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Call for Papers

"Living Together: Civic, Political and Cultural Engagement among
Migrants, Minorities and National Populations: Multidisciplinary
Perspectives"
6th Annual Conference
Centre for Research on Nationalism, Ethnicity and Multiculturalism
(CRONEM), University of Surrey
Guildford (UK)
29-30 June 2010

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This conference will range across different academic disciplines and
explore links between academic knowledge, policy, practice and the
media. The format will consist of keynote addresses, parallel paper
sessions, convened symposia, a poster session and a panel debate
organised by the Runnymede Trust.

Speakers already confirmed:

- Benjamin Barber, President (CivWorld at Demos) and Walt Whitman
  Professor Emeritus, Rutgers University, USA
- Constance Flanagan, Professor of Youth Civic Development, Penn
  State University, USA
- Yvonne Galligan, Director, Centre for the Advancement of Women in
  Politics, Queen's University Belfast
- Jørgen S. Nielsen, Director, Centre for European Islamic Thought,
  University of Copenhagen, Denmark
- Lord Bhikhu Parekh, Professor of Political Philosophy, University
  of Westminster, UK
- Antje Wiener, Professor of Politics, University of Hamburg, Germany

Despite the recent ‘Obama effect’, conventional forms of political
participation have declined in many countries in recent years, with
growing levels of political apathy, disengagement from formal
democratic processes and increasing distrust of, or lack of
confidence in, political institutions. However, research suggests
that issues, which might have mobilised individuals into taking
political action in the past, are now being tackled in many cases via
voluntary, community or charitable activities, protest movements or
consumer activism instead. Hence, current trends in political
participation, especially among younger people, may be indicative not
of public disengagement per se but of a shift to a different kind of
public activism.

Gendered perspectives on cultural, civic and political engagement,
which explore the conditions governing women’s participation, as well
as perspectives which examine engagement and participation among
migrant or minority groups, can be especially illuminating here.
Women, migrants and minorities play vital roles in any society,
contributing through their skills, labour, taxes, community
participation and cultural activities. Yet, when restrictive
criteria, practices or policies prevent members of these groups from
participating fully in the political, civic and cultural life of the
country in which they live, members of these groups often develop
novel forms of engagement in order to circumvent the obstacles.

Policy can have a crucial impact on levels of participation, either
by creating impediments and barriers to participation by specific
groups, or by minimising these impediments. However, policy issues
can be complex to tackle, with the policies which exist at different
levels (e.g., at community, regional, national and supranational
levels) often being incongruent with each other, and with
discrepancies frequently existing between intended policy, the
content of policy texts, policy implementation, and the
interpretation of policy by citizens.

This conference aims to take stock of the different forms of civic,
political and cultural engagement which currently exist, and
investigate the factors and processes which are driving them, and the
role of public policy in the engagement of women, migrants,
minorities and national populations. A special feature of the
conference this year will be an event organised by the Runnymede
Trust, which will consider where Britain stands 10 years after the
Parekh Report on the future of multi-ethnic Britain and 25 years
after the Swann Report.

We would like to encourage the submission of papers which address the
following themes:

- Active engagement, interaction, expression and dissension at civic,
  political or cultural levels
- The participation of young people, women, migrants and minorities
- Different forms of engagement among adult national majority
  populations
- The role of public policy in civic, political or cultural
  participation

As this is an international conference, papers reporting on contexts
other than the UK are especially welcome.

In addition to individual papers, we also encourage the submission of
proposals for convened symposia. For more information about symposium
proposals, please visit the symposium submission page. As in previous
CRONEM conferences, there will also be the opportunity for poster
presentations. The poster format is particularly suitable for
presenters who wish to engage in one-to-one discussions with other
conference participants and to receive more detailed feedback on
their work.

Please send abstracts for papers and posters (not more than 200
words) and abstracts for convened symposia through the CRONEM
conference submission page. The symposium abstract should consist of
not more than 300 words, and the individual symposium abstracts of
not more than 200 words each.

Key dates:

15 February 2010 - Closing date for abstracts
15 March 2010 - Notification of abstract acceptance
25 March 2010 - Confirmation of participation
30 April 2010 - Registration deadline for presenters
22 May 2010 - Paper submission (2000 words)


Contact:

Ms Melek Muderrisgil, Conference Administrator
Centre for Research on Nationalism, Ethnicity and Multiculturalism
University of Surrey
Post Box I4
Guildford GU2 7XH
UK
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/

 
 
 
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