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Call for Papers

Theme: Spotlight on Multiculturalism
Type: Academic Workshop
Institution: Dialogue Society, Birmingham Branch
   School of Politics, International Relations and Environment,
Keele University
   Department of Politics and Public Administration, Fatih University
Location: Istanbul (Turkey)
Date: 3.–5.5.2012
Deadline: 10.1.2012

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Introduction

The great power and machinery of state exercised on the basis of
racial and cultural superiorty can have savage consequences: in the
world this became undeniable only after the horrors of the Nazi
regime (many of whose victims were Europeans) were publicised.
imperial territories, held on the basis of racial and cultural
superiorty, were allowed to become new, “independent” nations. Then,
to meet demands for labour after the World War, European countries
encouraged immigration from former colonies: the empires came home to
a degree never imagined or prepared for. There was also large-scale
immigration from non-colonies, like that of Turks to Germany. When it
became obvious that the immigrants had settled, the discourse of
mutliculturalism developed in Europe as it had in North America –
namely, as a well-meaning effort to ensure that minorities were
treated as equal under the law and that society affirmed their human
dignity as expressed in their religious, cultural and linguistic
identity.

This well-meaning policy was a significant departure for the
nation-states of Europe, whose formation was typically a story of
repression or marginalisation of cultural and linguistic identities
in favour of decisive political identification with the state and
acceptance of the norms (especially language) of the dominant
community. Nevertheless, through the 1970s into the 1990s
multiculturalism achieved major objectives like reducing racial
discrimination, improving prospects for local or devolved
legislatures, etc. But the fear persisted that the loyalty to the
state of “other” communities is unreliable, a potential “enemy
within”. The political extreme right had always denounced
multiculturalism as a betrayal or surrender of so-called “European
values”. Then, through the years since 2001, when the Muslims’ image
problem intensified, it became acceptable for elites in the political
mainstream also to denounce multiculturalism as a failure.

Over the same period multiculturalism has engendered an academic as
well as political debate. It is no longer understood just as a way to
cope with socio-cultural diversity within a single political
jurisdiction. The new technologies of travel and communication have
meant that culturally distant communities are thrust into
neighbourhood, actual and virtual. People are able to move in and out
of diverse “neighbourhoods”; and for each they may nurture and deploy
a different dimension of their identity. Thus, the concept of
multiculturalism now embraces – beyond the issues of situating
minorities politically and securing their rights – individual,
personal domains of being and meaning.

The personal concerns and practical issues that multiculturalism now
deals with mean that it has become a far more vigorously
interdisiciplinary field. Sociology, ethnography, cultural
anthropology, anthropology of law, urban geography, transnational
geography, international and comparative law are some of the
specialisms that are interconnecting and interacting to evolve a
positive direction for multiculturalism. From a concern to correct
abuses against minorities, multiculturalism may grow into a concern
to enable social spaces in which cultural hybridity is positively
welcomed and sustainable, where the reality of multiple identities
for communities as well as for individuals can be legally and
politically safeguarded.

The Dialogue Society, Birmingham Branch, in collaboration with Keele
University and Fatih University, invites scholars and practitioners
(hereinafter ‘authors’) willing to share their ideas and experience
to take part in a Workshop in Istanbul to discuss the past and future
of multiculturalism. The Workshop is partciularly interested in
multiculturalism in Britain and Europe. Papers that relate to
theories, policies and practices outside of Europe are also welcome
so far as they can be related to Britain and/or a European country.
Programme

A detailed schedule will follow in due course.

Costs

The Dialogue Society will pay all the costs of accommodation and
board, and transfers, and there is no registration fee for
participants in the Workshop. However, authors are expected to pay
the costs of their flight to and from Turkey (currently about £200).

Outcome

Within six months of the event, a book will be produced and published
by the Dialogue Society, comprising some or all of the papers
presented at the Workshop. The papers will be arranged and
introduced, and to the extent appropriate, edited, by scholar(s) to
be appointed by the Editorial Board.

Copyright of the papers accepted to the Workshop will be vested in
the Dialogue Society.

Scope

Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:

Authors are invited to send abstracts (maximum 300 words) of their
papers on themes of their own choosing, which may include (by way of
example only):

Multiculturalism: Basics
- Multiculturalism and race relations
- Multiculturalism and groups identified by faith-based traditions
- Multiculturalism and the impact of public policy (education,
  health, employment)
- Multiculturalism and issues related to gender equality

Multiculturalism: Practice
- The feasibility and relevance of multiple legal frameworks
- The problem of extremisms of left and right
- The many dimensions of activism (state; civil society; media;
  individuals)
- Future prospects: possible new directions for multiculturalism

The Workshop is partciularly interested in multiculturalism in
Britain and Europe. Papers that relate to theories, policies and
practices outside of Europe are also welcome so far as they can be
related to Britain and/or a European country.

Selection Criteria

The Editorial Board welcome abstracts alike from academics in the
many relevant disciplines, practitioners working with statutory or
voluntary bodies, and independent researchers or writers working on
topics relevant to the Workshop.

Since the Workshop expects to address a broad range of topics while
the number of participants has to be limited, writers submitting
abstracts are requested to bear in mind the need to ensure that their
language is technical only where absolutely necessary and
intelligible to non-specialists and specialists in disciplines other
than their own; and present clear, coherent arguments in a rational
way and in accordance with the usual standards and format for
publishable work.

Schedule for Submissions

- Abstracts (200–300 words maximum) and CVs (maximum of 2 pages,
  including any personal statement and/or listing of publications or
  work experience) to be received by 10th January 2012.
- Abstracts to be short-listed by the Editorial Board and papers
  invited by 30th January 2012.
- Papers (3,000 words minimum – 5,000 words maximum, excluding
  bibliography) to be received by 10th March 2012.
- Papers reviewed by the Editorial Board and classed as: Accepted –
  No Recommendations; Accepted – See Recommendations; Conditional
  Acceptance – See Recommendations; Not Accepted.
- Final papers to be received by 1st April 2012.

Workshop Co-ordinator

Seref Kavak
Dialogue Society Birmingham Branch Academic Coordinator
Email: [email protected]

Website:
http://www.dialoguesociety.org/birmingham-forthcoming/687-academic-workshop-call-for-papers-spotlight-on-multiculturalism.html
 
 
 
 
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