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Graduate Workshop: How to Respond to Peer Reviews

November 11 @ 12:00 pm 1:30 pm

Location: Mergenthaler 431

Lunch provided; RSVP to ricjhu at jhu.edu by Nov. 7.

In this interdisciplinary graduate workshop, we’ll discuss the publication process from start to finish with special focus on how to process and incorporate reviewers’ feedback for resubmission. Our focus will be on publishing an academic article, but we will engage the range of venues and outlets for writing.  

This workshop is open to JHU PhD students and faculty in the humanities and social sciences. 

Speaker:

Justin L. Mann is an Assistant Professor of English and Black Studies at Northwestern University. His book, Breaking the World: Black Insecurity and the Horizons of Speculative Fiction (forthcoming March 2026) argues that Black speculative fictions uniquely reimagine security policy and practice in the contemporary. His research has appeared in American QuarterlyMELUSFeminist StudiesFeminist Theory, and Surveillance and Society, and on the websites avidly.com and syndicate.com, and he has guest edited the journals MELUSGLQ, and ASAP.

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Respondent:

Alice Engelhard is the Patrick Henry postdoctoral fellow of Mobilities and World Order in the Johns Hopkins Political Science Department. She received her PhD in International Relations from the London School of Economics, where she acted as Editor of the Millennium Journal of International Studies. Her research explores the regulation and categorization of (im)mobilities and transformations in world order, with a focus on empire and race in the Indian Ocean World. 

Convened by Maia Gil’Adí and Stuart Schrader, sponsored by the Chloe Center for the Critical Study of Racism, Immigration, and Colonialism

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