Borders, Belonging, and Moral Obligation in German History

Borders, Belonging, and Moral Obligation in German History (Deadline CfP Extended)

Veranstalter
Radboud University Nijmegen
PLZ
6525XZ
Ort
Nijmegen
Land
Netherlands
Findet statt
In Präsenz
Vom - Bis
27.06.2025 -
Deadline
10.02.2025
Von
David de Boer, Geschichte, Radboud Universiteit

As Germany celebrates the 75th anniversary of its Grundgesetz, the country continues to grapple with fundamental questions over borders, belonging, and its transnational moral commitments.

These tensions have deep historical roots. The aim of this conference is to convene research that sheds new light on these struggles throughout German history. We welcome transnational, comparative, (post)colonial, and/or interdisciplinary perspectives on any historical period.

To apply for the conference, please send a 200-word abstract and 50-word bio by 10 February to David de Boer (david.deboer@ru.nl). Notifications of acceptance will be sent out mid-December.

Borders, Belonging, and Moral Obligation in German History (Deadline CfP Extended)

The Platform for German History is delighted to announce its third annual conference, to be held at Radboud University Nijmegen on 27 June 2025. The keynote lecture will be given by Frank Trentmann (Birkbeck, University of London).

As Germany celebrates the 75th anniversary of its Grundgesetz, the country continues to grapple with fundamental questions over borders, belonging, and its transnational moral commitments. After the ravages of Nazism, many Germans sought to redefine their country as a post-nationalist stronghold of moral universalism. However, particularly in matters of migration and foreign policy, this ideal has long been challenged by more restrictive notions of Germany’s responsibilities to newcomers and outsiders. Recent shifts in border control and the domestic rift over Gaza are but the latest developments in a long-standing national conversation.

Political scientists have recently argued that these struggles over identity and the boundaries of solidarity reflect a broader divide between universalist and particularist perspectives on moral duty, which opened up in much of the Western world in the 1980s. Yet especially in Germany, these tensions have much deeper roots. Many of the questions dominating today’s debates have, in fact, been asked for centuries: What does it mean to be German? Who can rightfully claim Germanness? How should Germans manage their borders, and what obligations do they have towards others, both within and outside their territory?

The aim of this conference is to convene research that sheds new light on these debates throughout German history. We welcome transnational, comparative, (post)colonial, and/or interdisciplinary perspectives on any historical period.

To apply for the ‘Borders, Belonging, and Moral Obligation in German History’ conference, please send a 200-word abstract and 50-word bio by 10 February (deadline extended) to David de Boer (david.deboer@ru.nl). Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by early March.

Kontakt

david.deboer@ru.nl

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Englisch
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