Centrum pro studium politické filosofie, etiky a náboženství spolupořádá mezinárodní konferenci Republikanismus v dějinách politické filosofie a dnes. Konference proběhne 3.-4.11.2017. Dalšími pořadateli jsou Institut politologických studií FSV UK a Anglo-American University.
Praktické informace ke konferenci najdete ZDE.
Kompletní program:
Friday, November 3rd
8.30 – 9.00 AM Registraion
9.00 – 11.00 AM Panel Session 1
Room 2.07 | Panel 1.1 | Historical Forms of Republicanism |
Håvard Nilsen | Chair | |
Tomáš Korda | Hegel‘s Critique of Republicanism | |
Konstanty Kuzma | Learning from the Present? Understanding Hegel’s Vorrede to the Philosophy of Right | |
Lukas Perutka | The Mexican Adventure of Maximilian I and Its Influence on Czech Republicanism | |
Benjamin Slingo | Scholastic Republicanism: A Paradoxical Episode in the History of Political Thought | |
Room 3.26 | Panel 1.2 | Republicanism in Central Europe |
Jakub Jirsa | Chair | |
Elżbieta Ciżewska-Martyńska | The Republicanism of the Polish Solidarity Movement and the Challenges of Today | |
Agata Czarnecka | The Republican Tradition and Its Influence on the Polish Soul | |
Milán Pap | Revolution as Republican Moment: The Case of Hungary | |
Jaroslava Pospíšilová | Silent Citizenship in V4 Countries | |
Room 3.12 | Panel 1.3 | Republicanism and Power Inequality |
Matthew Hoye | Chair | |
Alan Coffee | A Radical Revolution in Thought: A Slave’s Perspective on Republican Freedom and Social Reconstruction | |
Dorothea Gädeke | Against Interactional Domination | |
Jan Géryk | Reconciling Human Rights and Utopian Projects: Republicanism as an Alternative? | |
Iain McDaniel | Republicanism against Caesarism in Nineteenth Century Europe |
11.00 – 11.30 AM Coffee Break
11.30 – 1.30 PM Panel Session 2
Room 2.07 | Panel 2.1 | Conceptual History |
Nicolai von Eggers | Chair | |
Kazutaka Inamura | A Hermeneutic Method for Developing Republican Political Theory | |
Jan Květina | Republicanism as an Aristocratic Mythomoteur: Common Discourse of Polish Early-Modern Thinkers | |
Banu Turnaoglu | A Conceptual History of Republicanism in Turkey | |
Håvard Nilsen | Republican Monarchy: The Neo-Roman Concept of Liberty and the Norwegian Constitution of 1814 | |
Room 3.26 | Panel 2.2 | Contemporary Republican Theory I |
Alan Coffee | Chair | |
Carolin Bohn | Arguing for Political Judgement as Key Capability of Republican Environmental Citizens | |
Alex Bryan | Citizenship, Equality, and Economic Crisis | |
Oscar Larsson | Analyzing Policy in Network Governance through the Lens of Neo-Republicanism and the Concept of Domination | |
Charles Richardson | Reverse-engineering of Freedom in Republican Thought | |
Room 3.12 | Panel 2.3 | US Republicanism |
Jakub Jirsa | Chair | |
Rudmer Bijlsma | Alienation in Commercial Society: The Republican Perspective of Rousseau and Ferguson | |
Dean Caivano | Jefferson’s Revolution: The Discordant and Rebellious Democratic Experience of 1776 | |
Adéla Rádková | The New Republicanism in The Federalist | |
Matthew Slaboch | T.G. Masaryk, America, and the Founding of a Republic |
1.30 – 2.30 PM Lunch
2.30 – 4.00 PM Panel Session 3
Room 2.07 | Panel 3.1 | Constitutional Theory |
Alex Bryan | Chair | |
Paul Blokker | Narratives of Constitutionalism, Popular Engagement, and the Transformation of Modern Constitutionalism | |
Valerio Fabbrizi | Reasonable Disagreement and Moral Consensus in Richard Bellamy’s Political Constitutionalism | |
Adam Fusco | Non-Arbitrary Power and the Democratic Constitution | |
Room 3.26 | Panel 3.2 | Problems of Globalised World |
Nicholas Vrousalis | Chair | |
Matthew Hoye | Illegal Immigrants, Sanctuary Cities, and Republican Liberty | |
Joshua Preiss | Republican Freedom in Globally Integrated Markets | |
Johan Rochel | Attracting the Best and Brightest: A Republican Account of the EU Immigration Law | |
Room 3.12 | Panel 3.3 | Republicanism: Ancient and Modern |
Tomáš Halamka | Chair | |
Michael Hawley | Cicero and the Origin of Liberty as a Political Ideal | |
Lluis Perez-Lozano | Not a Tale of Two Cities: Why “Neo-Athenian” and “Neo-Roman” Are Misnomers for Republicanism | |
Alena Wolflink | Aristotle, Community Valuation, and Necessity |
Transfer to the Faculty of Arts building
4.30 – 7.00 PM Plenary Session I (Faculty of Arts building, Room 140)
Philip Pettit: Neo-liberalism and Neo-republicanism
Richard Bellamy: Overcoming the Demoi-cratic Disconnect: A Republican Intergovernmental Proposal for Reconnecting Citizens to EU Governance
Transfer to the Anglo-American University building
7.30 PM Reception
Saturday, November 4th
9.30 – 11.30 AM Panel Session 4
Room 2.07 | Panel 4.1 | Contemporary Republican Theory II |
Charles Richardson | Chair | |
Christopher Donohue & Rafał Lis | A Dialogue Between Republicanism and the ‘Republic of Science’ | |
María Victoria Inostroza | The Democratic Forms of Global Domination | |
Jean Fabien Spitz | Is Structural Domination a Coherent Concept? | |
Themistoklis Tzimas | “A-topical” Polities, Demos- less, Neoliberal Statehood and the Quest for Citizenship: The EU Case | |
Room 3.26 | Panel 4.2 | French Republicanism |
Iain McDaniel | Chair | |
Hana Fořtová | B. Constant and the Ideas of Republicanism | |
Marit Pepplinkhuizen | Alexis de Tocqueville’s Republicanism | |
Spyridon Tegos | Republican Civility beyond the Old Regime: The Cases of Sophie de Grouchy and Germaine de Staël | |
Nicolai von Eggers | Radical Republicanism in the Early French Revolution, 1789-91 | |
Room 3.12 | Panel 4.3 | Republican Concept(s) |
Tomáš Halamka | Chair | |
Ophelie Desmons | Could Republicanism Not Be Neutral? Rethinking the Debate between Liberal Neutralism and Republican Perfectionism | |
Dries Deweer | Personalist Republicanism. Identification of an Old Branch | |
Eric Fabri | What Should Property Rights Look Like in a Republic? Different Answers for Different Republicanisms | |
Yevhen Kutsenko | How Different and Self Sufficient Is Modern Republicanism? |
11.30 – 1.00 PM Lunch
1.00 – 2.30 PM Panel Session 5
Room 2.07 | Panel 5.1 | Hannah Arendt |
Jakub Franěk | Chair | |
Milan Hanyš | The Republicanism of Hannah Arendt: A Case of Civil Disobedience | |
Brian Smith | Anarcho-Republicanism? Hannah Arendt and the Federated Council Republics | |
Judith Zinsmaier | Hannah Arendt’s Implicit Criticism of the Liberal Concept of Opinion | |
Room 3.26 | Panel 5.2 | Machiavelli and his Legacy |
Jakub Jirsa | Chair | |
Jan Bíba | Machiavelli Against the Venice Myth: The 16th Century Dialogue on the Nature of Political Representation | |
Axel Fjeld | Still Republican – Femia and Skinner on Machiavelli | |
Camila Vergara | On Plebeian Republican Thought | |
Room 3.12 | Panel 5.3 | Republicanism, Work and the Economy: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives |
Joshua Preiss | Chair | |
James Hickson | Republicanism, Free Labour, and Precarious Work | |
Bruno Leipold | Chains and Invisible Threads: Marx on Republican Liberty and Domination | |
Nicholas Vrousalis | Neorepublicanism and Wage Slavery | |
Room 3.10 | Panel 5.4 | Women and Neo-Roman Republicanism in Intellectual History |
Dorothea Gädeke | Chair | |
Federica Falchi | From Europe to the United States: Frances Wright’s Republican Experience | |
Serena Mocci | Republicanism and Feminism: A Plausible Alliance. The Case of Margaret Fuller | |
Giorgio Scichilone | The Republican Roots of Liberty: A European Perspective |
2.30 – 3.00 PM Coffee Break
Transfer to the Faculty of Arts building
3.30 – 5.00 PM Plenary Session II (Faculty of Arts building, Room 140)
Christopher Kelly: Sovereign versus Government: Rousseau’s Republicanism