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Call for Papers

Theme: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on European Solidarity
Type: International Conference
Institution: University of the West of England, Bristol
Location: Bristol (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–25.6.2019
Deadline: 24.3.2019

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20th-century European history can be understood as a progressive
crisis and transformation of core institutions and ideas (such as
democracy, the nation state, civil society) that continue shaping the
framework of contemporary political life. The defining experiences of
European transformation – World Wars, the Cold War, the collapse of
Communist regimes, post-1989 – placed a theoretical and practical
strain on well-established institutional and conceptual structures.
Through-out these transformations, the search for new, or renewed,
institutions and ideas defined the course of Europe, as an idea as
well as a reality.

Among those indispensable ideas belonging to the project of Europe is
the concept of solidarity. Solidarity is not only the theoretical
lynchpin within the constellation of contemporary political concepts.
It is equally central for political movements and the public
discourse of European institutions. Recent events (Brexit, revived
xenophobia, the immigration crisis), however, have further amplified
the profound challenge in theoretically stabilizing the concept of
solidarity as well as in mobilizing political and social movements in
the name of solidarity. Despite various attempts by European
institutions to foster solidarity, both legally (as stated in the
“Solidarity Clause” of the Lisbon Treaty) and practically (with
initiatives such as the European Solidarity Corps), a deficit of
solidarity is becoming more and more apparent whenever Europe is
faced with humanitarian and political crises which require an appeal
to concrete solidarity.

Given the increasing lack of mutual trust and apparent breakdown of
solidarity across the European political spectrum, one might ask
whether solidarity, understood as a moral, political, legal, and
economic principle, is still imaginable within European borders. No
political or religious principle of identity seems today to be
capable of generating such a trust; no institution appears to foster
the kind of solidarity required for such trust.

Over the past decade, numerous scholars from a variety of disciplines
that encompass moral and political philosophy and theory (Scholz
2008; Sangiovanni 2013; Wilde 2013; De Witte 2015; Kolers 2016;
Grimmel and Mi Giang 2017), legal studies (Wolfrum and Kojima 2010;
Biondi, Dagilytė, Küçük 2018), science and technology studies (Sharon
2016; Liboiron 2016; Hendrickx and Van Hoyweghen 2018), and migration
studies and economics (Agustín and Bak Jorgensen 2018; Della Porta
2018) engaged the problem of solidarity and attempted a substantial
redefinition of the meaning and practical implementation of
solidarity in today’s reality. Whilst the majority of these analyses
addressed the general idea of solidarity, some of them have Europe as
their main research scope although they are not limited to it.

Despite the abundance of bibliographic sources on this topic, there
is a substantial lack of interdisciplinary investigations of
solidarity, a gap this conference aims to fill. Which moral
obligations and political agenda can foster the establishment of
European solidarity? Does a ‘right to solidarity’ exist, and which
legal validity and legitimate application could this right have? What
is the meaning and impact of solidarity on EU people? We welcome
abstracts that address the concept of solidarity using resources
drawn from this multidisciplinary seam of investigations and
analyses. Contributions that will fall within the following research
clusters will be particularly welcome.

- Migration & Transnationalism
- Vulnerability & Resilience
- Citizenship & the Public Sphere
- Social Justice & Development
- Technology & Responsible Innovation
- Identities & Social Representations
- Agency and Policy
- Legality and Legitimacy

Please submit abstracts (max: 500 words) before 24th March 2019.
Decisions of accepted papers will be communicated by 1st April.

Abstracts as well as queries can be submitted to:
[email protected] and [email protected]




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