19/11/2020 20/11/2020
13:00 17:00
A colloquium organised in the framework of the Alfred Grosser Chair. Founded in 1993, the Alfred Grosser Chair reserves a special place for visiting German professors and researchers at Sciences Po...… Lire la suite
Event online via Zoom
 
A colloquium organised in the framework of the Alfred Grosser Chair. Founded in 1993, the Alfred Grosser Chair reserves a special place for visiting German professors and researchers at Sciences Po. Through the Chair, Sciences Po encourages and strengthens academic exchanges between France and Germany and facilitates the development of joint projects.
 
 
"Migrating Recognition" or "Constitutionalism(s) Reversed"
 
Thursday, 19 November- Day 1
Theorising Recognition: Constructing and Deconstructing Minorities in the Law and Elsewhere


13:00 - 14:30 
Session I : Critical Approaches towards the Law – Group Rights amidst an Arbitrary Legal Landscape

Miodrag Jovanović, Law, University of Belgrade - Making Social Groups Visible to and in Law -Essentialization and Law’s Generality

Sérgio Costa, Sociology, FU Berlin- Precarious Legitimization: Cultural Rights in the Context of Moving Differences

Discussed by Helena Alviar García, Law, Sciences Po
 
15:00 - 16:30 
Session II : "Unrecognised Minorities": Reconceptualising the Law and Institutions
to Accommodate Plural Identities
 
Alexandra Xanthaki, Law, Brunel University London - Migrants or minorities? This is the question

Stephanie E. Berry, Law, University of Sussex - Refugees as minorities: Expanding the Scope of Application of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities
 
Catherine Wihtol de Wenden, Political Science, Sciences Po - CERI / CNRS - The Migration Question of the 21st century: Migrants, Refugees and International Relations

Discussed by Riva Kastoryano, Political Sociology, Sciences Po - CERI / CNRS
 
Day 1
Join Zoom-Meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/98862902657?pwd=bThkaFZWa3ZLbEgyVnFWa1ZpUkRSZz09
Meeting-ID: 988 6290 2657
code: 5Du9dA
 
 
Friday, 20 November - Day 2
Grassroots Perspectives on Pluralism: Policy Models, Socio-Legal Strategies and Frameworks
 
13:00 - 14:00 
Session III : Civil and Political Rights as Tools of Collective Recognition

Balázs Vizi, Law/Social Sciences, MTA TK Institute for Minority Studies - the Minority Self-Governments in Hungary

Mia Caielli, Law, Università degli Studi di Torino - Freedom of Expression Revisited: Limiting Free Speech to End the Silencing of Minorities

Discussed by David Recondo, Political Science, Sciences Po / CERI
 
14:30 - 15:30 
Session IV : Religious Minority Dimensions as Approaches towards Plurality

Eugenia Relaño Pastor, Law/Political Science/Sociology, Law and Anthropology Department, Max Planck Institute - Is Multiculturalism a Dead Policy-Model for Managing ReligiousDiversity? 

Kyriaki Topidi, Law/International Studies/European Studies, European Centre for Minority Issues - Religious Education as a Socio-Legal Experiment on InclusivePlurality: A Comparative Approach from Below
 
Discussed by Astrid von Busekist, Political Science, Sciences Po

16:00 - 17:00 
Session V :  Intersectionality Paradigms from Below: European and Latin American
Experiences
 
Raphaële Mathilde Vassiliki Xenidis, Political Science/Law, University of Edinburgh and University of Copenhagen - Framing Intersectional Discrimination: Socio-Legal Change Strategies in European Courts 

Lourdes Peroni, Law, Sheffield Hallam University - Constitutions and Gender: A Bird's-Eye View from South America
 
Discussed by Astrid von Busekist, Political Science, Sciences Po 
 
Day 2
Join Zoom-Meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/92433780139?pwd=QmpWcVpYcURaMjg0ME16T2RzZWhYZz09
Meeting-ID: 924 3378 0139
Code: 5VcEYc

 

Scientific coordinator : Jessika Eichler, Law and Anthropology Department, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Sciences Po-Chair Alfred Grosser (2019-2020)

Organisé par : CERI