Jochen Kleinschmidt, Zentralinstitut für Lateinamerikastudien (ZILAS), KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Wednesday, June 7
From 10:00 AM: Registration of participants
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM: Welcoming event
11:45 AM – 01:15 PM: Lunch
01:30 PM – 03:30 PM: Panel 1: Hierarchies and resistance
Presentations:
Tomoko Akami, Australian National University: “In Each Other’s Sphere of Influence: The Monroe Doctrine in China and Mexico in the 1910s”
Alex Bryne, University of Nottingham: “The Empire of the Monroe Doctrine in the Early Twentieth Century”
Eckart Conze, University of Marburg: “The Monroe Doctrine in Germany: Trajectories of a Geopolitical Concept”
Juan Pablo Scarfi, Universidad de San Andrés/CONICET: “The Meaning and Scope of the Monroe Doctrine in the Americas: Towards a Hemispheric Intellectual History”
Discussants:
Thomas Fischer, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Christine Hatzky, Leibniz-Universität Hannover
03:30 PM – 04:00 PM: Coffee break
04:00 PM – 06:00 PM: Panel 2: Spatializations
Presentations:
Dawn Berry, Henry M. Jackson Foundation: “The Arctic and The Monroe Doctrine: Barometers of Global Geopolitical Change”
Stefanie Ortmann, University of Sussex: “Return of spheres of influence? Russian spatial imaginaries and the war in Ukraine”
Benjamin Tallis, German Council on Foreign Relations: “Neo-Idealism’s Challenge to Realism: Spheres of Integration vs Spheres of Influence in North, Central and Eastern Europe”
Carlos Gustavo Poggio Teixeira, Berea College: “A ‘hemispheric’ policy? Reinterpreting the Monroe Doctrine”
Discussants:
Jochen Kleinschmidt, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Matthew Specter, UC Berkeley
07:00 PM Dinner
Thursday, June 8
09:00 AM – 11:00 AM: Panel 3: Adaptation and Evolution
Presentations:
Tanja Bührer, LMU Munich: “The Monroe Doctrine and the legal regulation of global expansion at the Berlin Conference 1884-1885”
Thomas Fischer, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt: “The Monroe Doctrine at the Paris Peace Negotiations of 1919: A Global History Approach”
María del Rosario Rodríguez Díaz, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo: “Reflections on the bicentennial of the Monroe Doctrine. The Corollaries Roosevelt and Lodge, 1904-1912”
David M. K. Sheinin, Trent University: “Argentina’s Shocking Entry into the US Sphere of Influence, the Secret Domingo Cavallo Recordings, and the End of Whatever was Left of the Monroe Doctrine”
Discussants:
Jochen Kleinschmidt, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Christine Hatzky, Leibniz-Universität Hannover
11:00 AM – 12:30 PM: Recording of participant statements
12:30 PM – 02:00 PM: Lunch
02:00 PM – 03:30 PM: Recording of participant statements
03:30 PM – 04:00 PM: Coffee break
04:00 PM – 06:00 PM Roundtable I: The Everchanging Monroe Doctrine and its Historical Entanglements
07:00 PM Dinner
Friday, June 9
09:00 AM – 11:00 AM: Panel 4: Aesthetics, Identities, Imaginaries
Presentations:
Juliette Dumont, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris 3: „Building ‘Nuestra (Pan)America’: The Pan American Union’s Division of Intellectual Cooperation and the making of an Hemispheric ‘Imagined Community’”
Jochen Kleinschmidt, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt: “The Monroe Doctrine as a Semantic of Low-Intensity Securitization”
Christopher Robert Rossi, Arctic University of Norway: “Line of Amity, Line of Enmity: Hemispheric Fraternity, the Monroe Doctrine, and US Large Policy Men”
Arlene Tickner, Universidad del Rosario: TBA
Discussant:
Juan Pablo Scarfi, Universidad de San Andrés/CONICET
Christine Hatzky, Leibniz-Universität Hannover
11:00 AM – 01:00 PM Roundtable II: The Everchanging Monroe Doctrine and its Entanglements in Geopolitics & International Law
01:00 PM – 02:00 PM: Lunch
02:00 PM – 04:00 PM: Conference plenary
From 04:00 PM End of conference