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Call for Papers

Theme: Nationalism
Subtitle: Diversity and Security
Type: 25th Annual Conference
Institution: London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 21.–23.4.2015
Deadline: 15.12.2014

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Nationalists are concerned that the nation should be secure from both
external and internal threats. When the state is regarded as a
nation-state, these threats are turned into issues of national
security and integrity. On the one hand, there are perceived external
threats from other states and non-state entities such as
international criminal groups and international terrorism. On the
other hand, minorities and immigrants may be perceived as internal
threats, which do not recognise the legitimacy of the nation-state or
are not regarded as truly belonging the nation. Further, in an age of
global migration and porous borders it becomes increasingly important
to define both who belongs to the nation and from whom they should be
protected. This conference considers how both internal and external
threats are becoming ever more connected and changing the nature of
national security and diversity in nation-states.

Each of the three days of the conference will be punctuated by
plenary sessions consisting of presentations from two distinguished
academics. The first plenary usually has a theoretical and general
focus; the second an historical one; and the third is concerned with
contemporary and policy issues. Each provide different perspectives
on the conference’s central theme of the relationship between
nationalism, security and diversity.

Those wishing to take part in the conference are encouraged to
reflect on the many different forms that nationalism, diversity and
security interact. Below we outline a range of possible themes which
might be addressed by those wishing to give a paper to the conference.

The nation-state, national minorities and citizenship

- Is diversity a problem for nation-states? If so, how new is this?
  What changes have resulted in diversity being framed as a problem?
- How have majority/minority relationships been established before
  and within the nation-state?
- Are national minorities inherently a security concern?
- Do national minorities generate new forms of nationalism?
- What role does citizenship play when it comes to security and/or
  national minorities?
- Do national minority policies help or hinder security?
- Is multiculturalism necessary for security in diverse nation-states?
- What role does integration play in the relationship between the
  nation-state and the citizen?
- What role do national institutions play in securing the state?
- How do political parties respond to questions of minority and
  security?
- Do far-right groups represent an attempt to return to the essence
  of nation- states?

Immigration and security

- How and why does mass migration come to be regarded as a cultural
  or an economic or a political threat?
- What is the relationship between nationalism and immigration?
- Why do particular immigrant groups come to be regarded as a
  cultural or an economic or a political threat?
- Does the concern with immigration and immigrants generate new kinds
  of nationalism?
- Do refugees and asylum-seekers pose challenges for nationalism?
- Is statelessness the ultimate form of insecurity?
- What is the relationship between statelessness and nationalism?
- Is immigration policy a manifestation of nationalism?
- Do diaspora communities reinforce nationalism in both ‘host’ and
  ‘origin’ communities?

International relations and transnational dimensions

- How do theories of securitization and of nationalism relate to each
  other?
- When it comes to self-determination, is nationalism itself
  securitized?
- How do transnational organizations such as the UN and the EU affect
  nationalism? How do they affect perceptions of and strategies for
  national security?
- What impact does the international human rights framework have on
  nationalism?
- Are human rights compatible with nationalism?
- Is sovereignty still a valid concept? How does it relate to the
  concept of national security?
- How do nation-states claim responsibility for co-nationals in other
  states? Can this create problems of national security?
- Is international terrorism a threat to national security? Is it
  itself a new form of nationalism?
- What is the relationship between globalization, nationalism and
  security?
- How do non-state entities (criminal groups, diasporas, radical
  Islamists, etc.) make claims upon national minorities or immigrant
  groups? How do nation- states respond to such claims?
- Can nationalism ever be truly international?
- Must the security of one nation-state be secured at the cost of the
  security of others?

Please submit your abstract online by 15 December at:
http://asen.ac.uk/submit-an-abstract/

Your abstract should be no longer than 250 words and include your
name, institutional affiliation and title, when appropriate. Please
ensure that you highlight how your paper relates to the conference
theme and the central questions it asks.

Please email confere...@asen.ac.uk if you have any queries.

Conference website:
http://asen.ac.uk/conference/conference-2015/




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