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Duplicate Presentations in a Dual World: A Perspective from a Public Administration Political Scientist

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Cynthia J. Bowling
Affiliation:
Auburn University

Extract

When I first was asked to write this piece about “double conferencing,” I immediately went to my vita. Looking at the evidence Nelson Dometrius presented introducing this symposium and placing myself on the degree year list, I found I was in the center of the controversy, having received my degree in 1998. Had I committed the crime of presenting the same paper at two conferences? I skimmed my CV, and yes, there it was: an identically titled paper at both a national and a section conference. Granted, this was the only one I could find on my CV, there was only a month between the two conferences, and we had made some changes based on feedback. However, there was more than enough overlap to place me among the group of violators.

Type
SYMPOSIUM
Copyright
© 2008 The American Political Science Association

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References

Dometrius, Nelson C. 2008. “Editor's Introduction: The Evolving Norms of Conference Papers.” PS: Political Science and Politics 41 (April): 287288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar