PROGRAM
International Conference Kant's Cosmopolitan Normativity: Borders, Migration and Justice –
Facultad de Filosofía de la UCM (Departamento de Filosofía y Sociedad/Red RIKEPS “Kant: Ética, Política y Sociedad”
October 24th-26th 2022,
Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid
Conveners: Nuria Sánchez Madrid (Complutense University of Madrid, Spain)/Angela Taraborrelli (Univ. of Cagliari, Italy)
PROGRAM
October 24th 2022
Venue: Faculty of Philosophy, Building A (Room A-217 “Ortega y Gasset”)
9:40 Opening words
10:00-11:30 — Panel 1. Some Challenges of Kant’s International Political Order
—Ana Marta González (Univ. of Navarra, Spain), The Right to Dwell (Anywhere) on Earth and the Promise of Human Community
—Nuria Sánchez Madrid (Complutense Univ. of Madrid), Kant's on Labour, Civil Rights and Global Mobility
11:30-12:00 — Coffee Break
12:00-13:30 —Panel 2. Kant’s Cosmopolitan Right Towards Migration, Refugees and Climate Crisis
—Angela Taraborrelli (Univ. of Cagliari, Italy), Kant and Migration: Territorial Rights, Borders and the Cosmopolitan State.
—Corinna Mieth (Univ. of Bochum, Germany), Kant, Migration and the Cosmopolitan Right Not to be Treated with Hostility
13:30-15:00 Lunch
15:00-16:30 – Panel 3. Imperialism, Trade and Money in Kant’s International Order
—Macarena Marey (CONICET, Argentina), Cosmopolitanism as anti-imperialist struggle: Kant and Mariátegui
—Alice Pinheiro Walla (McMaster University, Canada), Kant on Money, Trade and the International Legal Order
October 25th 2022
Venue: Faculty of Philosophy, Building A (Room S-36)
10:00-11:30 – Panel 4. Contemporary Quandaries of Kant’s Cosmopolitan Order
—Sylvie Loriaux (Laval University, Canada) Human Dependence and Vulnerability in Kant’s Cosmopolitan Right. Another Look at the Refugee Crisis
—Reza Mosayebi (Univ. Bochum, Germany), Kant’s Cosmopolitanism and Race Mixing
11:30-12:00 — Coffee Break
12:00-13:30 — Panel 5. Cosmopolitan Emotions: Hope, Progress, History
—Claudio Corradetti (Univ. of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy), Is Humanity Morally Progressing? Kant’s Philosophy of History Under a Cosmopolitan Perspective
—Paola Romero (Univ. of Fribourg), Justice, a Global Problem? The Limitations of Kant's Cosmopolitanism
October 26th 2022
Venue: Faculty of Philosophy, Building A (Room S-30)
10:00-11:30 — Panel 6. The Legacy of Kant’s Cosmopolitanism: Contemporary Reception and Dialogues (I)
—Milla Vaha (Univ. of South Pacific, Fiji Islands), From Cosmopolitan Right to Radical Hospitality: The Limits and Potential of Kant’s Philosophy at the Time of Climate Crisis
—Jakub Szczepanski (Univ, Jagiellonian, Poland), Patriotical Cosmopolitanism? What Should, according to Kant, The International Order Look like?
11:30-12:00 — Coffee Break
12:00-13:30 — Panel 7. The Legacy of Kant’s Cosmopolitanism: Contemporary Reception and Dialogues (II)
—Gianluca Sadun Bordoni (Univ. of Teramo, Italy), Cosmopolitanism and Political Realism: Kant's Double Legacy and Contemporary Political Challenge
—Paulo Jesus (CFUL, Lisboa), Cosmopolitanism as Philoxeny and Fraternity: Between Kant and Levinas towards an Ethical Copernican Revolution
Associated and/or co-funding partners:
University of Cagliari (Italy)
University of Bochum (Germany)
University of Teramo (Italy)
University of Laval (Canada)
University of Navarra (Spain)
Jagiellonian University (Poland)
University of Lisbon (Portugal)
University of Buenos Aires/CONICET (Argentina)
University of South Pacific (Fiji Islands)
University McMaster (Canada)
University of Tor Vergata (Italy)