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Call for Papers

Theme: Two Centuries of Peacemaking
Subtitle: From the Peace Society to Martin Luther King
Type: International Conference
Institution: Department of Humanities, Northumbria University
   School of History, Classics, and Archaeology, Newcastle University
   Northumbria and Newcastle Universities Martin Luther King Peace
Committee
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne (United Kingdom)
Date: 7.–8.6.2016
Deadline: 23.10.2015

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2016 is an anniversary year that serves as a useful marker for
academics and activists to contemplate where we stand in our
understanding of peace and how to achieve it. June 2016 is the
bicentenary of the establishment of the (London) Peace Society.
Alongside the formation of the New York Peace Society, its appearance
is widely seen as representing the beginning of the modern peace
movement. Similarly it marks the start of a year of events to
commemorate the 50th anniversary of the visit of Martin Luther King
Jr to Newcastle in 1967 to accept an honorary doctorate. His
impromptu address, which fused together the issues of poverty, war
and racism, inspired the research expertise in the city’s two
universities, and national work of the Martin Luther King Peace
Committee to honour King’s legacy by "building cultures of peace."

This conference would mark this important date by asking big
questions about the direction and vitality of the peace movement over
200 years, and the place of King’s philosophy of nonviolence within
it. It will be a forum for scholars and activists to critically
reflect on our activities and explore how to build future synergies.
Between the bicentenary of the Peace Society, the centenary of
Britain's enactment of conscription during World War One, and the
run-up to the 50th anniversary of MLK’s visit, there is ample
opportunity to reflect on this history and stage a robust discussion
on radical shifts in the peace movement a hundred years ago,
including issues such as conscientious objection and the increased
importance of feminist/women’s activist roles, the geographical and
historical coordinates and influence of the civil rights movement,
King’s distinctive nonviolence in global peace movements, and more.

Keynote speakers include Martin Ceadel, Oxford; David Cortright,
Notre Dame; Kate Hudson, General Secretary of the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament; and Thomas Jackson, North Carolina—Greensboro.

Submissions

The organising committee invites abstract submissions on the
following or cognate themes:

- The Peace Society in retrospect
- Martin Luther King Jr.’s concepts and practices of
  nonviolence—local settings and global networks
- Locating the U.S. civil rights movement in historical and global
  peace and/or other activist movements
- Exploring the relationship between violence, nonviolence and armed
  self-defence: from Gandhi and King to "coloured revolutions" and the
  "Arab Spring"
- Histories of peace movements
- Resisting war through conscientious objection, mutinies, desertions
  and "live and let live systems"
- Women’s activism and involvement in the peace movement
- Transnational networks and peace activism
- Theology and religion in peace and nonviolence
- Peace ideas, analysis and practice
- Local histories of peace activism and war opposition (in Tyneside
  and elsewhere)

We welcome submissions that bring comparative international
perspectives to these topics. Please submit abstracts of 200 words
plus biographical line via email by October 23, 2015:
[email protected]

We welcome submissions of proposals for complete paper sessions.
Please provide panel title and name of convenor, as well as abstracts
and biographical lines for each panel member.

The event is at Newcastle and Northumbria Universities, with the
Martin Luther King Peace Committee, on June 7–8, 2016. One plenary
session will be a roundtable for peace activists, educators, and
scholars to discuss the state of the peace movement 200 years on and
the role of academics and activists within it.

A limited number of travel bursaries are available for postgraduate
students and peace activists/educators. If you would like to request
one, please indicate this to the organisers.

The event is organized by the Department of Humanities at Northumbria
University; the School of History, Classics, and Archaeology of
Newcastle University, and the Northumbria and Newcastle Universities
Martin Luther King Peace Committee.

For further information, please do not hesitate to contact

Jon Coburn and Sarah Hellawell (Northumbria, history)
[email protected]

Nick Megoran (Newcastle, geography and politics)
[email protected]

Daniel Laqua (Northumbria, history)
[email protected]

Ben Houston (Newcastle, history)
[email protected]




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