__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Cities, Territories and the Struggles for Human Rights
Subtitle: A 2030 Perspective
Type: International Conference
Institution: Human Rights Centre 'Antonio Papisca', University of
Padova
Location: Padova (Italy)
Date: 26.–27.11.2018
Deadline: 16.9.2018

__________________________________________________


The University of Padova Human Rights Centre 'Antonio Papisca', in
the framework of the activities of the International Joint Ph.D.
Programme 'Human Rights, Society, and Multi-level Governance', is
organising an International Conference on the theme 'Cities,
territories and the struggles for human rights: a 2030 perspective'.
The Conference will take place on 26th and 27th November 2018.

The Conference aims at shedding some light over the transformations
that lay ahead for cities and local communities, taking the 2030 SDG
Agenda as the fundamental yardstick to assess progress, and at
charting ideas and experiences that support a claim for a stronger
political role of sub-state and non-state territory-based entities in
the global world in a human rights perspective. 

Confirmed key-note speakers include:
Yvonne Donders (University of Amsterdam)
Ivan Koprić (University of Zagreb)
Josep Maria Llop (University of Lleida)

The Conference is organised in collaboration with: UNESCO Chair
'Human Rights Democracy and Peace', University of Padova; Law and
Development Research Group, University of Antwerp; Human Rights
Consortium, School of Advanced Studies, University of London; School
of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg; European Training and
Research Centre for Human Rights and Democracy and UNESCO Chair in
Human Rights and Security, University of Graz; South Africa Labour
and Development Research Unit (SALDRU), University of Cape Town. Each
of these institutes cooperate in the organisation and management of
one of the conference's research panels.

Concept Note

There is a growing function of “the local” in the promotion and
protection of human rights and in the development of human rights
mainstreaming, especially in a perspective of multi-level governance
and subsidiarity. This has been acknowledged, for instance, in the
Global Charter-Agenda for Human Rights in the City (Florence, 2011),
stressed in the Opinion of the European Committee of the Regions
(2015/C 140/07), emphasised by the UN Human Rights Council (see the
2014 Report of the Advisory Committee A/HRC/27/59) and highlighted by
the EU with special reference to territorial cohesion in Europe.
Cities and local entities were also evoked in the 2016 Habitat III
World Conference in Quito, and are deemed to be crucial for the
achievement of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, whose Goal 11
is about making cities and human settlements inclusive, safe,
resilient and sustainable.

Cities and territorial units are indeed a key component of any global
strategy for the governance of contemporary social phenomena and the
management of related risks – be them ecological, technological,
economical, etc. Thus, local authorities are pressured to adhere to
and abide by global strategies devised by decision-makers in
political and financial headquarters. Cities and territories however
also provide the set where the failures of such grand designs are
represented, and where innumerable instances surface of resistance to
the globalisation. Cities and local governments, including
self-government units, are therefore simultaneously at the periphery
of the global scene, and at its centre; the socio-economic and
cultural hub for individuals’ and communities’ lives, but a marginal
actor in politics and international relations. Laying on the
faultline between top-down policy implementation and bottom-up policy
contestations, status quo preservation and search for fresh visions,
cities and local governments experiment a dichotomic tension both as
democratic spaces (poleis) and as accountable bodies in the
multi-level legal framework.

The international conference aims at charting ideas and experiences
that support a claim for a stronger political role of sub-state and
non-state territory-based entities in the global world. Cities and
local communities lay at the intersection between an array of lines
of tensions: they face challenges such as the ecological and social
consequences of climate changes, the impact of development projects
of natural and social environments, ruthless competitions to attract
investments and intercept financial and trade flows, socio-political
conflicts as a result of unresolved religious and ethnic
confrontations, the waves of technological innovations and their
costs.  Migration and new religious and cultural diversity in the
cities raise the necessity for better understanding of urban
identities and question the concept of inclusive city with the new
challenging policies on religious freedom governance, intercultural
and interreligious dialogue with the focus on religious and ethnic
minorities.

New ways of conceptualising human rights and framing human rights
policies are taking shape in these contexts, that seem to depart from
the mainstream human rights koine, leading to output both more
radical and more unstable, including in connection with children’s
rights, women’s rights, anti-racism, participatory urban planning,
cultural participation, etc. Transformative and even transgressive
practices in subsidiarity (“right to the city”, shelter cities,
carbon-free cities, cities and local governments for peace and human
rights…) challenge the conventional forms of multi-level governance.

Against this background, interdisciplinary research is much needed to
shed some light over the transformations that lay ahead, taking the
2030 SDG Agenda as a fundamental yardstick to evaluate progress.

Submissions

Preference will be given to sound proposals which contribute
addressing, from different disciplinary perspectives, one of the
following topics.

Panels topics

1. Smart Cities and Human Rights 
2. Governing New Religious Diversity in the City
3. Microfinance to Start-up Bottom-up Social Changing Initiatives
4. Cities as International Actors – Shifting Normative and Political
   Frameworks
5. Beyond the State-centric Approach to Human Rights – Challenges and
   Opportunities in Human Rights Implementation, Protection and
   Development by Sub-state and Non-state Territory Based Entities
6. Evaluating the City: Problems, Prospects and Migration Flows

Dates and instructions

To participate in the call for papers, please send a pdf file
including the following information:

a) name, affiliation and contact of author/authors (in case of more
   authors, please indicate the name of the corresponding author),
b) a title and an abstract of 250 words maximum and 4-6 key-words,
c) an indication of the panel (title and number) for which the paper
   should be considered,

to centro.dirittium...@unipd.it by 16th September 2018 (midnight).

Notification of acceptance will be sent by 10th October.

For accepted abstracts, the submission of a working paper before the
Conference is strongly encouraged. This will also help the
opportunities of publication.

Conference website:
http://unipd-centrodirittiumani.it/en/attivita/International-Conference-Cities-territories-and-the-struggles-for-human-rights-a-2030-perspective/1192




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to