CFP From Roger Ventura Cossin, KU Leuven:
Call
for Papers
International
conference on
Constitutional Communities
When: 8-9
February 2024
Where: KU
Leuven (Institute of Philosophy and Faculty of Law), Belgium
Deadline
for abstract submissions: 25 October 2023
Theme:
Today almost all countries are “constitutional communities” in a
broad sense: their constitution provides the basic framework for their common
life. This link between community and constitution is increasingly recognized
and there is a growing awareness of the potential of constitutions for societal
integration. Jürgen Habermas, with his notion of constitutional patriotism,
made the case for a collective identity that does not rely on ethnic
nationalism. At the same time, the belief that a constitutional document can be
the source of a liberal collective identity has been criticized from various
angles. A constitution is typically anchored at the national level, while in a
globalized world social integration happens at many different levels. Moroever,
courts have used the concept of “constitutional identity” to justify divergent
interpretations of the rule of law and human rights and to uphold populist
claims. Indigenous people sometimes see constitutional recognition as a new
form of assimilation. And some critics have claimed that the concept is empty
and abstract: constitutional principles are mostly the same across borders so
how can they inspire a sense of community?
These developments raise important questions. How do constitutions
create communities? Can they
really do so? And should they?
These questions can be answered from different disciplinary perspectives.
Scholars in constitutional law and in the history of law have studied the
working of constitutions since long. But legal and political philosophy should
also weigh in, as philosophers from the past and the present have amply studied
the relation between written laws and community. The issue of constitutional identity
can also be approached from an empirical sociological perspective or even from
a literary perspective, as it is ultimately the agency of a text that is at
stake here.
By engaging in an interdisciplinary dialogue about constitutions
and community, this conference aims to explore the impact that constitutions
have and can have in the functioning of communities, and to contribute to
our understanding of the concept of constitutional identity.
Possible paper
topics:
- Constitutions and community building
- National and/or constitutional identity as legal
instruments
- The relation between constitutional identity and affiliated
notions (sovereignty, constituent power, representation, …)
- Constitutional recognition (of minorities, historically
oppressed groups, rights of nature, …)
- Constitutional change
- Specific philosophers on the role of constitutions
- Constitutions as a literary genre
Submitting your
abstract:
If you are interested in presenting your work at this conference,
please submit an anonymized abstract (max. 400 words, in .doc, .docx or
.pdf format) along with your name, title, and affiliation via e-mail to
Ana Van Liedekerke (ana.vanliedekerke@kuleuven.be). The actual
presentations can be 15 to 20 minutes long. Abstract should be submitted on 25
October 2023 (CET) at the latest. If accepted, you will be invited to develop
your abstract into a full paper of around 5000 words; papers will be
precirculated to all conference participants. We welcome submissions both
from junior and from senior scholars. We especially encourage scholars from
underrepresented groups to apply.
Conference Fee: There
will be a registration fee of 75 euro to participate in the conference (40
euro for those attending just one day and reduced prices for KU Leuven
students) and an additional fee of 75 euro for those wanting to attend the
conference dinner.
Organizers: Raf
Geenens, Stefan Sottiaux, Christophe Maes, Roger Ventura Cossin, Ana Van
Liedekerke.
This conference is organized by RIPPLE (Research in Political
Philosophy and Ethics Leuven) and the Leuven Centre for Public Law. It is part
of an interdisciplinary research project on constitutional identity, jointly
hosted by KU Leuven's Institute of Philosophy and KU Leuven's Faculty of Law
and funded by FWO, the Research Foundation Flanders.
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