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Call for Papers

"Responsibility in a Global Age"
International Conference
Charter Facilitators Group
Council for Research in Values and Philosophy (RVP)
Tbilisi (Georgia)
31 May - 1 June 2007

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We invite the submission of papers to the Conference
“Responsibility in a Global Age”, which will be held on May
31 - June 1, 2007 in Tbilisi, Georgia.

The conference is organized by Charter Facilitators Group
within the framework of the Charter project in Georgia and
in conjunction with The Council for Research in Values and
Philosophy (RVP).

Topic areas of the conference include, but are not limited
to, the following:
1. Relation of Rights to Responsibilities
2. Public Administration as Public Service
3. Responsibility and Education

Planned highlights of the conference include presentations
of the research papers, panel discussions, including
workshop/discussion of the Charter of Human
Responsibilities.

Refereed proceedings will be published in English by the
Council for Research in Values and Philosophy in Washington
DC, USA.

Background

Human rights refers to the concept of human beings as having
universal natural rights, or status, regardless of legal
jurisdiction or other factors, such as ethnicity,
nationality, and sex. Human rights are closely linked to
human responsibilities and both aim at human dignity.
However, it generally turns out that more attention is drawn
to human rights, while responsibilities remain “in the
shadow”.

At the end of World War II the United Nations Universal
Declaration of Human Rights listed 28 rights in order to
protect the individual from the overbearing power of the
totalitarian state. This continued the adversarial Western
tradition of the British “Magna Carta,” the French “Rights
of Man” and the American “Bill of Rights”. Only article 29
of the Bill spoke of responsibilities.

International life is still underpinned mainly by two
pillars: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which
focuses on the dignity of individuals and on the defence of
their rights, and the Charter of the United Nations, which
focuses on peace and development. These two documents have
been a framework for undeniable progress in the organisation
of international relations. But the last fifty years have
seen radical global changes. Humankind now confronts new
challenges and each of us must take up his or her
responsibilities at both the individual and the collective
level.

The more freedom, access to information, knowledge, wealth
and power someone has, the more capacity that person has for
exercising responsibilities, and the greater is that
person’s duty to account for his or her actions.
Responsibilities are proportionate to the possibilities open
to each of us. But every human being has the capacity to
assume responsibility.

The term often refers to a system of principles and
judgments shared by cultural, religious, and philosophical
concepts and beliefs. These concepts and beliefs are often
generalized and codified by a culture or group, and thus
serve to regulate the behavior of its members.

But rights imply duties and in an individualistic culture it
has been difficult, beyond the negative duty not to harm
one’s neighbor, to identify the corresponding subject of
such positive duties as the provision of an education or of
a job. Exclusive emphasis upon rights without social
development leads rapidly not to the protection and
promotion of persons and peoples but to their endangerment.

Moreover, as we enter upon a global age, it becomes obvious
that most of the world’s civilizations are constructed in
terms, not of the rights of disparate individuals, but of
responsibilities in social units. These begin from the
family and extend outward to one’s community, village,
nation and civilization - which Huntington terms “the
largest we” – and beyond to the global whole.

Hence, both from within and from without the usual
discussion of rights is in need of being expanded to include
the responsibilities of the person to the social wholes and
of the social wholes to the unique person

Important Dates:
April 1, 2007 – Paper submission deadline
April 10, 2007 – Notification of acceptance
May 31/June 1, 2007 – International Conference

Completed and original research papers of not more 20 pages
must be submitted electronically to the conference E-mail:
<[email protected]>. Submitted papers will
undergo a peer review process. Papers must be uploaded in
either Microsoft Word or PDF format.


Contact:

Dr. Tinatin Bochorishvili
Department of Political Sciences
Academy of Sciences of Georgia
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crvp.org/conf/2007/tbilisi.htm


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