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Call for Papers

Theme: Renembering
Subtitle: International Struggle for Civil and Human Rights
Type: International Summit on Civil and Human Rights
Institution: Division of Global Affairs, Kennesaw State University
Location: Kennesaw, GA (USA)
Date: 28.–30.10.2015
Deadline: 15.7.2015

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The fifty-year anniversaries of major events of the American civil
rights movement provide occasion for reflection on milestone events
in the American civil rights movement. We take pause to recall the
significance of Brown v. Board of Education, the Freedom Rides, the
March on Washington, and the major civil rights legislative
achievements. Various commemorative events are taking shape across
the United States, from the unveiling of the plaque of the Birmingham
church bombing, an event that took the lives of four African American
girls, to the re-enactment of the March on Washington. The multiple
meanings of universal themes of liberty, equality, justice, fairness,
and equal opportunity have characterized an era of sacrifice,
mourning, and guarded optimism that marked the African American fight
for freedom.

However, the struggle for civil and human rights was not solely an
African American struggle, nor did it occur solely within the borders
of the United States. As Kevin Gaines, Gerald Horne, Thomas
Borstelmann, Mary Dudziak, Aza Layton and many others have discussed,
the civil rights movement shaped and was shaped by an international
conversation on human rights, self-determination, and freedom.
Mexican American Cesar Chavez rallied agriculture workers in the
National Farm Workers Union to underscore economic issues that
impacted both sides of the US-Mexico border. SNCC, the Black Panther
Party, CORE, and other organizations developed visions of what was
possible in dialogue with a host of international influences in
African and Asian independence movements. Throughout Europe, Latin
America, Africa, and the Caribbean, people who were victims of
violent repression, social isolation, and political
disenfranchisement took up their own struggles for liberation using
the narrative, rhetoric, and strategy of the American civil rights
movement, but also developing and improvising their own strategies.

The commemoration of the American civil rights movement reminds us of
all those epic struggles and brings back memories of solidarity
across racial, geographical, generational, social, and cultural
divides that furthered the cause of liberty and human dignity around
the world. We must reflect on the connections and rifts between the
American experience and the African, Latin American and Caribbean,
Middle Eastern, European and Asian experiences and many of the other
international dimensions of civil and human rights’ struggles,
characterized by the travels, the dialogues, and the transfer of
ideas across borders, cultures, religions and other barriers,
historically and contemporarily. 

Kennesaw State University’s Center for African and African Diaspora
Studies invites scholars, artists, activists, and practitioners to
participate in a three-day summit in Kennesaw (an Atlanta suburb) on
October 28-30, 2015. The summit is designed as a multi-disciplinary
platform to remember, reflect, celebrate and interrogate historical
and contemporary civil and human rights issues that are both national
and transnational. It incorporates discussions in all formats –
visual and performance arts, spoken word, fine arts installation,
panel and roundtable discussions, and open forum discussions.


Themes

Proposed presentations are expected to reflect on the following
themes of the summit:

- Remembering the 50th anniversary of the American civil rights
movement is to recover our collective memory of past struggles for
justice and their on-going significance in the present.

- Reconstruction appeals to our sentiments to bring together
disjointed communities separated by time, space, culture, and
difference, to build something new.  In the United States, the
aftermath of the Civil War created a new society that dreamed boldly
and failed valiantly to create a new nation based on principles of
freedom. Although certain advances in civil rights were not
effectively and permanently established, these aspirations became
central to the tenents of the modern civil rights movement for the
remainder of the twentieth century.  The determination to engage
injustice and to rebuild society anew was not unique to the United
States but also evidenced throughout Latin America, the Caribbean,
Africa, Asia, and Europe.

- Re-aggregation urges us to consider how groups both nationally and
internationally can be compared and contrasted in ways previously
unconsidered, instead of thinking of isolated strands of independence
movements in Africa, Asia, North America, and South America.  How
might we frame our understanding of distinct regional movements as
part of collective aspirations for universal principles of justice
and autonomy?  Considering the groundwork of African-Asian solidarity
at the Bandung Conference, what other examples are there of
cross-cultural conversation, cooperation and conflict that will urge
us to bring together previously disparate leaders, movements, and
peoples?

- Re-envisioning challenges us to reconsider our preconceived ideas of
struggle, to consider fresh perspectives on civil and human rights ;
explore new and emergent modern ideas, creative and “out of the box”
thinking to address contemporary issues, such as, immigration,
criminal justice system, bullying, growing economic inequalities,
human trafficking, modern day slavery, child labor, LGBT rights,
refugee protection, gender inequality, etc.

- Re-inventing urges us to bring our collective insight from across
disciplinary, cultural, and intellectual traditions, to boldly create
new strategies for social change  in our local, national and global
communities..

It is in this spirit that The KSU Summit on “Remembering:
International Struggle for Civil and Human Rights,” calls on a
multidisciplinary group of scholars, activists, students, writers,
literary critics, historians, legal practitioners, social scientists,
humanists, cultural scholars, artists, and musicians to “remember”
the struggles for civil and human rights within the United States and
across the world.


Format

Presenters are asked to identify their preferred format in their
proposal (see below); however, proposal reviewers may suggest
alternative formats and/or the combination of like topics to form
panels or symposia.

Available options include:

- Panel Sessions are back-to-back presentations of research, theory,
concepts, and practices.

- Workshop Sessions are longer and interactive in nature and
facilitate group hands-on participation.

- Symposium Sessions combine a number of presenters who discuss
different aspects of a topic, from different perspectives. Presenters
will represent a diverse group of scholars, activists, policy makers
and practitioners. The idea is that by combining different aspects of
a topic, and a complimentary group of actors, rich discussion among
presenters and the audience will ensue.

- Roundtable Discussions provide an opportunity to discuss research
in progress, research issues, community action strategies, or other
relevant topics with a small group in an informal setting around a
table or in a circle of chairs.

- Poster Presentations provide an opportunity to present and discuss
one main research theme or relevant topic in an informal setting,
somewhat like an exhibit hall or information fair. A good poster
session centers on one main theme, presents useful information, and
stimulates discussion. Presenters prepare a display that captures
their topic and ideas in easily understood printed text and graphics
on a board no larger than 30” x 40.” As participants visit the
display, presenters will have the opportunity to discuss their poster
topic with them. Presenters should provide handouts and prepare a few
remarks that will welcome participants to their poster, and initiate
a dialogue with them.

- Exhibits and Performance Presentations provide an opportunity to
engage visual and performing artists whose work engages themes
throughout the struggle for civil and human rights in a format not
easily facilitated by traditional sessions.


Proposal Submission

Only original, unpublished work will be considered.

Special Form Instructions:

1) Title - Please use common capitalization, not APA. Do NOT use all
   caps.
2) Select the area in which your presentation best fits.
3) Presentation format.
4) A 200-word abstract.
5) All proposals must be submitted electronically in MS Word format,
   to [email protected].

The deadline for proposal submission is July 15, 2015

If you have questions, contact the Proposal Committee via the email
address [email protected].

Notification of acceptance decisions will be emailed by July 31, 2015.

Presenters must confirm that they will present at the summit by
August 15, 2015.

All presenters and co-presenters must register and pay registration
fees by September 1, 2015 to be included in the program. Names of the
primary presenter and any co-presenters will appear in the conference
program if received by this date.


Contact:

Saundra Rogers
Division of Global Affairs
Kennesaw State University
3391 Town Point Drive
Suite 2800
Kennesaw, GA 30144
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://dga.kennesaw.edu/content/civil_rights_summit




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