Call for Papers (a new journal): An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development
Author: Nikolai Petroukovitch
Date:
28. 01. 2010.
The University of Pennsylvania
Press,with support from The Mellon Foundation, announces the
launch of our new journal, Humanity:
An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development.
Call for Papers
In recent
decades, the traditional contest of left and right has been displaced by a
politics of humanity. In both domestic and international contexts, the
languages of human rights and humanitarianism are often marshaled as moral
claims that bolster diverse global enterprises of governance, intervention, and
reform. And development—a Cold War project—has evolved beyond economic or
institutional concerns. Now encompassing matters once targeted in human rights
activism, it has also expanded to address the acute humanitarian crises once
treated as episodic and temporary.
This convergence of the concepts of human rights, humanitarianism, and
development within a larger politics of humanity is one of the signature
phenomena of our time. The global politics of humanity legitimates itself not
on the old foundation of settled international law but on new promises to
generate new legal and political orders, to shape new social realities and
relations, to forge new cultural connections and values. Human rights advocates
find themselves involved in the rebuilding of political regimes, economic
structures and the very social fabric of societies. Political advisers and
academics of various persuasions engage in nation-building. Embedded
anthropologists reengineer traditional social structures in the midst of
military occupations. More than ever, politics aims at generating specific
forms of life, and the celebrated decline of state sovereignty seems to
coincide with the rise of biopower.
This new journal provides a single forum for the dispassionate, analytically
focused examination of these trends. Humanity will explore the transformations
in political understandings that have reshaped the terms of liberation and
idealism as well as the practices of domination and control. While the global
politics of humanity is emphatically a politics with an urge to mend,
ameliorate, or even transform circumstances of disorder and atrocity, its very
aspirational quality often immunizes it from critical inquiry. For a number of
years now, scholars have been analyzing this convergence -- its formative
history and future implications. Many powerful insights about these
transformations have emerged from fields as diverse as anthropology, history,
law, literature, philosophy, and sociology. Too often, however, this work has
remained cloistered from scholars in other fields (and the world of practice),
even though much of it shares a common intellectual genealogy; and the
centripetal force of the disciplines has tended to perpetuate the divide
between the social sciences and the humanities, even though both have a common
stake in the world. As it welds these diverse enterprises in one space,
Humanity will not offer skepticism for its own sake about various projects on
the terrain of human rights, humanitarianism, and development. It will,
however, prize analytical distance from them.
Humanity welcomes contributions
from all disciplines of the humanities and the social sciences but also seeks
to publish visual interventions - notably photographic material - as well as
occasional interviews shedding light on the contested politics of humanity.
Contributions should generally run 8,000 to 11,000 words, including apparatus,
but both shorter and longer pieces are potentially viable. Also invited are
thematic essay reviews, combining at least two recent books, between 5,000 and
7,000 words. Anyone interested in pursuing publication in the journal can write
to the editor at humanityjournal@gmail.com
Editorial
Collective
Samuel Moyn, Editor
Nehal Bhuta, Coeditor
Nils Gilman, Coeditor
Nicolas Guilhot, Executive Editor
Joseph R. Slaughter, Coeditor
Miriam Ticktin, Coeditor
In the first
issue, look for…
Michel Agier on the
politics of refugees, asylum, and camps
Isaie Dougnon on
global humanitarianism and African child-trafficking
Lynn Festa on
distance, empathy, and the origins of "humanity"
Martti Koskenniemi on
mainstreaming human rights
Andrew Lakoff on two
regimes of global public health
And other texts, including a war photography dossier and an essay review. |
Editorial
Board
Michel Agier | Barbara Harlow | Carolyn
Nordstrom |
Philip Alston | Peter Holquist | Sarah Nuttall |
Paige Arthur | Laurent
Jeanpierre | Patricia Owens |
Michael Barnett | Hans Joas | Mariella
Pandolfi |
Craig Calhoun | Paul Kahn | Sanjay Reddy |
Kamari Clarke | Thomas Keenan | Peter Redfield |
Anne Cubilié | Martti
Koskenniemi | Olivier Remaud |
J.P. Daughton | Andrew Lakoff | Alison Dundes
Renteln |
Faisal Devji | Mikael Rask
Madsen | Annelise Riles |
Mamadou Diouf | Liisa Malkki | Antonius Robben |
Ron Dudai | Gregory Mann | Mindy Jane
Roseman |
Mark Duffield | Susan Marks | Scott Straus |
Harri Englund | Sophia A.
McClennen | Imre Szeman |
Samera Esmeir | Robert Meister | Ruti Teitel |
Didier Fassin | Sally Engle
Merry | Françoise
Vergès |
James Ferguson | Alice M. Miller | Robert Vitalis |
Lynn Festa | Jeanne
Morefield | Eyal Weizman |
Hugh Gusterson | Benjamin
Nathans |
For additional
information about the journal, please contact
Paul Chase
Journals Coordinator
University of Pennsylvania Press
3905 Spruce St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
215-573-1295
paulbc@upenn.edu
http://hum.pennpress.org
Our address: 3905 Spruce Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
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