Conference Programme, Abstracts and Papers

With this inter- and multi-disciplinary project we
seek to explore the new developments and changes of the idea of pluralism
and the implications those have for social and political processes
of inclusion and citizenship in contemporary societies. The project
will also assess the larger context of major world transformations,
for example, new forms of migration and the massive movements of people
across the globe, as well as the impact and contribution of globalisation
on tensions, conflicts and the sense of acceptance, rootedness and
membership. Looking to encourage innovative trans-disciplinary dialogues,
we warmly welcome papers from all disciplines, professions and vocations
which struggle to understand what it means for people, the world over,
to be a citizen in rapidly changing national, social and political
contexts.
In particular papers, workshops and presentations
are invited on any of the following themes:
1. Challenging Old Concepts of Citizen and Alien
-
Who is a citizen and who is an alien, a foreigner?
-
The new value of political pluralism and cultural multiplicity;
breaking with homogeneity and sameness
-
What is the place of difference and alterity in defining membership
and citizenship?
-
How to account for political membership and identity?
-
Making sense of transformations
and their effects over citizenship identity and membership
-
Othering, marginalising, excluding, stygmatising
2. Nations, Fluid Boundaries and Citizenship
-
What does it mean, today, to belong to a nation?
-
New migrants, new migratory flows and massive
movements from peripheral to central countries
-
Resurgence of the local and the diminishing
importance of the national
-
Are we living post-national realities?
-
What is the place of economic and cultural
claims in today’s
forms of political membership?
-
Assimilation, integration, adaptation and other
forms of placing the responsibility of change on migrants
3. Institutions, Organizations and Social
Movements
-
Evaluating the promises and institutions of
post-national governing
-
What happened to the rights of migrants and
displaced peoples?
-
Political battles over globalization and the
forging of global citizenship
-
Social movements, new rebellion and alternative
global politics
-
Trans-national connections that escape institutional
and political control
-
New forms of global exclusion
4. Persons, Personhood and the Inter-Personal
-
De-nationalising citizenship and the making
of a global citizen
-
Tensions, contradictions and conflicts of citizenship
formations and political membership
-
New sources and forms of political participation;
new localism, parochialism and communitarianism
-
Bonds of care across boundaries of inequality
and exclusion, ideologies and religions, politics and power, nations
and geography
-
Thinking and acting with foreigners and migrants
in mind
-
Citizens acknowledging the fundamental role
of migrants; making migration personal and interpersonal
5. Media and Artistic Representations
-
The role of new and old media in the construction
of political membership, of nations and citizens
-
Production and reproduction of political and
citizen typing and stereotyping
-
The contested space of representing politics,
national identity and membership
-
Art, media and how to challenge the rigid and
impenetrable constructions of political culture
-
Living, being and exercising membership through
art
-
Political life imitating art and fiction
6. Transnational Political Interlacing of Contemporary Life
-
What is shared from political cultures? How
are political cultures shared? Who has access to the sharing of
political cultures?
-
Human rights, migration and massive displacements
of people
-
Living in a context with the political markers
of a different context: Is that political trans-culturalism?
-
Languages, idioms and new emerging forms
of wanting to bridge the ‘invisible’ divide
between political cultures
-
Symbols and significations that connect people
to places other than ‘their
own’
-
Politics, identity and belonging by choice
7. New Concepts, New Forms of Inclusion
-
Recognition and respect without marginality
-
An ethics for social and political relations
in a new millennium
-
What to do with historically old concepts
like tolerance, acceptance and hospitality?
-
Should not we all be strangers? Should not
we all be foreigners?
-
Is there any use for cosmopolitanism these
days?
-
Embracing the alien within the citizen; building
fluid boundaries of membership and political participation
Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300
word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 10th August 2007. If your
paper is accepted for presentation at the conference, an 8 page draft
paper should be submitted by Friday 19th October 2007.
300 word abstracts should be submitted to both Organising
Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats, following
this order: author(s), affiliation, email address, title of abstract,
body of abstract. We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals
submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should
assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace!
We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.
Joint Organising
Chairs |
Alejandro Cervantes-Carson
Research & Project Development Director,
Inter-Disciplinary.Net,
Barcelona, Catalunya,
Spain
E-Mail: Alejandro Cervantes-Carson |
Rob Fisher
Network Leader
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Freeland, Oxfordshire OX29 8HR
Email: Rob
Fisher |
The conference is part of the ‘Diversity and
Recognition’ research projects, which in turn belong to the ‘At
the Interface’ programmes of ID.Net. It aims to bring together
people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore
various discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers
accepted for and presented at this conference are eligible for publication
in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers will be developed for publication
in a themed hard copy volume.