__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Global Economic Justice
Subtitle: Assessing International Aid
Type: 2nd Lisbon Conference on Global Justice
Institution: Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas,
Universidade Nova
Location: Lisbon (Portugal)
Date: 14.–15.7.2011
Deadline: 15.4.2011

__________________________________________________


The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are the redistributive
mechanism by means of which the international community aims to bring
about consistent improvements in the fight against extreme poverty
worldwide. However, they raise perplexities in many respects. 1.4
billion people still live below the threshold of 1.25$/day that the UN
establishes as a desirable goal to achieve, and the acceptability of
the threshold is itself controversial. Moreover, the amount of
assistance due by the "1st World countries" is set at 0.7% of their
Gross Domestic Product, and may be spent both on humanitarian
assistance and on development actions.

Are the objectives plausible?
Are the means designed to achieve them sufficient?
Do they fit with what we may see as the 1st World countries'
responsibility towards world poverty?
Is there any such responsibility, and how can we normatively assess
it?

In order to assess the MDGs both in their normative and in their
practical dimensions we invite papers from philosophers, social
scientists, and professionals.

Possible topics are:

- International duties of assistance and their normative
  justification.

- Imperatives of charity vs. injunctions of justice.

- "1st World" responsibility: its justification, its scope, its
  quantification.

- "Assistance" and/or "fairness": forms of aid and fairness in the
  global market.

- The politics of the global market: economic inequality, political
  asymmetries, and international and supranational organisations.

- How should we redistribute? Through money and resources transfer?
  Through fair trade? Through trade liberalisation?

- Who should be the recipients of aid (individuals, governments,
  indigenous organisations)?

- Who should be the agents of aid distribution (States, International
  Institutions, Non-governmental Organizations, Transnational
  Corporations)?

The conference aims to grant participants a substantial opportunity
for discussion. Each paper-giver will have 30 min. time for his/her
presentation (instead of the nowadays customary 15 to 20 min.) and at
least 20 min. for discussion.

A selection of papers - elaborated into articles of approx. 6-8.000
words - will be published in a collective volume.

See the volume that resulted from the 1st Lisbon conference at:
http://www.degruyter.de/cont/fb/ph/detailEn.cfm?isbn=978-3-11-024574-5

Scholars who wish to participate may send an abstract of 500-1000
words to the following addresses by the 15th of April, 2011:

[email protected];
[email protected].

Please, make your abstract ready for blind review.
Notifications of acceptance will be sent by the 15th of May.

Keynote speakers:

Philippe van Parijs
(Université Catholique de Louvain/Harvard University)

Fernando Tesón
(Florida State University)
 
 
 
 
__________________________________________________


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

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

__________________________________________________
 
 

Reply via email to