Call for Papers "Using Large Language Models (LLMs) and Other AI Tools to Gather and Analyze Political Elite Networks" - ECPR Joint Session Workshop in Innsbruck, Austria, April 7-10, 2026

FK
franziska.keller@unibe.ch
Wed, Nov 12, 2025 1:11 PM

Dear EPSA team,

Can I ask you to share the call for papers with the just updated deadline (attached as .pdf, full text below, or as link on our project webpage: https://www.autpol.net/workshop) with the mailing list?

Thanks a lot,

Franziska

Do you study political networks and use AI-tools to gather the necessary data? Join our workshop at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Innsbruck, Austria, April 7-10, 2026, and discuss your approach and findings with like-minded peers!

Networks or connections among political actors play a crucial role in politics: alliances and enmities shape national and international conflicts, patronage ties enable corruption and career advancement, and the spread of rumors along informal ties can topple governments. But gathering information on such networks is labor-intensive.

Fortunately, recent advances in natural language processing, especially the development of large language models, have introduced ways to automate and greatly accelerate the inference of networks from text. What remains uncertain, however, are LLMs' reliability and replicability - and what completely new social network questions can be answered using these tools.

Our ECPR Joint Session workshop "Using Large Language Models (LLMs) and Other AI Tools to Gather and Analyse Political Elite Networks," explores these open questions. We are particularly interested in:

  1. Studies that explore new political network questions enabled by AI-tools or that revisit classical questions using such tools.
  2. Analyses that either compare different data-gathering approaches to the same case or apply the same approach to different cases to test its generalizability
  3. Innovative ways to combine human and AI-inputs in the data-gathering process
  4. Novel ways to ensure a) replicability, in particular for proprietary AI-tools, and b) test the reliability or external validity of networks constructed, i.e. construct ground-truth data sets
  5. Methods for improving LLM effectiveness and scalability in extracting political networks

We welcome research on both open-source and proprietary LLMs and other AI tools. While the focus will be on empirical and methodological studies, we are also open to conceptual and theoretical work, in particular on the limitations of this approach for different contexts, types of actors and networks. You may also submit in-depth research into parts of the data-gathering process, such as identifying the relevant entities, establishing the type or sentiment of the relationship, or gathering CV or other data used to construct networks.

We plan to make space for shorter presentations to get feedback on specific research ideas (for a PhD-thesis, a grant application, or a paper) - please indicate such proposals by beginning your submission with "Research proposal:"
Finally, also get in touch with us directly if you have developed tools, packages or programs relevant to this endeavor and would like to give a hands-on demonstration to this audience.

Note that this is an in-person event, but that ECPR offers travel grants to students and early career scholars from Full ECPR member institutions.

If you want to join the workshop, submit an abstract of no more than 500 words by December 10, 2025, here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809. For questions, please contact Franziska Keller (franziska.keller@unibe.chmailto:franziska.keller@unibe.ch) or Yuequan Guo (yuequan.guo@wzb.eumailto:yuequan.guo@wzb.eu).

Franziska Keller, PhD
Assistant Professor
Institute of Media and Communication Studies (icmb), University of Bern
www.fbkeller.nethttp://www.fbkeller.net/

Recent Publications:
<China Watchershttps://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096525101200> in PS: Political Science & Politics (with Jos Dornschneider-Elkink and Hans Hanpu Tung)

<How do media contribute to the dissemination of conspiracy beliefs? A field study combining panel and web tracking at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemichttps://academic.oup.com/joc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/joc/jqaf033/8206747>, in Journal of Communication (with Silke Adam, Tobias Rohrbach, Mykola Makhortykh, Ernesto de Leon, Chiara Valli, Ani Baghumyan, and Maryna Sydorova)

Dear EPSA team, Can I ask you to share the call for papers with the just updated deadline (attached as .pdf, full text below, or as link on our project webpage: https://www.autpol.net/workshop) with the mailing list? Thanks a lot, Franziska Do you study political networks and use AI-tools to gather the necessary data? Join our workshop at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Innsbruck, Austria, April 7-10, 2026, and discuss your approach and findings with like-minded peers! Networks or connections among political actors play a crucial role in politics: alliances and enmities shape national and international conflicts, patronage ties enable corruption and career advancement, and the spread of rumors along informal ties can topple governments. But gathering information on such networks is labor-intensive. Fortunately, recent advances in natural language processing, especially the development of large language models, have introduced ways to automate and greatly accelerate the inference of networks from text. What remains uncertain, however, are LLMs' reliability and replicability - and what completely new social network questions can be answered using these tools. Our ECPR Joint Session workshop "Using Large Language Models (LLMs) and Other AI Tools to Gather and Analyse Political Elite Networks," explores these open questions. We are particularly interested in: 1. Studies that explore new political network questions enabled by AI-tools or that revisit classical questions using such tools. 2. Analyses that either compare different data-gathering approaches to the same case or apply the same approach to different cases to test its generalizability 3. Innovative ways to combine human and AI-inputs in the data-gathering process 4. Novel ways to ensure a) replicability, in particular for proprietary AI-tools, and b) test the reliability or external validity of networks constructed, i.e. construct ground-truth data sets 5. Methods for improving LLM effectiveness and scalability in extracting political networks We welcome research on both open-source and proprietary LLMs and other AI tools. While the focus will be on empirical and methodological studies, we are also open to conceptual and theoretical work, in particular on the limitations of this approach for different contexts, types of actors and networks. You may also submit in-depth research into parts of the data-gathering process, such as identifying the relevant entities, establishing the type or sentiment of the relationship, or gathering CV or other data used to construct networks. We plan to make space for shorter presentations to get feedback on specific research ideas (for a PhD-thesis, a grant application, or a paper) - please indicate such proposals by beginning your submission with "Research proposal:" Finally, also get in touch with us directly if you have developed tools, packages or programs relevant to this endeavor and would like to give a hands-on demonstration to this audience. Note that this is an in-person event, but that ECPR offers travel grants to students and early career scholars from Full ECPR member institutions. If you want to join the workshop, submit an abstract of no more than 500 words by December 10, 2025, here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809. For questions, please contact Franziska Keller (franziska.keller@unibe.ch<mailto:franziska.keller@unibe.ch>) or Yuequan Guo (yuequan.guo@wzb.eu<mailto:yuequan.guo@wzb.eu>). Franziska Keller, PhD Assistant Professor Institute of Media and Communication Studies (icmb), University of Bern www.fbkeller.net<http://www.fbkeller.net/> Recent Publications: <China Watchers<https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096525101200>> in PS: Political Science & Politics (with Jos Dornschneider-Elkink and Hans Hanpu Tung) <How do media contribute to the dissemination of conspiracy beliefs? A field study combining panel and web tracking at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic<https://academic.oup.com/joc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/joc/jqaf033/8206747>>, in Journal of Communication (with Silke Adam, Tobias Rohrbach, Mykola Makhortykh, Ernesto de Leon, Chiara Valli, Ani Baghumyan, and Maryna Sydorova)
FK
franziska.keller@unibe.ch
Fri, Dec 5, 2025 1:59 PM

Apologies for cross-posting

Deadline coming up soon (December 10th) - submit your proposal here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809

Do you study political networks and use AI-tools to gather the necessary data? Join our workshop at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Innsbruck, Austria, April 7-10, 2026, and discuss your approach and findings with like-minded peers!

Networks or connections among political actors play a crucial role in politics: alliances and enmities shape national and international conflicts, patronage ties enable corruption and career advancement, and the spread of rumors along informal ties can topple governments. But gathering information on such networks is labor-intensive.

Fortunately, recent advances in natural language processing, especially the development of large language models, have introduced ways to automate and greatly accelerate the inference of networks from text. What remains uncertain, however, are LLMs' reliability and replicability - and what completely new social network questions can be answered using these tools.

Our ECPR Joint Session workshop "Using Large Language Models (LLMs) and Other AI Tools to Gather and Analyse Political Elite Networks," explores these open questions. We are particularly interested in:

  1. Studies that explore new political network questions enabled by AI-tools or that revisit classical questions using such tools.
  2. Analyses that either compare different data-gathering approaches to the same case or apply the same approach to different cases to test its generalizability
  3. Innovative ways to combine human and AI-inputs in the data-gathering process
  4. Novel ways to ensure a) replicability, in particular for proprietary AI-tools, and b) test the reliability or external validity of networks constructed, i.e. construct ground-truth data sets
  5. Methods for improving LLM effectiveness and scalability in extracting political networks

We welcome research on both open-source and proprietary LLMs and other AI tools. While the focus will be on empirical and methodological studies, we are also open to conceptual and theoretical work, in particular on the limitations of this approach for different contexts, types of actors and networks. You may also submit in-depth research into parts of the data-gathering process, such as identifying the relevant entities, establishing the type or sentiment of the relationship, or gathering CV or other data used to construct networks.

We plan to make space for shorter presentations to get feedback on specific research ideas (for a PhD-thesis, a grant application, or a paper) - please indicate such proposals by beginning your submission with "Research proposal:"
Finally, also get in touch with us directly if you have developed tools, packages or programs relevant to this endeavor and would like to give a hands-on demonstration to this audience.

Note that this is an in-person event, but that ECPR offers travel grants to students and early career scholars from Full ECPR member institutions.

If you want to join the workshop, submit an abstract of no more than 500 words by December 10, 2025, here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809. For questions, please contact Franziska Keller (franziska.keller@unibe.chmailto:franziska.keller@unibe.ch) or Yuequan Guo (yuequan.guo@wzb.eumailto:yuequan.guo@wzb.eu).

Franziska Keller, PhD
Assistant Professor
Institute of Media and Communication Studies (icmb), University of Bern
www.fbkeller.nethttp://www.fbkeller.net/

Recent Publications:
<China Watchershttps://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096525101200> in PS: Political Science & Politics (with Jos Dornschneider-Elkink and Hans Hanpu Tung)

<How do media contribute to the dissemination of conspiracy beliefs? A field study combining panel and web tracking at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemichttps://academic.oup.com/joc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/joc/jqaf033/8206747>, in Journal of Communication (with Silke Adam, Tobias Rohrbach, Mykola Makhortykh, Ernesto de Leon, Chiara Valli, Ani Baghumyan, and Maryna Sydorova)

Apologies for cross-posting Deadline coming up soon (December 10th) - submit your proposal here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809 Do you study political networks and use AI-tools to gather the necessary data? Join our workshop at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Innsbruck, Austria, April 7-10, 2026, and discuss your approach and findings with like-minded peers! Networks or connections among political actors play a crucial role in politics: alliances and enmities shape national and international conflicts, patronage ties enable corruption and career advancement, and the spread of rumors along informal ties can topple governments. But gathering information on such networks is labor-intensive. Fortunately, recent advances in natural language processing, especially the development of large language models, have introduced ways to automate and greatly accelerate the inference of networks from text. What remains uncertain, however, are LLMs' reliability and replicability - and what completely new social network questions can be answered using these tools. Our ECPR Joint Session workshop "Using Large Language Models (LLMs) and Other AI Tools to Gather and Analyse Political Elite Networks," explores these open questions. We are particularly interested in: 1. Studies that explore new political network questions enabled by AI-tools or that revisit classical questions using such tools. 2. Analyses that either compare different data-gathering approaches to the same case or apply the same approach to different cases to test its generalizability 3. Innovative ways to combine human and AI-inputs in the data-gathering process 4. Novel ways to ensure a) replicability, in particular for proprietary AI-tools, and b) test the reliability or external validity of networks constructed, i.e. construct ground-truth data sets 5. Methods for improving LLM effectiveness and scalability in extracting political networks We welcome research on both open-source and proprietary LLMs and other AI tools. While the focus will be on empirical and methodological studies, we are also open to conceptual and theoretical work, in particular on the limitations of this approach for different contexts, types of actors and networks. You may also submit in-depth research into parts of the data-gathering process, such as identifying the relevant entities, establishing the type or sentiment of the relationship, or gathering CV or other data used to construct networks. We plan to make space for shorter presentations to get feedback on specific research ideas (for a PhD-thesis, a grant application, or a paper) - please indicate such proposals by beginning your submission with "Research proposal:" Finally, also get in touch with us directly if you have developed tools, packages or programs relevant to this endeavor and would like to give a hands-on demonstration to this audience. Note that this is an in-person event, but that ECPR offers travel grants to students and early career scholars from Full ECPR member institutions. If you want to join the workshop, submit an abstract of no more than 500 words by December 10, 2025, here: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/WorkshopDetails/16809. For questions, please contact Franziska Keller (franziska.keller@unibe.ch<mailto:franziska.keller@unibe.ch>) or Yuequan Guo (yuequan.guo@wzb.eu<mailto:yuequan.guo@wzb.eu>). Franziska Keller, PhD Assistant Professor Institute of Media and Communication Studies (icmb), University of Bern www.fbkeller.net<http://www.fbkeller.net/> Recent Publications: <China Watchers<https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096525101200>> in PS: Political Science & Politics (with Jos Dornschneider-Elkink and Hans Hanpu Tung) <How do media contribute to the dissemination of conspiracy beliefs? A field study combining panel and web tracking at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic<https://academic.oup.com/joc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/joc/jqaf033/8206747>>, in Journal of Communication (with Silke Adam, Tobias Rohrbach, Mykola Makhortykh, Ernesto de Leon, Chiara Valli, Ani Baghumyan, and Maryna Sydorova)