Democracy
Promotion: Hegemony, Resistance and the Shifting Discourses of Democracy in
International Relations
February 1, 2013
Senate House,
University of London
Institute for
the Study of the Americas (University of London) and Department of Politics and
International Relations (University of Westminster)
Panel
plan (preliminary)
Panel 1
Hegemony, Resistance, Seduction:
Opportunity Through Challenge?
After
Hegemony: Normative Contestation of Democracy Promotion in a Pluralist World
Annika
Poppe (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) and Jonas Wolff (Peace Research
Institute Frankfurt)
Contesting
the Hegemony of Democracy Promotion
Joel
Lazarus (University of Oxford)
Political
Liberalism and the “Internal Resistance” to Democracy Promotion
Elisa
Piras (London School of Economics and Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa)
Historicising
the Depth of Democracy in the Peripheries: Turkey and the Philippines in
Comparison
Cemal
Burak Tansel (University of Nottingham) and Salvador Santino Regilme (Berlin
Free University)
Panel 2
Democratisation, State-Building and the
Arab Spring
The
End of State-Building and a Return to “Democracy”: The Legacy of the Arab
Spring for Studying the Successor States of the Former Yugoslavia
Adam
Fagan (Queen Mary)
Dance
of the Seven Veils: Seduction and Resistance in European Democracy Promotion
Initiatives in the Arab World
Helle
Malmvig (Danish Institute for International Studies)
US
Democracy Promotion and the Arab Uprising: A Problem of Language of Democracy?
Jeff
Bridoux (Aberystwyth University)
The
Obama administration and the transition towards democracy in the Middle East
and North Africa, an early assessment
Mattia
Toaldo (Institute for the Study of the Americas)
Panel 3
Global Civil Society, Cosmopolitanism
and Empowerment: Impact on Democracy Promotion?
Democracy,
Abridged: Democracy Promotion and the Civil Societalisation of Policy
Alistair
Brisbourne (Royal Holloway)
The
Concept of Cosmopolitan Democracy
Michael
Murphy (Royal Holloway)
Democracy
in Private: Empowerment and the Rise of the Social
Jessica
Schmidt (University of Westminster)
Panel 4
Lessons Learnt and the Future of
Democracy Promotion
International
Democracy Promotion: Patterns of Learning Within a Policy Area
Kateryna
Pishchikova (Transatlantic Academy, Washington DC and Scuola Superiore
Sant’Anna, Pisa)
Matters
of History or History Matters? Shifts, Inceptive Moments and “Generations” of
Democratisation Through State-Building
Elisa
Randazzo (University of Westminster)
The
Limits of Democracy Conceptualisation in State Democracy Promotion: Why it
matters that states promote their own conceptualisation of democracy
Malcolm
Russell (independent consultant)
US
Democracy Promotion in friendly tyrannies: the internal-external strategy
during the Cold War and the War on Terror
Robert
Pee (University of Birmingham)
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