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Call for Papers

"The Roots of Global Civil Society: From the Rise of the
Press to the Fall of the Wall"
Cambridge World History Workshop
University of Cambridge
Cambridge (UK)
2-3 October 2009

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The concept of global civil society has gained currency in
recent years among social scientists and public policy
practitioners. However, it is often seen as a contemporary
phenomenon - a by-product of the wellspring of popular
sentiment leading to the collapse of the Berlin Wall, or of
the increasingly integrated global system which emerged in
its wake.

Yet, the roots of global civil society - like those of
globalisation itself - may be traced far further back.
Ordinary citizens and subjects have long pursued social and
political aims through organisations which spanned states
and empires and crossed borders - and were often explicitly
ecumenical in purpose. From Buenos Aires to Beirut, Paris to
Penang, growing numbers of civil society institutions -
cultural clubs, philosophical and learned societies,
charitable organisations and reformist leagues - emerged
throughout the nineteenth century. Their members
increasingly thought globally, using the printing press and
the telegraph to exchange ideas, and to put their claims
before the world. By the early 1900s, women's rights
activists and socialists, anarchists and Marxists, radical
nationalists and religious revivalists had all created
movements which ran across, and sometimes undercut, borders.
Indeed, the twentieth century witnessed not only successive
reforms to international society, but also the growing
prominence of organisations which sought to mobilise
citizens for a global purpose - from the peace leagues of
the 1920s and 1930s to the anti-globalisation movements of
the 1990s.

Can we locate the roots of 'global civil society' in such
events? How did historical actors understand the ecumenical
dimensions of their activities at various locations and
points in time? How were these notions articulated in their
writings and pronouncements? And how were they embodied in
the associations they created, and the friendships and
alliances they contracted? How might we, in turn, define and
use the concept of 'global civil society'?

The Cambridge World History Workshop invites scholars
working across a broad range of time periods and
geographical areas to help answer such questions around the
theme of 'global civil society'.

Possible topics might include, but are not limited to:

- The concept of global civil society, and its utility as a
  category of world-historical analysis
- Religious and secular conceptions of civic virtue in a
  global context
- Cosmopolitan / Trans-national models of association and
  articulation
- Interwar globalism and the anti-colonial moment
- Trade unions, NGOs, and the post-1945 consensus from below
- Global Civil Society from the 1960s

This two-day conference will be held 2-3 October 2009 at the
University of Cambridge. Funding for travel and assistance
with accommodation may be available. Please check the
website for further details:
http://www.worldhist.group.cam.ac.uk

We particularly welcome applications from graduate students
and early-career academics.

Please send a CV and 250 word abstract, including name,
contact details, and institutional affiliation as a .doc
attachment to the conference organisers.

The deadline for applications is 10th May 2009.


Conference Organisers:

Su Lin Lewis
Email: [email protected]

Andrew Arsan
Email: [email protected]

Anne-Isabelle Richard
Email: [email protected]

 
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