Workshop/CfP - Contested Liberal World Order – Nationalist Challenges for Multilateralism, 6 - 7 June 2019, Germany

Publish Date: Jan 18, 2019

Deadline: Jan 31, 2019

Event Dates: from Jun 06, 2019 12:00 to Jun 07, 2019 12:00

Call for Papers for the workshop “Contested Liberal World Order – Nationalist Challenges for Multilateralism”, 6.-7. June 2019, LMU Munich

The liberal world order is in crisis. National populist movements in the core countries of liberalism are on the advance. Parties with a nationalist and Eurosceptic agenda such as the French Rassemblement National (formerly Front National), the UK Independence Party (UKIP) or the Alternative for Germany (AfD) are increasingly receiving support. In the USA, Hungary, Poland and Austria, politicians with similar attitudes participate in the government.

This development has far-reaching consequences for multilateral cooperation, which appeared to be taken for granted at the latest since the end of the East-West conflict:

  • On the one hand, the international scope for action for liberal governments is restricted by a growing populist opposition. Due to national resistance, the member states of the European Union (EU) have so far been unable to agree on a solution to the so-called ‘refugee crisis’.
  • On the other hand, nationalist and populist governments are fundamentally questioning the traditional liberal value base within international institutions. US President Donald Trump, for example, criticizes the principle of free trade enshrined in the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The workshop, sponsored by the GraduateCenterLMU, will examine the causes and consequences of these current re-nationalization tendencies in international politics and examine them from an inter- and multidisciplinary perspective. Possible research questions are:

  • What effects does the success of nationalist movements have on the actions of liberal governments at the international level?
  • What role do new nationalist governments play within existing international institutions? More precisely, when do nationalist governments criticize international institutions – such as the United States in NATO – and when do they withdraw from them – such as in the case of Brexit Britain's withdrawal from the EU?
  • Which values and norms anchored in international institutions attack national-populist politicians, which remain undisputed?
  • How do international organizations react to the populist challenge? For instance, does a change in institutional design and working methods take place, or can new legitimation strategies be identified?

We invite all interested doctoral students and post-docs to send their proposals for a contribution (abstracts with a maximum of 300 words) by e-mail until January 31th 2019 to contested-world-order@gsi.lmu.de.

During the workshop, five established experts will discuss the submitted contributions: Dr. Caroline Fehl (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, PRIF), Prof. Orfeo Fioretos (Temple University), Prof. Lora Viola (FU Berlin), Prof. Berthold Rittberger (LMU Munich), and Prof. Bernhard Zangl (LMU Munich).

Accepted participants will be notified by mid-February and have to submit their contribution by 24 May 2019. Travel grants for external participants from outside Munich are limited available.

For more information click "LINK TO ORIGINAL" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

https://www.contested-world-order.gsi.uni-muenchen.de/call/index.html

Similar Opportunities


Disciplines

Governance

Policy

Study Levels

Doctoral

Postdoctoral

Opportunity Types

Grants

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

Germany

Conference Types

Call for Papers

Event Types

Workshops