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Call for Papers

Theme: Living Together in Diversity
Subtitle: National Societies in the Multicultural Age
Type: International Conference
Institution: Central European University
Location: Budapest (Hungary)
Date: 21.–22.5.2012
Deadline: 31.12.2011

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Introduction

Contemporary European societies have been recently characterized as
having entered the age of ‘super-diversity’. Migratory flows in
particular have contributed to this transformation, due to the
heterogeneous ethno-cultural, and religious background of present
migrants, as well as their social status, age, and mobility patterns.
Among the effects this transformation has brought about is the
increased challenge posed to the constitutive principle of the
nation-state, i.e., the assumption that identity (nation) and
politics (state) can and should be mutually constituent and spatially
congruent. Thus, unsurprisingly, many states have started perceiving
diversity as a ‘problem’, potentially threatening national unity,
while anti-immigration and xenophobic attitudes have experienced a
rapid surge.

Existing scholarship has offered insightful critical analyses of this
‘backlash against diversity’, documenting the rise of repressive
state measures designed to limit access of new migrants to the
national territory and citizenship. Other scholars have instead moved
away from the idea of the nation-state, proposing either
post-national solutions, which decouple the cultural (nation) from
the political (state), or transnational paradigms, which implicitly
discard the focus on the nation-state as not only obsolete but also
politically questionable. Yet, despite important insights from this
scholarship, social and political life continues to remain largely
structured by discourses, resources and institutions articulated at
the national scale.

Aim

The aim of the proposed conference to explore how ‘living together in
diversity’ is imagined, narrated, organized, justified, and practiced
within contemporary national societies. With the stress on ‘in’
rather than ‘with’ diversity we want to move away from reifying the
dominant ‘majority’ society perspective, which assumes diversity as
something ‘carried’ solely by immigrants and something that the
‘native’ society has to cope with. Some of the questions that we are
interested in are:

- What makes multicultural societies circumscribed by state borders
  cohere together?
- What are the ways in which the nation becomes re-signified to
  accommodate the ethno-cultural diversity of its populace?
- How do migrants position themselves in national narratives and
  political structures?
- What alternative modes and models of belonging are at work within
  present national societies?
- In which ways does the national continue to feature as a site of
  attachment?
- Is it necessary to have some form of common identification at the
  national scale to have functioning states in the first place?

Although we acknowledge that these questions are inescapably
normative in character, we particularly welcome empirically-informed
work. The privileged level of analysis we are interested in is the
national scale, but papers focusing on sub-national and
supra-national scales can also be welcomed inasmuch as they can offer
insights regarding how living together in diversity works at the
national scale. Regionally, the conference will focus on Europe, but
contributions discussing other geographical contexts are also
welcomed.

Deadlines

All potential participants are invited to submit an abstract (250-300
words) to Tatiana Matejskova ([email protected]) by December 31st,
2011. By January 31st, 2012 participants will be informed about the
acceptance of their papers. Confirmation of participation and payment
of the conference fee will be due on February 12th, 2012. The
conference fee of 60 Euros will cover gala dinner, lunches, and
refreshments.

Expected outcomes

One of the most immediate outcomes of the conference is the
publication of a selection of papers in form of both an edited book
with a major publishing company and a special issue to be submitted
to a leading cross-disciplinary international journal. On the longer
term, the conference also aims to consolidate the collaboration among
the participants in form of a cross-disciplinary research network,
which might lead to collective research projects to be funded by the
EU and other external bodies.

Conference website:
http://livingindiversity.eu
 
 
 
 
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