Colonialism in Kants Political Philosophy

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Prof. Howard Williams (University of Aberystwyth)

This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

Kants Conceptions of Colonialism, Free Trade, and Cosmopolitical Providence

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Dr. Johannes Thumfart (Freie Universitaet, Berlin)

This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

World citizenship and global connections in Enlightenment political thought

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Prof. Sankar Muthu (University of Chicago)

This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

Kant on race and economic globalization: On just trade and free trade

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Prof. dr. Pauline Kleingeld (University of Leiden)


This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

World trade as the guarantee for perpetual peace? On the value and consistency of Kants theory of fair trade

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Liesbet Vanhaute (University of Antwerp)

This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

Provisional Rights and Past Injustice

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Prof. Anna Stilz (Princeton University)

This two-day conference took place at the Manor Road Building and Nuffield College, Oxford, on 1-2 October (week one of Michaelmas term). Supported by CSSJ, the conference explored the relevance of Kants critique of colonialism to an appropriate reconstruction of Kants cosmopolitan theory in recent global justice debates.


Convenors: Lea Ypi (with co-organiser Katrin Flikschuh from LSE)

China in World War II, 1937-1945: Experience, Memory, and Legacy

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China's long war against Japan from 1937 to 1945 has remained in the shadows of historiography until recently, both in China and abroad. In recent years, the opening of archives and a widening of the opportunity to discuss the more controversial aspects of the wartime period in China itself have restored World War II in China ('the War of Resistance to Japan') to a much more central place in historical interpretation.
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