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Call for Papers

Theme: Democracy and Dissent
Subtitle: Theorizing Political Agency from Sites of Difference
Type: Graduate Political Theory Conference
Institution: Department of Politics and International Relations,
University of Oxford
Location: Oxford (United Kingdom)
Date: 2.–3.6.2017
Deadline: 31.3.2017

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Democratic ideals promise equal respect and the possibility of
political agency for all. Yet procedural theories of democratic
legitimacy often foreground models of democratic exchange that
constrain the deliberative expression of ‘deep difference,’ whether
that be from sites of socioeconomic, national, religious, racial and
ethnic, gendered or sexual particularity. Alternative approaches to
democratic theorizing, like those offered by theorists of ‘agonistic’
deliberation, consider that people who suffer from persistent,
systematic and structural oppression are equally capable of acting in
their own best interests in a hostile — and potentially dangerous —
political environment. Too often, normative political theory neglects
the problematic of empowerment and views the epistemic and agential
capacities for dissent as preconditions for political agency rather
than as achievements in their own right.

In this conference, we seek to probe the tension between democratic
theory’s egalitarian promise and the patterns of exclusion that it
must negotiate in particular socio-cultural contexts of ethical
practice; between what democracy ought to offer citizens from diverse
social positionalities and ethical perspectives and what it does make
available when instantiated according to formal models. Some
contemporary democratic theories of a proceduralist stripe take
dissent to compromise democratic legitimacy, insofar as dissenting
citizens draw on expressive resources  beyond the scope of
‘deliberative reason.’ This problem of ethical diversity and
democratic dissent is of increasing urgency for political thinkers
concerned with the contemporary challenges of deliberative exclusion
and domination that traverse societies and define ‘multiple
modernities.’

How do contemporary democratic theories make possible the expression
of dissent out of different ethical or social perspectives? What
models of democratic governance — whether consensus-driven,
agonistic, or somewhere in between — provide the best conceptual and
normative tools for addressing the potential for conflict across
deep-seated ethical differences, or between citizens subject to
radical power asymmetries? How does democratic theory need to
readjust across social and geopolitical contexts? What does it mean,
in the contemporary conjuncture, to speak from and inhabit the
political sites of ‘deep difference’ and of ‘dissent’?

We welcome papers that address themselves to these questions.
Submissions are not limited to normative political theory, but can
also draw from disciplines like philosophy, social theory, Cultural
Studies and sociology, history and international relations. Relevant
topics may include, but are not limited to:

- Procedural approaches to democracy and deep difference
- Democratic deliberation, public reason and dissent
- Agonistic democracy and the conflictual nature of ‘the political’
- State sovereignty, political legitimacy and consent
- Secularism, the religious Other and dissent
- Speaking from the margins: the subaltern, political subjectivity
  and power
- Race, racism and the politics of (sub)personhood
- Feminist approaches to the gendered public sphere
- Indigenous dissent and self-determination
- Queer politics, deviance and dissent
- Decoloniality and epistemic resistance
- Dissent in nondemocratic regimes
- Empire and the Global South: contesting the European democratic
  project
- Neoliberal governmentality and the possibilities of political agency
- The ecological crisis as a problem for democratic representation
- Grassroots social movements and the reemergence of populisms, left
  and right
- Financial capitalism, state regulation, and the appropriation of
  public protest
- The aesthetic moment in and of dissent

Please send an abstract formatted for anonymous review of up to 400
words to oxfordpoliticalthe...@gmail.com by Friday, March 31. The
conference organizers will notify researchers with successful
submissions by Friday, April 14. Those selected for the conference
will be expected to provide a complete paper by Friday, May 26 for
pre-circulation. Only graduate students who have not yet defended
their doctoral dissertations are eligible to apply.

Further Particulars:

Conference organizers will help presenters book into single
accommodation in Oxford colleges for one to two nights. Limited
bursaries may be available to researchers whose institutions are
unable to fully cover travel and housing costs. The 2017 political
theory graduate conference is supported by the Department of Politics
& International Relations at the University of Oxford.

Location:

Department of Politics and International Relations
University of Oxford
Manor Road
Oxford, OX1 3UQ

Keynotes:

Professor Alessandro Ferrara (Rome – Tor Vergata)
Dr. Mihaela Mihai (Edinburgh)

Conveners:

Sarah Bufkin, DPhil in Political Theory
Benedict Coleridge, DPhil in Political Theory
Payaswini Tailor, MPhil in Political Theory


Contact:

Graduate Political Theory Conference
Email: oxfordpoliticalthe...@gmail.com
Web: https://oxfordpoliticaltheory.wordpress.com




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