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Call for Papers

Theme: Reconciliation in Post-Colonial, Post-Conflict and
Multi-Ethnic Africa
Type: 18th Annual Conference
Institution: International Society of African Philosophy and Studies
(ISAPS)
   School of Philosophy and Ethics, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Location: Pietermaritzburg (South Africa)
Date: 16.–18.4.2012
Deadline: 31.1.2012

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One of the difficult challenges facing many African countries today
is the problem of negotiating successful transitions from histories
tainted variously by colonialism, racial segregation, oppression and
conflicts to a truly democratic dispensation.  South Africa, Rwanda
and Sierra Leone are representative examples of countries on the
continent that have attempted to confront violent and fractious
histories of Apartheid, Genocide and Civil War respectively through
the establishment of reconciliatory processes. The success of these
processes are debatable and many of the problems that continue to
plague African countries may well be attributed to the failure of
post-colonial, post-conflict and multi-ethnic African states, to
fully integrate. How new dispensations deal with an oppressive past
will have a huge impact on how they consolidate their democratic
gains.

The 18th annual conference of the International Society of African
Philosophy and Studies hosted by the School of Philosophy and Ethics
of the University of KwaZulu-Natal (Pietermaritzburg campus), South
Africa, from the 16th to the 18th of April 2012, will bring together
scholars from a variety of intellectual backgrounds to explore the
question of reconciliation in (post-colonial, post-conflict and
multi-ethnic) Africa. The conference will enable participants to
explore this broad theme in relation to nation-building and
democratic sustainability in Africa.

The organizers welcome ground-breaking contributions in African
philosophy and African studies and in general the humanities and
social science disciplines, addressing issues such as reconciliation
and forgiveness as contested notions; transitional justice and, in
particular, restorative and/or retributive justice; international
conflicts and reconciliation; the role of the international community
in attaining reconciliation; interpretations of truth and the success
of truth-commissions in bringing about reconciliation and
integration; ethnic jingoism, conflict transformation and nationhood;
the possibility of nation-building and national unity; strategies of
coping with the past; the nexus between trauma and forgiveness;
collective memories, narrative self-understanding and reconciliation;
traditional approaches to justice and reconciliation in Africa; the
nexus between political apology and reconciliation. In addition,
papers that take a multi-disciplinary approach will be most welcome.
Hence presentations could range from the psychology of forgiveness or
reconciliation to the sociology of reconciliation; from the history
of reconciliation to the politics of nation-building; from the
anthropology of healing to how popular culture/music responds to
issues of healing; from literary fictional narratives of war and
reconciliation to ‘big screen’ representations of reconciliation.

Abstracts of no more than 500 words in Word and Rich Text formats,
with the name and institutional affiliation of the author should
reach the local organisers no later than the 31st of January 2012.
Email your abstract to the following email contacts:

Bernard Matolino
Email: [email protected]

Oritsegbubemi Oyowe
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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