CFP: Multiculturalism and Obligation: Individual, Group, Society, and State
Submission deadline: June 1, 2014
                            Conference date(s):
                             September 8, 2014 -  September 10, 2014
                        
Conference Venue:
                        Manchester Centre for Political Theory (MANCEPT), University of Manchester
                        
                        Manchester,
                        United Kingdom
                    
Topic areas
Details
Multiculturalism and Obligations: Individual, Group, Society, and State.
 
 MANCEPT Workshops - September 8/10 2014
 
 Convenor: Domenico Melidoro (Center for Ethics and Global Politics, LUISS
 University of Rome)
Deadline for submitting the abstracts: June 1st 2014
 
 The debate on multiculturalism, independently from its placement within
 liberalism, has largely been focused on three main issues: 1) the
 possibility of recognizing some rights to people in reason of their
 belonging to some sort of groups; 2) the nature and the limits of admissible
 cultural diversity; 3) the proper attitude of state towards this diversity.
 A fundamental, but often neglected or underdeveloped, issue concerns the
 nature and the limits of the obligations binding individuals to the other
 actors involved in the academic and political controversies over
 multiculturalism: groups, state, and society understood as that social space
 between groups and state.
 
 A serious and systematic discussion on the obligations individuals owe to
 their group, society, and state might have significant consequences on how
 the other multicultural issues have to be faced. For instance, the strength
 and the kind of the obligation someone owes to the group to which she
 belongs might have direct bearings on how we can account for minority rights
 and for the relationship between individual and the state. The more a group
 exercise legitimate authority over an individual the more it can constrain
 individual behaviour and ask for collective rights. From a completely
 different and less multicultural oriented standpoint, if one aims at denying
 any legitimate power to groups, one could argue that states are the only
 legitimate political entities that can bind individuals. Finally, those
 libertarian or anarchical scholars who object to the legitimacy of the state
 in favour of the power of the groups have to devote some systematic effort
 to work out a convincing theory of the obligations binding individuals to
 groups.
 
 Thus, the connections between traditional multicultural issues and the
 theory of obligation represents a research field worthy to be explored both
 from political theorists interested in multiculturalism and from those
 interested in obligations. A collective work on these questions might enrich
 both the communities of scholars.The workshop invites submission on the following (and related) topics:
 
 -          obligations and multiculturalism
 
 -          the obligations of the individuals: groups, society, and state
 
 -          nature and limits of the obligations
 
 -          multiculturalism and the anarchical challenge: individuals with
 no obligations at all?
 
 -          is a unique theory able to account for all the obligations an
 individual owe to group, society, and state?
 
 Professor John Horton (Keele University) will be the keynote speaker of the
 workshop. The other paper givers will be selected through this call for
 abstracts.
 
 If you are interested in participating in this workshop, please submit an
 abstract (up to 1000 words) to [email protected] by June 1st 2014.
 You will receive notice of the acceptance of the abstract by June 10 2014.
