CFP: MANCEPT Workshop - Global Justice beyond States?

Submission deadline: May 17, 2021

Conference date(s):
September 8, 2021 - September 10, 2021

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

Manchester Centre for Political Theory (MANCEPT), University of Manchester
Manchester, United Kingdom

Topic areas

Details

Global Justice beyond States? is one of the workshops at the 2021 MANCEPT Workshops in Political Theory. The workshops will be held online.

Our world faces some pressing global problems. For example, we are currently in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, and affluent states are beginning to roll out the first phase of vaccination for high-priority groups. These states make up just 14% of the world’s population, and yet have secured 53% of the most promising vaccines. This situation has been described as unjustifiable ‘vaccine nationalism’, since wealthy countries have prioritised the health needs and economic interests of their own populations instead of supporting a just programme for global vaccine distribution.

One possible interpretation of these events is that they are representative of broader issues in the way we address global problems. In recent years, scholars have become increasingly critical of state-centric approaches to philosophical theorising and international practice. Cosmopolitans like Seyla Benhabib (2020) argue that the state-based perspective ‘denies the radical fluidity, historical variability and interdependence of peoples, histories, cultures, and territories on both sides of the border’. In the philosophy of migration, Alex Sager (2018) claims that state-centric approaches have ‘failed to recognize how profoundly migration disrupts dominant political categories’.

Similarly, Thomas Piketty (2020) suggests that although the current principles by which the world is organised seem impossible to supersede, ‘in reality they stem from a very specific type of political-ideological regime’ that must be overcome if we are to address problems like rising inequality and climate change. Arguing that ‘the frame within which political action is imagined must be permanently rethought’, he proposes a federalist model for transnational governance. 

On the other hand, various scholars have defended state-centric ways of responding to international problems. According to Michael Blake’s ‘institutional conservatism’ (2013), ‘we have reason to take the forms of political institution we have as provisionally settled, and see what these institutions would have to do in order to be justified’. Similarly, Gillian Brock (2020) suggests that ‘administrative structures are important in our quest to secure justice’, and since states are the best administrative structures we have, our first aim should be to make the state system legitimate.

This panel seeks to explore the value of state-centric responses to global issues in both theory and practice. We welcome papers on topics in global justice that examine the benefits and/or limitations of the state system, including those discussing non-state political actors and various forms of transnational governance. Potential areas of discussion include, but are not limited to:

  • Statist vs cosmopolitan approaches to distributive justice
  • Ways to achieve international justice in times of crisis, like the Covid-19 pandemic
  • The role of states and non-state actors in migration and displacement
  • States as the primary protectors of human rights
  • Whether a state-led approach can achieve an effective response to the climate emergency
  • The effectiveness of international law and international institutions
  • The effects of global capitalism on the pursuit of domestic justice
  • The legacies of empire and colonialism in the constitution of the state system

Abstracts should be 500-1000 words and should be sent by Monday 17th May 2020 to Mike Gadomski ([email protected]) and Eilidh Beaton ([email protected]).

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