__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Beyond the Nation? Critical Reflections on Nations and
Nationalism in Uncertain Times
Interdisciplinary Conference
School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy,
Queen’s University
Belfast, Northern Ireland (UK)
12-14 September 2007

__________________________________________________


‘No man has a right to fix the boundary of the march of a nation; no man has
a right to say to his country, “Thus far shalt thou go and no further,”’
Charles Stewart Parnell (Speech, January 21st, 1885, Cork, Ireland)

‘It is a well-known fact that we always recognize our homeland when we are
about to lose it,’
Albert Camus (Selected Essays and Notebooks, ‘Summer in Algiers’).

Few ideas have proved more alluring and yet controversial than nationhood
and nationalism.  Celebrated by some as the source of political value and a
key organizational principle, decried by others as treacherous and
intellectually moribund, the nation and its attendant ideologies have
endured despite the momentous upheavals of the 20th century.  But in an age
of increasing globalization and political fragmentation, does the nation
have the relevance it once had?  Are we, in short, finally moving into a
post-national era?  A major interdisciplinary conference, ‘Beyond the
Nation? Critical Reflections on Nations and Nationalism in Uncertain Times’
will explore the nation and nationalism as realities and ideals in the early
21st century.  Its goal is to bring leading international researchers and
thinkers from the fields of nationalism studies, ethnic conflict studies,
comparative politics, European studies, international relations/theory,
political history, political theory/philosophy, social history/theory, and
law to critically interrogate the role and viability of nationalism in our
time.

The conference will take place in Queen’s University Belfast’s central
campus and run over a three day period, from Wednesday 12th to Friday 14th
September inclusive.  It will be comprised of three strands, each strand
taking the form of a workshop devoted to a particular sub-theme(s) or
discipline(s).  There will be a number of plenary and keynote speeches, as
well as social events on each of the evenings, including Friday 14th
September.

There will also be a pre-conference workshop running from Monday 10th to
Wednesday 12th September.  It is organized by the International Political
Studies Association’s (IPSA) Research Committee on Politics and Ethnicity
(RC14) and is devoted to the theme of ‘The Challenge of Ethno-Nationalism.’
A number of social events will take place over the course of the
pre-conference workshop.

Confirmed speakers:

Adrian Guelke, Queen’s University Belfast Richard English, Queen’s
University Belfast Michael Keating, European University Institute John
McGarry, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario Michael Mann, University of
California at Los Angeles/Queen’s University Belfast David Miller, Nuffield
College, Oxford Margaret Moore, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario
Ephraim Nimni, University of New South Wales Geneviève Nootens, Université
du Québec Brendan O’Leary, University of Pennsylvania Shane O’Neill, Queen’s
University Belfast

The workshops are open to all with a research interest in any aspect of
nationalism studies, including postgraduate students and researchers.
Papers are invited for the following workshops and themes:

Pre-Conference Workshop: The Challenge of Ethno-Nationalism (10th-12th Sep
2007)

Theme(s):  The theme of this workshop is the current reality of
ethno-nationalism.  The workshop pursues two questions, broadly conceived:
• Does ethno-nationalism threaten the organization of the world into
nation-states or is it congruent with the notion of a world made up of
nation-states, with each ethnic group claiming the rights of nationhood?  
• Is it possible to accommodate ethno-nationalism without a further
multiplication of the number of sovereign states?
Disciplines: Papers are welcomed from researchers in the areas of ethnic
conflict studies, nationalism studies, international relations, and
comparative politics.
Organization: this workshop is a colloquium of the International Political
Science Association’s (IPSA) Research Committee on Politics and Ethnicity
(RC14).  However, participation by other researchers and postgraduate
students is encouraged.  Those wishing to participate should contact the
workshop convenor, Prof Adrian Guelke ([email protected]), for further
information.  Note that you should let Prof Guelke know whether you will be
participating in the pre-conference workshop (10th-12th Sep) only or whether
you would also like to participate in the main conference programme.

Conference Workshop 1: New Modalities of National Self-Determination and
Sovereignty (12th- 14th Sep 2007)

Theme(s): The traditionally accepted assumption of the legal and political
exercise of national self-determination is the existence of a sovereign
nation-state that represents the nation as a cultural community.  However,
given that there are more nations than the possibilities of creating
nation-states, that the abode of many nations overlaps with the abode of
others, and, of course, the unprecedented mass movement of different peoples
across continents, this conventional vision of national-territorial
sovereignty is increasingly called into question.  While the problem is not
new, it is only recently that it has been explicitly discussed in a plethora
of new works on identity, sovereignty, and self-determination, as
exemplified in debates over indigenous and minority rights,
multiculturalism, the ‘politics of recognition,’ and the growing number of
stateless nations.  The aim of this workshop is to empirically and
conceptually evaluate new modalities for self-determination and sovereignty
that transcend the bounds of the traditional nation-state.  It will
therefore include case studies and conceptual discussions.  Areas for
discussion include:

• National self-determination and indigenous rights • Sovereignty,
ethnicity, multiculturalism, and the politics of recognition • National
sovereignty and the securitarization of minorities • National sovereignty,
conflict, and violence • New developments in the area of nationhood and
sovereignty • Sovereignty and stateless nations • Security and prejudice:
the securitization of Islam in Western democracies • Case studies on the
self-determination of stateless nations, ethnic minorities and religious
groups.

Disciplines: Papers are welcomed from researchers in the areas of ethnic
conflict, nationalism studies, comparative politics, international
relations, law, multiculturalism studies, and political theory/philosophy.
Organization: Those wishing to participate are encouraged to contact the
workshop convenor, Dr Ephraim Nimni ([email protected]), for further
information.

Conference Workshop 2: Theorizing Nationalism and the Nation (12th- 14th Sep
2007)

Theme(s): Up until the late 20th century, political theory and philosophy
simply presumed the existence and continued endurance of the nation-state.
Despite their fundamental differences on what the good or just society ought
to look like, most political thinkers took for granted that the
institutional structures of such a society would be unproblematically
national.  However, recent historical experiences have fundamentally
questioned such easy assumptions.  In order to make sense of these
experiences, this workshop addresses the key theoretical questions and
challenges posed by a changing world to our understanding of nations and
nationalism as realities and normative ideals.  These include:

• Is liberal nationalism a defensible theoretical position?
• Are we in a post-national era?  What does post-nationalism mean?
• Does globalization spell the end of ‘the nation’ or does it demand,
instead, a reconfiguration of nationalism?
• Does cosmopolitanism represent a theoretically viable alternative to
nationalism and national citizenship?  What would a defensible cosmopolitan
conception of political sovereignty and citizenship look like?
• What are the demands of global distributive justice, if any, and do these
demands fatally undercut nation-state centred normative theories?
• What are the implications of multiculturalism and internal
politico-cultural diversity for the nation-state?
• What impact does and should gender and sexual differentiation have on
contemporary conceptions of ‘the nation’?
• What consequences do contemporary challenges to the nation-state have for
our understanding of legitimate political violence and of war?

Disciplines: Papers are welcomed from researchers in the areas of political
theory/philosophy, social theory, legal theory, nationalism studies,
international political theory, and multiculturalism studies.
Organization: Those wishing to participate are encouraged to contact the
workshop convenor, Dr Keith Breen ([email protected]), for further
information.

Conference Workshop 3:  European Governance Beyond the Nation-State (12th-
14th Sep 2007)

Themes(s):  The post-World War II development of European integration has
created a distinctively successful and dense network of institutions of
governance beyond the nation-state. Highly institutionalized forms of
‘shared sovereignty’ have penetrated deeply into the fabric of the
continent’s polities and societies, creating the potential for significant
reconfigurations of both structures of power and senses of identity. The
present workshop interrogates this distinctive, multi-level ‘European model
of governance,’ seeking to understand how the processes of European
integration broadly conceived have variously challenged, redefined, or
‘rescued’ state and nation.  Contributions are invited which provide new
theoretical or empirical insights into the developmental dynamics of
European institutions of governance, the impact of such ‘Europeanizing’
trends at national and sub-national levels, and the relationship of European
developments to wider international arenas.  Topics for discussion include:

• The ‘constitutionalization’ of the European Union • New modes of European
governance • Problems of democratic legitimacy/ accountability in systems of
multi-level governance • The ‘Europeanization’ of national polities,
societies, and political economies • Shifting senses of territoriality and
the reconfiguration of European borders/political space • ‘European
citizenship’ and the redefinition of national identity • Patterns of
political/intellectual opposition to European integration
(‘Euroscepticisms’) • ‘Europe’ as a foreign policy actor and the reshaping
of international order • European Union enlargement as a process of
‘normative export’
• European integration and globalization • Comparisons between European
integration and other processes of regional integration

Disciplines: Papers are welcome from researchers within the fields of
European Union studies, European integration history, federalism,
constitutionalism, comparative politics, and international relations.
Organization: Those wishing to participate are encouraged to contact the
workshop convenor, Dr Robert Harmsen ([email protected]), for further
information.

Submitting a paper:

The conference is open to those who intend to present papers and those who
simply want to attend the various workshops.  If you would like to give a
paper, please submit a title and abstract (150-300 words) to the appropriate
workshop convenor (see above).

Deadline for submission of title/abstract: 1st March 2007

Paper acceptance notification: 2nd April 2007

Registration Deadline: 14th May 2007

Conference Organizers

Dr Keith Breen (QUB, [email protected])
Prof Adrian Guelke (QUB, [email protected])
Dr Robert Harmsen (QUB, [email protected])
Dr Ephraim Nimni (UNSW, [email protected])
Ms Catherine Madden (QUB admin support, [email protected])
Ms Anja Vigouroux (QUB admin support, [email protected])

Conference Website:
http://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofPoliticsInternationalStudiesandPhilosophy/NewsandEvents/BeyondTheNationConference2007/#d.en.51488


__________________________________________________

InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

Reply via email to