One upshot of this is that I'm rather isolated from the political science public law community, but that's not a huge problem since I'm still perfectly tied into the public law scholars at law schools. The bigger issue comes when I try to bring law-centered approach to political theory. Then this happens:
Me: Hello! I am hereby submitting a proposal to present at your political theory conference! My topic is on the role of judges in protecting marginalized groups; specifically, the deliberative advantages of the judiciary being "force to listen" to claims that other political actors can dismiss out of hand.
Conference organizer #1: I don't know. That sounds like a pretty niche area. I mean, does anybody really pay much attention to the intersection of minority rights and the law? I think we need something with a wider base of appeal.
Conference organizer #2: I agree. How about a paper presenting an esoteric reading of five pages of a 19th century German philosopher known to approximately two dozen people outside of this room instead?
Conference organizer #1: That sounds great! But is our conference unbalanced what with eight "history of political thought" papers scheduled and just one contemporary piece?
[Everybody laughs uproariously, and scene]Learning a new discipline is weird.
2 comments:
As a kid, academia seemed so cool. So did politics. As a grown-up, not so much.
Speaking of being a grown-up, any thoughts about what you want to be? (No, your mom didn't put me up to this.) I'd imagine having a combined JD/poli sci PhD might open all kinds of doors. Joining a law faculty would be the obvious one -- but that industry seems to be contracting at the moment....
The goal is to become a professor. Beyond that, in these academic-economic position, my line is that "my dream school is the one that hires me." That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
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