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Call for Papers

Theme: Global Justice and Ethics of Exclusion
Type: Workshop in Applied Philosophy
Institution: Ethics Institute, Northeastern University
Location: Boston, MA (USA)
Date: 28.–30.9.2012
Deadline: 1.5.2012

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Questions around inclusion and exclusion are increasingly central to
discussions of global justice. For example, what norms or moral
principles ought to be used to determine political membership? What,
if anything, do citizens of democracies owe to people who are forced
to leave their home countries (refugees, stateless people, etc.)? Is
exclusion a necessary feature of contemporary political life or can
we imagine a different kind of community? What are the implications
of globalization for norms of inclusion and exclusion?

This workshop is will consider new research on these topics and will
bring together ethicists, philosophers, and others working on
theoretical issues related to global justice and the ethics of
exclusion. The workshop is designed to provide speakers with
constructive feedback from colleagues working on related issues.

We invite the submission of abstracts (no more than 750 words) from
researchers working on theoretical topics related to the ethics of
exclusion. Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the
following:

- Ethical issues related to refugees, asylum seekers, economic
  migrants, the forcibly displaced
- The ethics of political membership and immigration
- Ontological and existential dimensions of statelessness
- Sovereignty and the ethics of exclusion
- Religious ethics on hospitality and “welcoming the stranger”
- Gender, race, and/or disability as categories of global exclusion
- The ethics of humanitarianism and “humanitarian repression”
- Theoretical work on political membership, democracy, and the bases
  for inclusion/exclusion

Please email submissions (and questions) to Serena Parekh
([email protected]).

The abstract submission deadline is May 1st, 2012. Abstracts will be
reviewed by a program committee. Those selected for the program will
be asked to submit completed papers one month prior to the workshop,
and papers will be made available on the workshop website. Papers can
be of any length, but speakers will be limited to twenty-five minutes
to present their ideas, followed by thirty minutes of discussion.

For more information about the workshop go to:
http://www.northeastern.edu/ethics/workshop/
 
 
 
 
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