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Call for Applications

Theme: Conceptualising Community
Type: Conference & PhD Summer School
Institution: Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society, and Rule of Law
(CISRUL), University of Aberdeen
Location: Aberdeen / The Burn, Scotland (United Kingdom)
Date: 30.–31.5.2022 / 1.–2.6.2022
Deadline: 15.2.2022

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Community is among the foremost political concepts. Coexistence,
human or otherwise, inevitably raises questions about how this
togetherness should be conceptualised and how the politics of
community is or should be carried out.

Questions regarding the ways in which communities are formed, who is
included or excluded by them, and what rights or access this allows
or curtails, remain central to many of the experiences and struggles
that dominate today’s social and political landscape. Indeed,
political struggles are often if not always concerned with
communities who share experiences of oppression, contesting exclusion
from a wider dominant community, or pushing for the creation or
recognition of alternate communities. Given the centrality of
community to politics across the world and throughout history, the
concept is in continual need of critical analysis, reflection, and
(re)thinking.

This conference aims to bring together scholars from a wide variety
of disciplines to critically explore, question, and interrogate
‘community’ as a political concept, including how it is used by
people all over the world in structuring their lives. How, on what
basis, and to what effect do different understandings of community
inform politics and contemporary political struggles? Are communities
always constituted by exclusion, and to what extent is this
justified? What role has community played in current global
experiences including the COVID-19 pandemic and climate and
ecological crises? What role does or should community play in every
facet of social and political life, including education, media,
religion, law, and social movements? And vice versa, how do these
aspects inform and create new forms of community and new ways of
sharing coexistence? With this in mind, this conference aims to
explore not only political communities, but also other forms of
community, including but not limited to religious and moral
communities, as well as how these interrelate.

We also intend to explore the concept of community on a more abstract
theoretical level. What does ‘community’ mean in the first place? To
what extent does the concept of community presuppose sameness, and
what degree of difference can it accommodate? How did contemporary
philosophical understandings emerge historically, and to what extent
is community still a useful concept for contemporary politics? How
does community relate to, or oppose, other concepts (for example,
society)? To what degree are mainstream understandings of community
Eurocentric?

We welcome conceptual and empirical submissions from a multitude of
disciplines, including but not limited to philosophy, sociology,
politics, international relations, anthropology, law, de- and
postcolonial studies, feminism, critical theory, education, and media
studies.


Keynote speakers

Gerald Taylor Aiken (Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research)
Dilar Dirik (University of Oxford)
Bonnie Honig (Brown University)


Practical information and how to apply

The conference will be held at the Old Aberdeen campus of the
University of Aberdeen. This will be followed by a PhD summer school
at The Burn, a country house in Aberdeenshire, where PhD work in
progress as well as key texts on community will be discussed in a
more informal setting.

- To apply for the conference:
Prospective conference speakers are invited to submit an abstract of
200-400 words to present a paper.

- To apply for the summer school:
PhD candidates are invited to submit a 1-2 page letter in which they
describe their thesis and, where appropriate, its relevance to
‘community’, along with their motivation for attending the summer
school.

PhD candidates can choose to apply to either or both events, but are
expected to attend (if not present at) the conference if they are
applying to the summer school.

All submissions should be sent to conceptualisingcommun...@abdn.ac.uk
by 15 February 2022.

Please include your name(s), affiliated institution/organisation, and
where appropriate, the title of your paper. PhD candidates should
also indicate their status, and whether they are applying to one or
both events.

Accommodation, lunch and dinners are included for all participants.
Travel funding of up to £250 is included for PhD candidates. Speakers
can apply for travel funding up to £250. We encourage travel to
Aberdeen by other means than flying where possible, whether for all
or part of your journey. Should the default funding be insufficient
to cover travel to Aberdeen by rail, bus, or other forms of public
transport, successful applicants are invited to get in touch so
requests can be considered on needs-based grounds.

This event is hosted by the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society,
and Rule of Law (CISRUL) at the University of Aberdeen. It is
organised by Maxim van Asseldonk and Elise Boyle Espinosa:
conceptualisingcommun...@abdn.ac.uk




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