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Call for Papers

Theme: Empire and Humanitarianism
Type: 2nd Imperial and Global History Network Conference
Institution: Imperial and Global History Network, University of Exeter
Location: Exeter (United Kingdom)
Date: 13.–14.6.2016
Deadline: 27.11.2015

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Following the success of the Network’s first conference in June 2014,
we’re delighted to announce details of our second conference, which
will take place at the University of Exeter in June 2016. The next
conference will be on the theme of ‘Empire and Humanitarianism’ and
the call for papers can be found below. As with our first conference,
we’re particularly keen to have submissions from PhD students and
early career researchers but proposals from more established
historians are welcome too. A selection of papers from the first
conference are scheduled to appear in the Journal of World History
later this year and we anticipate that our second conference will
result in a special issue or edited collection. 

The ‘global turn’ has invigorated the study of humanitarianism,
development and human rights. Within the context of Imperial history,
historians have pointed to the complex and often contradictory
relationship between humanitarianism and empire. Although
humanitarianism emerged in response to the worst excesses of
imperialism, such as the slave trade and the atrocities associated
with the Boer War, it was nonetheless shaped by the ‘moral and
political frameworks of empire’. In other words, empire and
humanitarianism were not necessarily incompatible and could in fact
be mutually reinforcing, whether this was through the paternal
rhetoric of the ‘civilising mission’ or the development of
international regulatory agencies during the inter-war period.
Although these discourses and mechanisms were often more concerned
with consolidating the authority of the imperial powers than they
were in protecting the rights of colonial subject populations,
humanitarianism could have emancipatory effects. As the legitimacy of
empire came under increasing scrutiny after 1945, metropolitan
activists shifted from abstract expressions of sympathy for colonial
peoples to forms of participatory activism that involved the outright
rejection of empire and the channelling of political and material
support to nationalist movements. For anti-colonial nationalists
the emerging discourses associated with human rights,
self-determination, and development provided a global context for
their local struggles, enabling them to forge transnational links
with other anti-colonial groups and providing the language and the
means with which to undermine the moral authority of the imperial
state.

In view of long and complex relationship between humanitarianism and
empire, the conference organisers invite proposals for 20-minute
papers that consider one or more of the following topics:

- Humanitarianism and the ethos and practice of imperial rule
- Advocacy groups in both the metropole and the colonies
- Networks of humanitarian activists, technical ‘experts’, and
  development practitioners
- Medical emergencies in colonial contexts
- The relationship between humanitarianism and development in both
  the colonial and post-colonial periods
- Humanitarianism and colonial conflicts
- Gendered histories of colonial humanitarianism and development
- The role of international NGOs in colonial contexts
- Humanitarianism and anti-colonialism
- Indigenous, non-western or ‘local’ understandings of
  humanitarianism, development, and individual or collective rights
- Empire and the global rights order
- Humanitarianism during the era of decolonisation
- The relationship between the developmental state, group rights, and
  individual freedoms
- Population movements and refugees crises, with a particular
  emphasis on the period of decolonisation and its immediate aftermath
- International aid and development after empire

The conference organisers welcome papers that consider one or more of
these issues in the context of any of the late nineteenth- and
twentieth-century European empires, as well as Latin America and the
contiguous empires of the United States, Russia, and East Asia.
Comparative papers are particularly welcome. Proposals, which should
include a 300 word abstract and a brief biography, should be sent to
Gareth Curless ([email protected]) by Friday 27 November 2015.



Contact:

Dr Gareth Curless
Department of History
University of Exeter
Amory Building
Rennes Drive
Exeter EX4 4QJ
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]




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