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Call for Papers

Theme: Nationalism and Self-Determination
Type: 29th ASEN Annual Conference
Institution: Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism
(ASEN)
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–25.4.2019
Deadline: 15.11.2018

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The Paris Peace Conference of 1919 and the establishment of the
League of Nations in 1920 mark key moments in the attempt to build an
‘international community’ to settle disputes between nation-states
fairly and without resort to violence. It thus stands beside the
Peace of Westphalia, or the Congress of Vienna as a landmark attempt
to build a lasting peace after a protracted and highly destructive
war.

Unlike these previous Eurocentric moments, Paris was a global affair
dominated by the triumphant western powers. The decision to apply
Woodrow Wilson’s principle of national self-determination to the
territories of the defeated powers raised the question of its more
general application. There were subjects of formal and informal
colonial rule urging the extension of the principle (e.g., Ireland,
China, Vietnam, India), as well as many states opposed (irredentist
Italy, defeated Germany and Hungary, expansionist Japan, the new
Soviet Union). Creating nation-states brought with it the problem of
national minorities. Wilson had, in the words of his Secretary of
State, opened a “Pandora’s box”.

This conference looks at the world of nation-states shaped,
successfully or not, by the assumptions and the realpolitik of 1919
and its long aftermath. Its key themes focus on nationalism,
nationalities, self-determination, national and ethnic minorities,
and international relations over the last century and into the next.
On the surface the principle of national self-determination has
triumphed. In 1923 the League of Nations had 23 members, and much of
the world was under formal imperial rule. Today there are 193 members
of the United Nations – successor to the League – and formal empire
has virtually disappeared. The events played out at Versailles
sparked a wave of nationalism that is still resonating globally today.

The conference aims to explore the short and long term consequences
of the events of 1919-20. In the short term there are issues such as
creating nation-states, dealing with national minorities within those
states, and managing the new international conflicts that were
created. In the longer term there is the question of how and why the
nation-state has come to be regarded as the key unit of the
international community, and what this has meant for nationalism,
national and ethnic identity, state sovereignty, and international
relations.

The conference is intended to cover cases from all parts of the world
and welcomes papers based on different theoretical perspectives and
methodological approaches, and from different disciplines and fields,
such as political science, sociology, history, IR and law.

Themes include:

- The theory and practice of national self-determination
- The destruction of empires and the construction of new nation-states
- The Paris Peace Conference and League views on gender, class and
  race
- Nationalism and opposition to the League of Nations
- The (alternative) Bolshevik vision of nationhood
- The League of Nations and minorities questions
- The impact of national self-determination on inter-war empires
- The fall of empires and the formation of nation-states after 1945
- Evaluating the concept of national self-determination today
- National identity as a precondition of statehood
- The nation-state as the key objective of nationalist movements
- Nations without states: nationalism opposed to existing
  nation-states

Abstract submission

Please, submit your abstract by 15 November 2018. Abstracts should be
no longer than 250 words and they must include a working title and
the position and affiliation of the author. You should expect to
speak for no more than 15 minutes. Please ensure that you highlight
how your paper relates to the conference theme and its central
questions. Co-authored papers must be submitted by only one of the
authors and panel submissions must be indicated on the ‘Extra notes’
section.

Enquiries

For any enquiries in relation to the conference, please contact the
ASEN Coordinator at: a...@asen.ac.uk

Conference website:
http://asen.ac.uk/events/asen-conference/




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