Site icon The Oversight Project

Oversight and Accountability Conference: Call for Papers, Posters, and Panels

The Oversight Project at American University Washington College of Law (www.oversightproject.org) is hosting a research conference on November 6, 2020 to highlight scholarship on the work of federal oversight and accountability institutions, including: Inspectors General, the General Accountability Office, the Office of Government Ethics, the Office of Special Counsel, the Office of Management and Budget, and the role of the Congress in oversight and accountability of the federal government. Submissions (for papers, posters and panels) are welcome for this conference. Submit proposals via email to OversightProject@wcl.american.edu through April 1, 2020.

Important Dates:

Topic Areas

The program committee encourages submissions from diverse organizations, disciplines, approaches, and geographies on the following and related topics:

Papers and posters

Submit an abstract of research (in progress or recently completed) and present the completed paper in a conference session or as a poster. The presentation format is best for work that has been completed, whereas posters are ideal for feedback on work-in-progress and completed work where detailed feedback and engagement is desired. Posters will be prominently displayed and provide an opportunity to discuss your research in detail with conference attendees.

Paper sessions generally include three presentations of selected papers, grouped by common topic, with a moderator. Presentations are 20 minutes, followed by a 10-minute discussion period. In the poster session, participants display materials that highlight their research and discuss such research with conference attendees. Posters should display the question, hypothesis, data, and results.

Submit proposals via email to OversightProject@wcl.american.edu through April 1, 2020.

Authors may present only one paper or poster at the conference, although they may also participate in a panel or be a coauthor of papers or posters presented by others. An author may submit multiple abstracts for consideration, but at most one will be accepted.

Papers not submitted in final form by July 31 will be removed from the program.

Important Dates:

Panels

Propose a panel discussion of a relevant topic. If your proposal is selected, you will be asked to organize the panel. Panels should convene a slate of experts to address current topics of interest to the oversight and accountability community. They should include:

The submitter of an accepted panel is responsible for organizing the session.

Submit proposals via email to OversightProject@wcl.american.edu through April 1, 2020.

When submitting a panel proposal, you should, in 500 words or less:

Submitters must ensure availability of all participants. Remote participation by panelists is discouraged but may be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Important Dates for Panel Proposals:

Any questions or comments? Email us at OversightProject@wcl.american.edu.

Exit mobile version