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Call for Papers

Theme: Future Generations and Global Inequality
Type: International Seminar
Institution: Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches sur la Justice Sociale
(CERJUSP), Université Catholique d'Afrique Centrale (UCAC)
   Department of Philosophy, Leiden University
   Institute for Business Ethics, University of St.Gallen
   Chair of Economics and Social Ethics, Université catholique de Louvain
Location: Yaoundé (Cameroon)
Date: 20.–26.8.2018
Deadline: 15.2.2018

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The things we do now, more than in the past, affect how future people
will live. We can improve their conditions by transferring knowledge,
technology or things of beauty, or make the world a much less
pleasant place for them to live in, for example by failing to stop
climate change, resource depletion, environmental degradation to the
point where human rights come under threat. This raises the question
of intergenerational justice: what do we owe to future people? Do we
have minimal duties to protect their human rights or more demanding
duties to preserve what's we've inherited from past generations? Do
we have egalitarian duties towards future generations?

Many of the developments that negatively affect the living standards
of future generations – like climate change and resource depletion –
do not only affect future generations, but already have an effect on
many people’s wellbeing today. Think of desertification around the
Sahara, increasingly extreme weather conditions in low-lying coastal
areas like Bangladesh, or the saltification of fresh water reserves.
These consequences are felt most  by countries whose degree of causal
contribution to climate change is the smallest. This uneven
distribution of the effects of unsustainable behavior will continue
in to the future. Addressing questions of climate change are often
seen as a common responsibility. But how do we fairly distribute the
costs of addressing climate change, given that both the effects and
causal responsibility are unevenly distributed globally? This
question does not arise for climate change alone, but for other
questions of intergenerational justice as well.

There are important ways in which global justice and
intergenerational justice intersect, especially (but not exclusively)
when it comes to questions of non-ideal theory.  How do we fairly
distribute the costs of acting on our obligation to future
generations in a radically unequal world? What sacrifices can be
asked from whom, also taking into account that some are much
wealthier than others?

In this summer school we plan to investigate these questions. We
strongly encourage submissions addressing the intersection of global
and intergenerational justice but also other related general
questions. We would also welcome papers on (this list is not meant to
be exhaustive):

- intergenerational justice, sustainability
- global justice, ideal and non-ideal theory
- historic injustice
- the ethics of climate change
- duties to past generations
- human rights
- the ethics of migration

We invite contributions from different theoretical perspectives, and
we plan to approach these questions both from the perspective of
analytical political philosophy and ethics and from the perspective
of non-Western traditions, e.g. African philosophy.

This event is jointly organized and supported by the University of
Leiden, the Institute for Business Ethics (St. Gallen), the Hoover
Chair of Economics and Social Ethics in Louvain la Neuve (Belgium)
and the Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches sur la Justice Sociale
(CERJUSP) of the Catholic University of Central Africa in Yaoundé.

Confirmed keynote speakers:
Katrin A. Flikschuh (London School of Economics)
Eszter Kollar (KU Leuven)
Olatunji A. Oyeshile (University of Ibadan)
Dominic Roser (University of Fribourg)

Submission guidelines

The Yaoundé Seminar organising committee invites graduate and PhD
students, postdoctoral researchers and early career faculty to submit
contributions on themes related to the conference’s topic.
Applications should include (1) an abstract (300 to 500 words) and
(2) a short biographical note. They should be submitted via email to
[email protected] , [email protected] and
[email protected] by February 15, 2018. Applications and
presentations can be either in English or in French, but speaking
French is not a requirement to attend the event. The keynote
presentations will be in English.

Successful applicants will be notified by March 15.

Successful applicants should be ready to cover:

1. The participation fee – 100€ (for participants affiliated to
African Universities) and 300€ (for participants affiliated to
non-African Universities) by June 30, 2018. NB: there might be
subsidies to reduce participation costs for PhD students in African
institutions, but these are limited.

2. Their travel costs to Yaoundé (Cameroon).

Once in Cameroon, the accommodation, transportation and catering of
registered participants will be covered by the organizing committee.

Organisers

Danielle Zwarthoed
Chair of Economics and Social Ethics
Université catholique de Louvain
Email: [email protected]

Thierry Ngosso
Institute for Business Ethics
University of St.Gallen
Email: [email protected]

Tim Meijers
Department of Philosophy
Leiden University
Email: [email protected]




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