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Announcement

Publication: CEACOP Series in East Asian Comparative Ethics, Politics,
and Philosophy of Law
Institution: Center for East Asian and Comparative Philosophy
(CEACOP), City University of Hong Kong
   Rowman and Littlefield
Editors: Prof. Philip J. Ivanhoe, Dr. Sungmoon Kim, Dr. Eirik Lang
Harris

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This new monograph series by Rowman and Littlefield International is
organized and overseen in cooperation with the Center for East Asian
and Comparative Philosophy (CEACOP), which is located in the
Department of Public Policy at City University of Hong Kong. We
publish path-breaking and field-defining works in East Asian
comparative ethics with a special interest in works of normative and
applied ethics, political theory, and philosophy of law. We seek
works that are more historically grounded as well as those that are
more focused on contemporary affairs and problems that meet the
standards of clarity and argumentative rigor characteristic of the
best philosophy in the Anglo-American tradition. We expect more
historically grounded works will demonstrate a sophisticated
sensitivity and approach to issues of historical context and
interpretation while wholly contemporary works will begin from and
respond to issues of relevance to modern East Asian and Western
societies. Ideal manuscript length is 80,000 words, but works on
either side of this standard can under certain circumstances be
accommodated. Monographs that incorporate empirically-based research
in the social sciences are most welcome. We do not accept manuscripts
for review that have not passed an initial proposal screening
process. Complete proposals, meeting the guidelines described below
are welcome by electronic submission.

In terms of geographic area, we seek manuscripts that take as their
focus the ethical, political, or legal thought of one or more of the
following East Asian cultures: China, Korea, or Japan. Studies that
compare the thought of one or more of these cultures with one another
or with parts of the Western philosophical tradition are most
welcome. As noted above, we are equally interested in works that are
grounded in and focused upon traditional philosophy as well as
contemporary thought or that rely upon careful empirical research as
part of their method. In every case, we seek works that draw such
resources into the service of original, constructive philosophical
projects that make significant contributions to contemporary legal,
political, and normative or applied ethical theory.

Our guiding aim is to contribute original, constructive analytical
works to the fields of East Asian and comparative philosophy. While
we insist that these works honor and accurately present the East
Asian and Western sources that serve as their basis, our goal is to
produce publications that will engage, challenge, and contribute to
on-going debates and controversies in contemporary legal, political,
and ethical theory. We aim to produce books that will be read by
non-specialists as well as specialists in East Asian ethics,
politics, and law and that will find a privileged place within the
canonical writings in these disciplines.

We find it regrettable that it is still possible to find published
works on The History of Ethics, The History of Political Theory, or
Philosophy of Law that are exclusively focused on the Western
tradition, as if great traditions of ethics, politics, and law do not
exist outside the West. It is our firm belief that those who fail to
study these and other disciplines from a comparative perspective are
profoundly limited in their understanding of even their home
traditions. Without the benefit of comparative study, one is too
easily led to take the particular nature and history of one’s
tradition as representing or defining the realm of possible theory
and practice and attribute ontological status to contingent features
of human experience. Such assumptions are naïve, provincial, and
constrained. In order to address this state of affairs, we feel a
grand imperative to introduce a new series that respects the
distinctive features and qualities of East Asian sources but also
values and is fully conversant with the best ethical and political
thought in the Western tradition. We are committed to bringing East
and West into deep, productive, and mutually enriching dialogue.

Guidelines for proposal preparation and submission

Proposals should be submitted using the Proposal Form available on
our web page:
http://www6.cityu.edu.hk/ceacop/RLISeriesProposalForm.doc

Completed proposals should be no less than ten and no more than
twenty pages in length. They should offer a clear and comprehensive
introduction to the aims and content of the work, including a
chapter-by-chapter synopsis of its contents, and a description of the
work’s intended audience. Our strong preference is to receive
proposals for completed manuscripts; if the manuscript is not
completed, please clearly describe how much of the work is completed
at the time of submission and a projected date of completion. If any
part of the manuscript previously has been published, in any
language, please make clear when and where as well as how much of the
work has been published. Please send completed proposal forms, along
with complete current CVs of all the work’s authors or editors, as MS
Word attachments to: cea...@cityu.edu.hk with “Submission for the
CEACOP Series in East Asian Comparative Ethics” in the subject line.


Contact:

Prof. Philip J. Ivanhoe, Dr. Sungmoon Kim, Dr. Eirik Lang
Center for East Asian and Comparative Philosophy (CEACOP)
City University of Hong Kong
3B, Block 1, To Yuen Building
Kowloon Tong
Hong Kong
Email: cea...@cityu.edu.hk
Web: http://www6.cityu.edu.hk/ceacop/CEACOP_series.html




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