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Call for Papers

Theme: Moderation and its Discontents
Subtitle: Religion, Rights and Social Justice
Type: International Workshop
Institution: Department of Sociology, University of Warwick
Location: Coventry (United Kingdom)
Date: 23.–25.6.2014
Deadline: 7.2.2014

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With the rise of neoliberal globalisation in the early 21st Century,
the world is undergoing complex and rapid economic and political
transformations. The apparent arrival of a ‘post-secular’ moment in
the West, in which religion has re-entered the public square in
multicultural liberal democracies like Britain and further unsettled
debates about rights, secularism and ‘truth’, further signals a world
‘in flux’. The threat of both ‘home-grown’ terrorism and racist
violence, as witnessed last year with the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby
in Woolwich and Pavlo Lapshyn’s attempted bombings of mosques in the
West Midlands, intensifies again these anxieties and uncertainties.
This has prompted some now to argue for a project of moderation to
mitigate the effects of crisis and indeterminacy associated with
market-based policies and the so-called ‘culture wars’ they have
provoked. Indeed, moderation has been fiercely argued in relation to
combating Islamic extremism and finding an enduring peace in the
Middle East. It has also been the subject of US debate in relation to
issues of electoral polarisation and Church-State separation.

But what does ‘moderation’ actually mean? And what might a reasoned
project of moderation look like – intellectually, politically and in
practice? This interdisciplinary workshop builds on the arguments of
Alex Smith and John Holmwood in their edited volume Sociologies of
Moderation: problems of democracy, expertise and the media (2013,
Wiley Blackwell) to suggest that moderation is better understood as a
disciplined engagement with divided publics rather than a doctrine
devoid of intellectual commitment or moral courage. Papers are
therefore invited from scholars working in any field of the arts,
humanities and social sciences on issues relating to the conference
theme. Working with an expanded definition of moderation,
contributions on the following topics would be particularly welcome:

- Democracy, multiculturalism and interfaith dialogue
- Citizenship, human rights and social justice
- Education, expertise and the media
- Publics versus markets
- Pragmatism and social theory
- Religion, secularism and science

Please send abstracts to Dr Alexander Smith at
alexander.sm...@warwick.ac.uk no later than 17.00 on Friday, 7
February 2014. Those selected to give papers will be informed by the
end of February. Abstracts should be no longer than 250 words and
should be attached as a Word document with your institutional
affiliation and position.

The workshop is being generously supported by funding from Warwick
University’s Research Development Fund, the Global Research Priority
‘Connecting Cultures’ and the Department of Sociology. Reasonable
travel and accommodation expenses within the UK will be reimbursed to
those selected to present papers. A condition of being selected will
be that the conference organiser reserves the first right of
rejection for publication of the paper. For further details on
publication plans, please contact Dr Smith.

Keynote speakers:
Professor Bob Antonio (Sociology, University of Kansas)
Professor Danielle Allen (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
Professor John Holmwood (Sociology, University of Nottingham)
Dr Rowan Williams (ex-Archbishop of Canterbury)


Contact:

Dr Alexander Smith
Department of Sociology
University of Warwick
Coventry, CV4 7AL
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0)24 7615 1958
Fax: +44 (0)24 7652 3497
Email: alexander.sm...@warwick.ac.uk




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