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Call for Papers

Theme: Reinventing Citizenship
Type: 7th International Symposium
Institution: International Network for Alternative Academia (INAA)
   Humber College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning
Location: Toronto, ON (Canada)
Date: 13.–15.5.2013
Deadline: 19.4.2013

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This trans-disciplinary research project is interested in exploring
the current relevance and value of citizenship in democracies across
the world. We seek to identify central problems of the experience of
being a citizen today and evaluate to what degree is citizenship a
good vehicle for democratic agency in contemporary societies.

For almost half a century, political regimes across the world have
struggled with citizen participation and the legitimacy problems this
creates for the political process. As a result politics has
increasingly been seen as a highly formal, specialized and separate
domain from the everyday life and needs of citizens. Perhaps nowhere
has the gulf that has formed become more evident than with regard to
our understanding of the concept of citizenship itself. While
boundaries between nations and the composition of resident
populations have become increasingly more fluid and diverse,
citizenship and the legal frames that sustain national politics have
shown a shocking resilience to change, short capacity to increase
inclusion and a rather rigid response to decades of massive migration
and global change. Many now have dual or multiple citizenships and
are connected to more than one body politic and legal framework.
Simultaneously, the numbers of permanent residents of countries that
refuse to grant them citizenship and formal access to politics
continues to increase. How are old models of citizenship evolving?
With what effects? Can these changes be initiated within existing
political systems? Do social movements that advocate sidestepping
states and formal politics altogether, movements that seek to
generate their own forms of political representation and membership
point the way towards the future of citizenship?

We invite colleagues from all disciplines and professions interested
in exploring and explaining these issues in a collective,
deliberative and dialogical environment to send presentation
proposals (based on theoretical and/or empirical projects) which
address these general questions or the following themes:

1. Visualizing: Rethinking Citizenship

- Has the ideal of citizen lost its meaning in 21st century? Has it
  lost its relevance? Should we abandon the concept all together or
  take on the task of its re-conceptualization?
- What are the routes we should take for reinventing a conception of
  citizenship that responds to the current transnational trends of
  world mobility and life?
- Is it possible to unhinge citizenship from the nation-state? How
  would this be done in conceptual, political and practical terms?
- Is there a way of thinking of citizenship devoid of loyalty to a
  nation or even multiple nations, but rather anchored in a different
  set of principles, responsibilities, obligations and cosmopolitan
  civic commitments?
- Why does citizenship need national anchoring? Is it possible to
  move the link up to an international level and down to a local one,
  in order to re-shape both rights and responsibilities?
- How can we conceive of a new definition of citizenship that is
  global, transnational, multiple and multifaceted? How can we move
  the definition of citizenship away from the notion and practices of
  exclusion and closer to that of inclusion?
- Might the rethinking of citizenship entail abandoning the idea all
  together and seeking for a different form of political relationship?

2. Zooming In: What Is Lost? What Is Broken?

- What accounts of citizenship are offered to us from across history?
  What are the relative strengths and weaknesses of their adoption in
  addressing 21st century social, cultural and political life?
- What is the relationship between citizenship and allegiance,
  loyalty and trust? Should not democracy itself and democratic
  relationships be what defines allegiance, loyalty and trust?
- What is the current place of political accountability to citizens?
  Are political democratic systems accountable to citizens? Is
  accountability being strengthened by politics and democratic
  practice? How so and what are the links and processes of this
  relationship?
- How can citizens expand their participation in decision-making
  processes? How can citizens ensure that democratic politics is
  exercised, not only their name but in their benefit? How can
  citizens regain their power over political systems?
- How are the lines between citizen, worker, resident and consumer
  being redrawn?
- Who is included and who is excluded from the ranks of citizen
  through the introduction of citizenship tests? What are these tests
  seeking to affirm?
- How should we think of the relationship between citizenship and
  security? Is it legitimate to redefine citizenship based on ideas of
  security? How so and what are the limits? Are these limits justified
  by democratic rights and responsibilities?
- Are we not giving up rights and responsibilities by accepting
  principles of national security?

3. Second Take: Current Experiences of Alternative Citizenship

- What is the relationship between residency and citizenship? Is
  there any way we can embody denizen ship with legal rights and a
  constitutional persona? Would this be a way of inserting new
  significance to citizenship?
- Can we conceive of local community political relationships that are
  good examples for new models citizenship? What lessons can we derive
  from these experiences and how can we use them for the renovation of
  the roots of citizenship?
- How do these local experiences relate to established and legal
  definitions of citizenship? What might be there contributions to the
  formal and informal ways of rethinking citizenship?
- What are the relative merits and demerits of dual and
  multi-national citizenship? Aside from facilitating travel and
  residency for global travelers and residents, are there additional
  considerations we can extend to single citizenship status?
- What happens when allegiances conflict? Is there a prior
  citizenship right? How is it to be established, from an
  international legal perspective?
- What happens with local, regional and transnational experiences
  that contest the nation state’s legitimacy and decide to side step
  them to exercise their conceptions of citizenship? Are their virtues
  in these practices? What lessons can we derive from them both for
  citizenship and democracy?
- Are there new models and political relationships emerging from
  local, regional and international experiences that speak to new
  forms of democratic political life? Are these just revamping old
  ideas of democratic citizenship or creating new conceptions with
  their practices?

4. Artistic Scene: Aestheticizing Citizenship

- In what ways is art being employed as a means for redefining and
  reconfiguring political identity at both the personal and societal
  level? How much do these aesthetic experiences seep into the fabric
  of social life?
- How can we explore the productive effect of art on forms
  conceptions of citizenship?
- How is art and art expression responding to the need to redefine
  citizenship? How might art serve as a model in the creation of new
  ways of experiencing politics, political participation and
  citizenship?
- How can we participate and foster processes of critical and
  creative aesthetic innovation for citizenship perception and
  political agency?
- Can art insert playfulness and joy, pleasure and fun in conceptions
  of politics and the exercise of citizenship?
- Can the aesthetization of protest and contestation contribute to a
  de-formalization of citizenship and bring about a more joyful
  exercise of political rights and duties? Is there other ways for
  regaining the joy in political participation?
- How can citizenship and political participation be seen as a
  festival or a social festivity? Would this have an impact over
  political participation? Would this have an effect over how citizens
  relate to politics? Would this suggest new ways definitions of the
  exercise of rights and duties?

5. Stand Still: Normative Renewal and Building New Citizenship

- What are the current conditions for the possibility of citizenship?
  How are these conditions being reconfigured by new technologies and
  globalization?
- Can we even think of the possibilities of international
  citizenship? How so and what would it require? Is this a productive
  route to pursue for the renewal of citizenship?
- What is the impact of international organizations on conceptions of
  national citizenship? How have basic ideas been reformulated?
- How are norms of citizenship being modified and changed within
  nations? How are international normative formulations being
  contested and challenged?
- How is trans-nationalism challenging traditional conceptions of the
  rights of participation in political processes?
- What is the future of passports, visas and citizenship cards?
  Should we continue to identify citizenship belonging in this way?
  How can/how will citizenship be identified?
- How are normative frameworks of democratic citizenship holding up
  to contestation and challenge within national borders and from
  transnational social and political movements? 

If you are interested in participating in this Annual Symposium,
submit a 400 to 500 word abstract by Friday 19th of April, 2013.

To submit an abstract online follow these steps:

1) Go to our webpage: www.alternative-academia.net
2) Select your Symposium of choice within the list of annual events
   (listed by period and city)
3) Go to LOG IN at the top of the page
4) Create a User Name and Password for our system and log in
5) Click on the Call for Papers for the Symposium
6) Go to the end of the Call for Papers page and click on the First
   Step of Submission Process button
7) Follow the instructions provided for completing the abstract
   submission process

For every abstract proposal submitted, we acknowledge receipt. If you
do not receive a reply from us within three days, you should assume
the submission process was not completed successfully. Please try
again or contact our technical support for clarifications.

All presentation and paper proposals that address these questions and
issues will be fully considered and evaluated. Accepted abstracts
will require a full draft paper by Friday 3rd of May, 2013. Papers
presented at the symposium are eligible for publication as part of a
digital or paperback book. 

Symposium Coordinators: 

Marina Kaneti
PhD Candidate, Politics
New School for Social Research
New York, NY
USA
Email: [email protected] 

Alejandro Cervantes-Carson
General Coordinator
International Network for Alternative Academia
Barcelona
Spain
Email: [email protected]

Conference website:
http://www.alternative-academia.net/ocs-2.3.5/index.php/TORONTO2013/RC-7




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