CASID Conferences
To help promote IDS in Canada and abroad, CASID organizes one annual conference and sponsors five regional events per year. The ambition of both the annual conference and the regional events is to bring together people working and studying in the broad field of international development to share opinions, experiences and research findings, to enhance networking and communication in the IDS community, and to facilitate the emergence of new development researchers and practitioners through active interaction and cooperation with Development Studies and related programs in Canadian universities and colleges.
Annual Conference News
Crossroads: Rethinking Development Theory and Practice in an Uncertain World
5 weeks 2 days ago
CALL FOR PAPERS* CASID Conference 2012 CROSSROADS: RETHINKING DEVELOPMENT THEORY AND PRACTICE IN AN UNCERTAIN WORLD...
5 Days until CASID 2011!!
31 weeks 2 days ago
Dear all,
UPDATE: CASID Annual Conference - (FINAL!) Final Program and List of Special Events
38 weeks 5 days ago
Please find attached the Draft Final Program for this year's CASID meeting in Fredericton. You will note that of the 28 panels and roundtables, slightly more than half require a chair/discussant. Please look over the program and if you are... |
Regional Event News
12 weeks 6 days ago
For the past four years, the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development (CASID) has invited its members across Canada to submit proposals to organize CASID-sponsored Regional Events focused on international development. The...
47 weeks 3 hours ago
The Trent University Students Association for International Development invites the public to the 5th annual Community Movements Conference taking place from Friday, February 11th to Sunday, February 13th at the Peterborough Public Library,...
47 weeks 3 hours ago
This conference will examine the interrelationships among indigenous peoples and the developmental state in contemporary Brazil. The topic is of extreme importance in international development studies, because Brazil’s Amazon... |

