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Conference Announcement

Theme: What Equality?
Type: Interdisciplinary Workshop
Institution: Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society and Rule of Law
(CISRUL), University of Aberdeen
Location: Aberdeen, Scotland (United Kingdom)
Date: 28.–29.6.2011

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Equality, slogan of choice in heady moments such as the 1790s and the
1960s, recedes into the background at other times like our present.
All the more reason to ask, now, what ideas of equality there are,
and whether there are equalities in practice. Ideas and practices of
equality have, no doubt, been around for ever. Hunter-gatherers are
often said to be egalitarian. Being equal in the eyes of God has for
long been important to Judaeo-Christian traditions. But the workshop
will focus on the ideas of equality associated with citizenship, with
civil society and with rule of law.

The conference is hosted by the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society
and Rule of Law, whose mission is to produce conversation across the
social sciences and humanities on key concepts of the modern polity.
Citizenship, civil society and rule of law are three such key
concepts, all three of some pedigree but enjoying a new lease of
life, prescribed by bodies such as IMF and United Nations, championed
by social movements, and debated in the media and in academic
research.

Citizenship, civil society and rule of law all include notions of
equality, but it is far from clear what notions of equality, how they
relate to each other, and what they do in practice. There are, to
begin with, many notions of equality. For example, citizenship and
rule of law share a notion of being equal as individuals in spite of
other differences. One votes as a citizen rather than as a women,
indigenous person or aristocrat, and one faces judgement as a legal
subject equal to other legal subjects. But we will discuss, among
other things, how the equality of citizens and equality before the
law relate to each other, and how they stand in relation to other
kinds of equality and inequality, such as the substantive
distribution of rights, the socioeconomic disparities that concerned
T.H. Marshall, access to the justice system, and cultural
recognition. We will also ask how equality plays out in civil
society, which has been accused of being unrepresentative and elitist
yet often invokes some kind of equality as its objective.

There have been occasional debates among social scientists or between
legal and political theorists but we represent a broader range of
disciplines, including anthropology, education, history, law,
literary and cultural studies, politics, sociology and theology. We
are also keen to get beyond contemporary Europe and the US, on which
most recent studies have focused, by including other contexts and
perspectives.

Our three key questions will be:
- How do notions of equality relate to citizenship, civil society and
  rule of law, in theory and in practice?
- How do notions of equality in citizenship, civil society and rule
  of law compare and relate to each other?
- What notions of equality exist beyond citizenship, civil society
  and rule of law?

Academic Coordinators:
Trevor Stack ([email protected])
Matyas Bodig ([email protected])

Conference Website:
http://www.abdn.ac.uk/cisrul/events/129/

 
 
 
 
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