(Source: H-Net)
We learned of a call for papers for
a conference on war making and peacemaking from Westphalia to the present day.
Call for Papers
Waging war and making peace
European ways of inciting and
containing armed conflict, 1648-2020
Eleventh annual conference of the
Research Network on the
History of the Idea of Europe
Venice, 24-26 June 2020
The history of Europe is as much
about violence and divisions – including religious wars, national clashes and
ideological conflicts – as it is about shared cultural, social and economic
accomplishments. If war has been such a constant presence in the history
unfolding on the continent, the incessant efforts to limit its destructiveness
are also an undeniable fact. It was such efforts that eventually led to the
birth of Jus ad bellum and, ultimately, laid down the
foundations of modern international law. From such a viewpoint, one might even
find another definition of what European history might be. Some scholars have
suggested that if war has structured a common European space, the containment
of violence and the art of peacemaking have constituted ‘Europe’ in thought and
practice. In the second half of the eighteenth century, however, Voltaire
asserted that the propensity to war and destruction had taken much less
possession of the minds of the people of India and China, than of the minds of
Europeans, arguing that war has also constituted ‘Europe’ in thought and
practice.
All this raises the question
what, if anything, may be regarded as ‘typically European’ in ideas of war and
peace that referred to, or originated within, Europe and its space. Scholars
interested in participating in the eleventh annual conference of the Research
Network on the History of the Idea of Europe are invited to consider their
research with regards to the meaning and function that concepts such as
‘Europe’, ‘European’, ‘European civilization’ etc. have within the treatises,
treaty texts, minutes, speeches, propaganda material, and so on. In our
conference discussion, we will try to find out whether there are long-term
patterns of ‘Europe’-related discourses concerning peace and war, and if so,
what they consist of.
These aspects may be considered
in relation to a number of narrower questions, including, but not limited to:
How do Jus ad bellum and the various peace treaties, from
Westphalia 1648 to Paris 1947, and the international conflict-reducing
arrangements, like Minsk 2015, conceive of the nature of war in relation to
ideas of Europe? What were and are the ideas of legitimate, just, and unlawful
war? Who were or are seen as legitimate and illegitimate actors in wartime?
What is the role of terrorism in European perceptions of threat after the
2004–2005 al-Qaeda attacks and the 2015–2017 Islamic State attacks on European
soil? How have the differences between war crimes and the crime of war been
defined? What are, historically, the legal and philosophical bases of peace
treaties? In the European mind, has peace been considered a state of exception,
the prevalent and desirable normality, or a utopian ideal that humanity should
strive for under European leadership? What have been the conceptual differences
between wars amongst Europeans and wars against extra-European populations? Is
there a European long-term pattern of war propaganda and enemy depiction? How
are peace and war related to moral claims within discourses about Europe? How
are efforts to bridge the divide between ‘us’ and the ‘other’ been related to
Europe? How are initiatives of reconciliation and understanding construed in
connection to ideas of Europe?
The themes listed above are
examples and by no means limited to the exclusion of others. Scholars of
history, international law, legal history, philosophy, political science,
literature and any other discipline related to the topic are invited to send
their proposals (max. 300 words, with a title and a short biography) to m.dauria@uea.ac.uk and bellipacisque@libero.it
by December 2nd, 2019. Please note that the working
language will be English. There will be no fees for participating.
Sponsors:
Fondazione Venezia per la Ricerca
sulla Pace; Regional Council of Veneto; Venice City Council; Ca’
Foscari University of Venice; Institute for the Study of Ideas of Europe
(University of East Anglia)
Scientific Committee:
Matthew D’Auria (University of
East Anglia); Fernanda Gallo (University of Cambridge); Florian Greiner
(University of Augsburg); Rolf Petri (Ca' Foscari University of Venice); Laura
Picchio Forlati (University of Padua); Peter Pichler (Karl-Franzens-University
Graz); Jan Vermeiren (University of East Anglia); Anita Ziegerhofer (Karl-Franzens-University
Graz)
Organizational Committee:
Matthew D’Auria (University of
East Anglia); Rolf Petri (Ca' Foscari University of Venice); Jan Vermeiren
(University of East Anglia)
Contact Info:
Dr Matthew D’Auria
Lecturer in Modern European
History and PGR Director
Co-Editor of History: The Journal of the Historical
Association
School of History, University of East Anglia
Norwich, NR47TJ
United Kingdom
School of History, University of East Anglia
Norwich, NR47TJ
United Kingdom
Tel.: +44 (0)1603 59 3661
Contact Email:
(Source: ESILHIL)
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