(Source: Ntaunomy)
We learned of a call for papers
for a conference on territorial and non-territorial aspects in accommodating
national diversity within states at the University of Vienna.
We invite scholars for an
in-depth exploration of territorial and non-territorial aspects in
accommodating national diversity within states, from the French Revolution to the
end of the Cold War in Europe and beyond.
We welcome proposals that tackle
the interplay between the dimensions of territory, group, and the individual
from both theoretical and empirical perspectives. Since the late 18th century
states have increasingly perceived ethno-national diversity as an issue to be
addressed through policy. Voluntarily or not, some of them responded to this
challenge by granting positive rights to individuals, groups or territories.
What interests us is the relationship between these various approaches and
whether they can be treated separately at all. While the accommodation of
national diversity is commonly associated with territorial arrangements,
ethno-national groups could also be conceived of separately from specific territories.
Yet, one could also argue that even fully fledged non-territorial solutions
based solely on the “personality principle” nevertheless have to take
territorial issues into account for administrative purposes. By exploring how
theoreticians or political protagonists engaged in entangling or disentangling
both ideas and policies about territory and nation, we hope to shed new light
on the chequered history of accommodating national diversity. We invite a broad
range of scholars (historians, political scientists, legal scholars,
anthropologists, sociologists, geographers and political philosophers) to
submit papers dealing with the above-outlined problems.
We are especially interested in
presentations that focus on one or several of the following agents: governments,
bodies claiming to represent national groups, parties and other political
organisations, supranational organisations, as well as individual politicians,
scholars (including legal scholars) and national and minority activists.
Possible topics to be addressed
through the lens of territoriality and non-territoriality include, but are not
limited to:
- Theories of national diversity
accommodation
– federalism, non-territorial
autonomy, consociationalism, collective rights
- Case studies of attempts to
accommodate national diversity - Discourses on territoriality and groupness -
National ideologies and party programmes - Liberal citizenship, legal equality
and group rights
– complementarity and conflict
- Accommodating national
diversity in non-liberal and authoritarian settings
- The scope, extent and content
of national autonomy - managing national diversity in colonies and former
colonies
- Indigenous groups and state
territory
- International minority
protection
The conference will take place at
the University of Vienna between April the 2nd and 4th of 2020. Keynote
addresses will be given by Prof. Jana Osterkamp (University of Munich) and
Prof. Yonatan Fessha (University of the Western Cape). Accommodation will be
fully covered by the organisers. Partial reimbursement of travel costs will
also be available. The working language of the conference will be English.
Please send paper proposals of no more than 400 words and a brief CV to
ntautonomy.iog@univie.ac.at by January the 8th 2020.
More info at the project website
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