Research Training Seminar
“The Concepts of Republic: Local, Regional and International”
co-organized by the international research network CONCEPTA and the research center Res Publica, European University at St Petersburg
December 6-7, 2012
Venue: European University at St Petersburg, Russia
Republicanism seeks to conceive of forms of government that can secure freedom as non-domination and provide for wider political participation than the dominant paradigm of liberalism. This is partly the reason why republicanism has become a central concern in political theory and conceptual history in recent years. The aim of the seminar is to explore various understandings, conceptual change and re-description in the history of republic and republicanism.
For this seminar we invite contributions addressing the history of the concept of republic in three distinct political settings: city-republics, regional powers and community of nations. We are particularly interested in comparative conceptual histories of republicanism in the European Northern and Southern city-republics and Russian North-Western regions, in the late Middle Ages, early modern and modern periods. We also encourage submissions addressing the history of this concept in other regions. In addition to these regular forms of republics, we welcome aggregate-level analyses of real or imagined republics. These may include conceptions of various political unions as aggregate republics, such as the “united States” and Europe, and discussions of the impacts a republican constitution might have on the relations among nations.
Contributions to the seminar may also focus on the conceptualizations of the institutional structures of republics, the shifts in identification of model republics by republican theorists, and the connection of republican constitution to its material infrastructure. At the international level, contributions may inquire into the debates on alternative forms of international political organization, which could ensure the basic principle of non-domination, but for various reasons disappeared from the list of viable options and key political terms. Submissions in the field of contextual and diachronic studies, where special attention is paid to rhetorical means of applying the concept of republic and adapting it to changing political circumstances, are equally welcome. The overall objective is to contribute to the debate over the role of republicanism in different political settings by drawing attention to non-conventional examples of republican forms and new historical sources in textual domains, ranging from natural law, pamphlets and poetry to city statutes and charters.
Keynote lectures by Professor Quentin Skinner (Queen Mary, University of London) and Professor Martin van Gelderen (European University Institute, Florence).
The Research Training Seminar will be followed by the conference on the history of European and Russian city republics, December 8-9, 2012. All participants are kindly invited to attend.
Call for applications will be open in early 2012
Deadline for applications: August 2012
Visa: You will need to acquire a visa to enter the Russian Federation. The organizers will send invitations to selected participants.
Language: English
Finances: No attendance fee will be charged. The organizers will provide a few partial travel grants.
Contact: Evgeny Roshchin email: firstname.lastname@jyu.fi