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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20081114
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20081116
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T101529Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155629Z
UID:10000330-1226620800-1226793599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The formation of normative orders
DESCRIPTION:Opening conference \nThe new Frankfurt Cluster of Excellence presented its interdisciplinary research program to a wider public for the first time at an international conference.  A contribution from Eva Buddeberg \nThe formation of normative orders is the central theme of the Frankfurt Cluster of Excellence\, which is based in the humanities and social sciences\, and it was under this title that the international conference took place on November 14 and 15\, 2008 at the Maritim Hotel in Frankfurt\, at which the Cluster discussed its guiding concepts for the first time across research fields and with greater public participation. In line with the cluster’s division into four research fields\, the conference was divided into four panels and supplemented by a fifth panel\, which explicitly focused on interdisciplinary discussion.    \nTo kick off the conference\, Research Field 1 invited the philosophers Peter Stemmer (Constance) and R. Jay Wallace (Berkeley)\, both of whom have published groundbreaking work on the topic of normativity. This combination already made one of the aims of the conference clear\, namely to discuss not only across disciplines\, but also opposing positions within a discipline: While Stemmer\, in his lecture “The Construction of Normative Reality”\, as in his recently published study on normativity\, took a position that ascribed only subject-relative normativity to norms or values\, Wallace\, in his contribution on “Conceptions of Normativity: Some Basic Philosophical Issues”\, explored the terrain between constructivist and moral-realist positions that ascribe norms their own validity.  \nProfessor R. Jay Wallace\, Berkeley: “Conceptions of Normativity: Some Basic Philosophical Issues” \nWallerstein: Capitalist system in final crisis\nAfter this philosophical introduction\, the second panel of the historically oriented field of research became much more empirical – alongside the “grand seigneur” of the social sciences Immanuel Wallerstein\, the historian Robert Harms (both from Yale) also came from the USA: His lecture\, entitled “Slave Trading\, Abolition\, and Colonialism as Inter-Linked Normative Orders”(script)\, examined the internal connections between three interlinked international orders: the transatlantic slave trade\, international efforts to end it\, and the rise of colonialism in Africa. The focus of his presentation was on analyzing the different ways in which these orders were justified and the arguments used to present them as illegitimate.  \nProfessor Robert Harms\, Yale: “Slave Trading\, Abolition\, and Colonialism as Inter-Linked Normative Orders” \n“In what Normative Order(s) has the World been Living in the Modern World System?”(script) was the title and guiding question of Wallerstein’s contribution\, in which he linked the broad lines of the history of modernity with development trends in the current situation. Based on his thesis that all types of structures and\, by extension\, historical social systems do not last forever\, but will eventually perish in final crises\, he interpreted the current situation as that of such a systemic crisis.  \nProfessor Immanuel Wallerstein\, Yale: “In what Normative Order(s) has the World been Living in the Modern World System?” \nThe afternoon of the first day was dedicated to the legal theory research field of the cluster\, which deals with the development of legal norms between nations. First\, the legal philosopher Samantha Besson\, who teaches in Fribourg\, gave a lecture on “The Authority of International Law – Lifting the State Veil”. She explored the question of how the four main characteristics of legal authority that she identified should be understood in the context of international relations. In the second lecture\, Armin von Bogdandy\, Director of the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg\, presented his research on “Developing the Publicness of Public International Law: Towards a Legal Framework for Global Governance Activities”(article). His initial question was how legal scholars can contribute to the construction of international normative orders.     \nProf. Dr. Armin von Bogdandy\, Heidelberg: “Developing the Publicness of Public International Law: Towards a Legal Framework for Global Governance Activities” \nCaney: A just world requires effective global institutions\nBefore the interdisciplinary panel discussion on the second day of the interdisciplinary conference between seven of the now almost thirty Principal Investigators of the Cluster\, the large audience from all disciplines represented in the Cluster was able to listen to two political scientists (both from Oxford): Andrew Hurrel dealt with “Provincializing Westphalia: The Evolution of International Society as a Global Normative Order”. Starting from a question that continues to preoccupy historians\, namely how a European international order based on states was able to expand into a global system\, Hurrell came to conclusions about the role that generally emerging and increasingly important states play for the existing institutional and normative order.  \nProfessor Andrew Hurrell\, Oxford: “Provincializing Westphalia: The Evolution of International Society as a Global Normative Order” \nSimon Caney\, known for his work on contemporary international political theory\, spoke on the topic of “Justice\, Democracy and Global Governance”. His initial aim was to define the principles on which the institutional organization of our world should be based\, in order to reinforce his main thesis that any form of an approximately just society at global level requires international institutions. He then compared these with alternative proposals on how to think about the relationship between justice\, democracy and global order.   \nThe interim results of the conference on the basic concepts of the cluster: the formation of normative orders\, were then discussed once again across disciplines at the final panel. The two Cluster spokespersons Rainer Forst (political science and philosophy) and Klaus Günther (law) were joined on the panel by ethnologist Susanne Schröter\, who recently joined the Cluster\, and four other Principal Investigators: Rainer Klump (economics)\, who was recently elected Vice President of the University\, ancient historian Harmut Leppin\, HSFK Executive Board member Harald Müller (political science) and philosopher Marcus Willaschek. The most important topics discussed included the relationship between norms and sanctions as well as the controversy between cultural dependency and the claim of universal validity of norms.   \nSince these events at the latest\, the discussion of content has been in full swing\, and we can look forward to the next conferences to be held this year\, e.g. on the concept of the “justification narrative”\, which already plays a central role in the cluster application and was frequently mentioned at this conference.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-formation-of-normative-orders/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20091103T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20091104T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155625Z
UID:10000328-1257235200-1257354000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Charles Larmore: Reason and subjectivity
DESCRIPTION:Charles Larmore (W. Duncan MacMillan Family Professor in the Humanities\, Professor of Philosophy) \n I: Reason\nII: Subjectivity \n“Reason itself\, however\, must be something deeper than any set of principles\, since it enables us to test their validity and\, if necessary\, to recognize them. Reason is our ability to orient ourselves according to reasons\, and therefore lies so deep in our being that it is precisely this self-relation that makes us subjects in the first place. The aim of the two lectures is to present a theory of the inner connection between reason and subjectivity.”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/charles-larmore-reason-and-subjectivity/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20091113T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20091114T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T101829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155629Z
UID:10000332-1258099200-1258218000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Justification narratives. Legitimization and narrative understanding
DESCRIPTION:2nd Annual International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence \nThe second annual conference of the Frankfurt Cluster of Excellence on the “Formation of Normative Orders” is dedicated to the topic of “Justification Narratives”. With the help of this concept\, the historical dimension of orders of justification\, i.e. the narratives that condense into legitimizations of social structures and institutions\, is to be explored in particular. They do not form homogeneous blocs\, but are to be analyzed in their plurality\, conflictuality and dynamics. \nWith the keyword ‘justification narrative’\, the annual conference is dedicated to a central object of investigation of the cluster. This refers to narratively structured justifications for the legitimacy or illegitimacy of normative orders. It is just as much a matter of extracting justification narratives from broader discourses as it is of examining how to deal with the fact that justification narratives become detached and therefore often have to carry a historical\, potentially self-relating dimension within them\, without therefore giving up their claim to validity. \nProgram\nFriday\, November 13\, 2009\nCasino – Cas 823 Ballroom \n10:00 a.m.: Welcome\nProf. Rainer Klump\, Vice President of Goethe University \n10.15 a.m.: Introductions\nProf. Rainer Forst\, Co-Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence\nProf. Andreas Fahrmeir\, Coordinator Research Field 2 \n10.30 – 12.30:\nPanel I: Justification narratives in times of transition\nIntroduction Prof. Moritz Epple\nLecture Prof. Hans Kippenberg: “Das Thomas-Theorem In der modernen Religionsgeschichte. On the difference between normative attitudes and actions”\nLecture by Prof. Hartmut Leppin: “Deo auctore – Die Christianisierung kaiserlicher Selbstdarstellung in der Spätantike”\nDiscussion \n12.30 p.m.: Lunch break \n14.00 – 16.00 hrs:\nPanel II: Justification narratives in international negotiation processes\nIntroduction Prof. Klaus Dieter Wolf\nLecture Dr. Gunter Pleuger: “The normative effects of multilateral negotiation”\nLecture Prof. Nicole Deitelhoff: “Political practice and political analysis. A commentary”\nDiscussion \n16.00 hrs: Coffee break \n16.30 – 18.30 hrs:\nPanel III:Human Rights as Rights ProductionNarratives?\nIntroduction Prof. Klaus Günther\nLecture Prof. Robert Howse: “Human Rights Discourse in World Trade”\nLecture Prof. Günther Frankenberg: “Human Rights as Rights Production Narratives”\nDiscussion \n7 p.m.: Reception \nSaturday\, November 14\, 2009\nHörsaal-Zentrum – HZ 3 \n10.00 – 12.30 hrs:\nPanel IV: Aesthetics of Justification Narratives\nIntroduction Prof. Matthias Lutz-Bachmann\nLecture Prof. Michael Hampe: “Explanation through Description”\nLecture Prof. Martin Seel: “Narration and (De-)Legitimation. The second Iraq war in the cinema”\nDiscussion \n12:30 p.m.: Lunch break \n14.00 – 16.00:\nPanel V: Economic Justification Narratives\nIntroduction: Prof. Mamadou Diawara and Betram Schefold\nLecture Prof. Harri Englund: “Economic Rights as a Justification Narrative: Poverty and Vulnerability in Africa”\nLecture Prof. Keith Tribe: “The Limits of the Market: Walras versus Becker”\nDiscussion \n16.00: Closing remarks\nProf. Klaus Günther
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/justification-narratives-legitimization-and-narrative-understanding/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100419
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100421
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181639Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155624Z
UID:10000326-1271635200-1271807999@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Nancy Fraser: The Crisis of Capitalism
DESCRIPTION:Nancy Fraser (Henry and Louise Loeb Professor of Philosophy and Politics at the New School for Social Research in New York) \nI: Marketization\, Social Protection\, Emancipation\nII: Ambivalences of Emancipation \nThe lectures aim to critically develop Polanyi’s ‘The Great Transformation’\, in which the conflict between marketization and social security is expanded to include a third axis of social struggles: “emancipation”. This analysis sheds new light on the current crisis of capitalist societies.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/nancy-fraser-the-crisis-of-capitalism/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100517
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100519
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155623Z
UID:10000324-1274054400-1274227199@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Frank I. Michelman: The Case of Liberty
DESCRIPTION:Frank I. Michelman (Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard University specializing in constitutional law\, philosophy of law\, property law and municipal law) \nI: Liberty\, Liberties\, and “Total Freedom”\nII: Contract versus Common Ground? \nThe lectures consider the concepts of contract\, consensus and ethical values in relation to the justification of democratic orders. In doing so\, they explore the question of whether a strong distinction between contract-based and value-based justificatory orders can be maintained. This question is framed by considering different approaches to defining constitutionally protected freedoms\, as found in John Rawls and Ronald Dworkin.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/frank-i-michelman-the-case-of-liberty/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20101108
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20101110
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155622Z
UID:10000322-1289174400-1289347199@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Jonathan Israel: Philosophy and Revolution in the late 18th Century: a Reinterpretation
DESCRIPTION:Jonathan Israel (professor of Modern History at the Institute for Advanced Study\, Princeton) \nI: The late 18th century’s Curious Idea that Philosophy caused the French Revolution\nII: The Enlightenment’s Quarrel over Basic Human Rights \nAlthough it seems strange to us today\, it was common in the years around 1790 for philosophers sympathetic to the French Revolution to speak of it as the realization of ‘modern philosophy’. When examined\, this perception can be seen to possess appreciable cultural and political significance. What was meant was that modern philosophy\, considered in all its aspects implied a vast mobilization of intellectual and cultural impulses and these could be seen as having provided the mental apparatus that engineered the vast transformation political\, social and legal that Europe and the entire world was undergoing. ‘ The French Revolution the work of philosophy\, but what a leap from the cogito\, ergo sum to the first resounding of the à la Bastille in the Palais Royal. ‘ Given Lichtenberg’s approach to scientific and philosophical questions\, we may presume that he meant by this that it needed a shift to a systematically rational view of reality on many levels for human ideals and needs to come to be expressed and legislated for in the way that transpired in 1789. Thinking in terms of basic human rights was obviously one such dimension; another was the virtual destruction of confessional and theological differences as a meaningful divide between humans. But the most important change was the idea that the state exists to promote the interests of the majority conceived as equals. ‘What a development! ‘\, exclaimed Wekhrlin\, in 1791: the torch of philosophy has finally been taken up in society and the ‘rights of reason and of Man’ transferred to the sphere of reality. ‘The true principles of society have been researched and enlightened’\, and the public understanding has been brought to grasp ‘the general good’. In short\, the century of the Enlightenment was one in which human life had ceased to be the plaything of politics and religion!’ With the public sphere\, freedom of the press and the Revolution\, humanity had become\, or so it briefly seemed\, the sphere of ‘reason’.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/jonathan-israel-philosophy-and-revolution-in-the-late-18th-century-a-reinterpretation/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20101118
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20101121
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T102041Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155631Z
UID:10000334-1290038400-1290297599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Justice and/or Peace
DESCRIPTION:3rd Annual International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence \nIn ordinary language peace usually stands for ‘freedom from disturbance’ or ‘a state or period in which there is no war’. Justice\, in turn\, is generally associated with ‘the quality of being fair and reasonable’. In ethical and moral discourse the two are often discussed together\, suggesting an internal\, if delicate relationship. Consider three different voices: When\, in addressing the United Nations\, Pope Benedict quotes the prophet Isaiah that ‘justice will bring about peace; right will produce calm and security’ the mere invocation of peace and justice as mutually interdependent already portends that the realities of global life probably do not (yet) live up to Catholic normative standards. John Rawls is more explicit when he argues that a ‘liberal people tries to assure reasonable justice for all its citizens and for all peoples’ and ‘can live with other people of like character in upholding justice and preserving peace’. Yet the qualifiers ‘liberal’ and ‘reasonable’ immediately suggest that demanding normative standards have to be met if both justice and peace are to obtain. Finally\, political realists like to quote Thucydides’ assertion that ‘the standard of justice depends on the equality of power to compel’. In their view\, peace is mainly a function of power – ‘the strong do what they have the power to do and the weak accept what they have to accept’.  \nQuoting these very different perspectives on justice and peace not only provides an initial taste of the difference in disciplinary language games. It also hints at how definitions predetermine the relationship between peace and justice\, i.e. whether it is conceived in terms of equivalence or hierarchy\, mutual dependence or exclusivity. The title of this conference\, ‘Justice and/or Peace?’\, is meant to capture these different dimensions. As in previous years we have aimed at a broad array of disciplines and perspectives\, mixing contributions from members of the Cluster with scholars from outside Frankfurt. Of course\, perspectives will differ and may even clash. This is to be expected – not only due to the subject matter but also to different responses to the standards of the normative order of scholarly exchange. However\, as conference organizers we have taken all precautionary measures to ensure that this exchange will be conducted in a fair and peaceful manner! What remains is for all participants – speakers\, chairs and audience – also to help to render it a successful and productive exchange. \nProgram\nThursday\, November 18\, 2010\nAuditorium Center HZ3 \n18.00 hrs: Welcome \n18.15: Opening lecture\nProf. Michael W. Doyle (Columbia University): “Ethics\, Law\, and the Responsibility to Protect” \nFriday\, November 19\, 2010\nCasino – Cas 823 Ballroom \n10.00 a.m.: Official opening \n10.30 am – 12.30 pm:\nPanel I: Contending Views on Justice and Peace\nLecture Prof. Harald Müller: “Justice and Peace: Good Things Do not Always go Together”\nLecture Prof. Rainer Forst: “The Normative Order(s) of Justice and Peace” \n12.30 p.m.: Lunch break \n14.00 – 16.00 hrs:\nPanel II: The Politics and Ethics of Peace\nLecture Prof. Matthias Lutz-Bachmann: “War and Peace: Norms and Facts in a Globalized World”\nLecture Prof. Pauline Kleingeld: “Kant on Justice and Morality and Peace” \n16.00 hrs: Coffee break \n16.30 – 18.00 hrs:\nPanel III: Lessons from History? Designs of Post-War World Orders \nLecture Prof. Luise Schorn-Schütte: “Religious Peace As a Political Problem in Early Modern Europe (16th to 17th Centuries)”\nLecture Prof. Brendan Simms: “New Order of Confluence of Crises?” \nSaturday\, November 20\, 2010\nCasino – Cas 823 Ballroom \n10.00 – 12.00 hrs:\nPanel IV: Particularity and Universality\nLecture Prof. Cecelia Lynch: “Popular Casuistry and the Problem of Peace and/or Justice in Christian Ethics”\nLecture Prof. Mamadou Diawara: “Justice\, in Whose Name: The Domestication of Copyright in Sub-Saharan Africa” \n12.00 p.m.: Lunch break \n1.30 – 3.30 pm:\nPanel V: Justice and Peace – Goals or Fragments of International Law?\nLecture Prof. Andreas Paulus: “International Law between Fragmentation and Constitutionalization”\nLecture Prof. Stefan Kadelbach: “International order as an Idea – On strict rules and flexible principles”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/justice-and-or-peace/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110509
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110510
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155621Z
UID:10000320-1304899200-1304985599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Martti Koskenniemi: International Law and Empire: Historical Lessons
DESCRIPTION:Martti Koskenniemi (Director of the Erik Castrén Institute for International Law and Human Rights at the University of Helsinki) \nI: Empires of Private Right 1500-1606\nII: Empires of Public Power 1625-1914 \nThe two lectures are dedicated to the role of private and public law as instruments of the global exercise of power. Historically\, power has not only been exercised in the form of state sovereignty\, but also in the private law forms of property and contract. The lectures will show that the global exercise of power is still dependent on both forms. However\, too little attention is paid to the global regulatory function of private rights.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/martti-koskenniemi-international-law-and-empire-historical-lessons/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20111110
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20111113
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T102236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155632Z
UID:10000336-1320883200-1321142399@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Legal Cultures\, Legal Transfer\, and Legal Pluralism
DESCRIPTION:4th Annual International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence \nThe subject of the conference concerns recent developments of normative orders in general and legal orders in particular: The fact that in the area of globalization our traditional image of an integrated normative order within a nationstate on one territory which can be identified by its borders becomes more and more obsolete. International and transnational norms emerge and influence or determine national law\, different kinds of norms govern people on the local as well as on the global level and different actors of normativity are active beyond territorial borders. The fact of legal pluralism reveals the other fact that law is and always was an integral part of cultures – and the plurality of cultures determines in a certain way the pluralization of law as well as conflicts about the law and the different processes of exchange and transfer between different normative orders. It is also obvious that the fact of legal pluralism has a long historical continuity – and it might be that a unified and centralized national law and legal code was an exception and not the normal condition of modern societies.    \nProgram\nThursday\, November 10\, 2011 \n18.00 Welcome\n18:15 Opening lecture:\nMartin Loughlin “Some reflections on the concept of constitutional pluralism” \nFriday\, November 11\, 2011\n\n 10.00 a.m. Official opening\n(Rainer Forst & Stefan Kadelbach) \n10.30 a.m. Panel I\nGlobal Legal Pluralism: Fact\, Fiction\, Forecast\, Norm?\nChair: Christoph Menke\nLecture Paul Schiff Berman “Global Legal Pluralism as a Normative Project”\nLecture Klaus Günther “Normative Legal Pluralism and Its Discontents” \n14.00 Panel II\nTransfer of Normative Orders – Normative Orders from Transfer\nChair: Annette Warner\nLecture Michael Stolleis “Transfer of Normative Orders. Baumaterial für junge Nationalstaaten – ein Südosteuropa-Projekt”\nLecture Jane Burbank “The Rights of the Ruled: Legal Process and Sovereignty in Imperial Russia”  \n16.30 Panel III\nThe Politics of Legal Pluralism and the Role of Experts\nChair: Gunther Hellmann\nLecture Jean Cohen “The Politics and Risks of the New Legal Pluralism”\nLecture Jens Steffek “Law\, Expertise\, and the Legitimacy of International Governance” \nSaturday\, November 12\, 2011 \n10.00 a.m. Panel IV\nEmerging Transnational Normative Orders: Efforts on the Ground-Level\nChair: Stefan Kadelbach\nLecture Christian Joerges “What is left of the ‘integration through law’ project?”\nLecture Alexander Peukert “Intellectual Property: The Global Spread of a Legal Concept” \n12.00 p.m. End of conference \n 
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/legal-cultures-legal-transfer-and-legal-pluralism/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20111123
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20111125
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T104050Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155639Z
UID:10000346-1322006400-1322179199@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Crisis: Interdisciplinary Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:International annual conference \nProgram\nPanel 1 \nConceptions of Crisis \nProf. Dr. Albena Azmanova (Brussels School of International Studies\, Kent University):\nCrisis of Crisis: On Normative and Institutional Stuckness \nProf. Dr. Rainer Forst and Prof. Dr. Klaus Günther (Directors of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University):\nNormative Crisis: Conceptual and Diagnostic Remarks \nDr. Brian Milstein (Goethe University):\nWhat Does a Legitimation Crisis Mean Today? \nChair: Rebecca Schmidt (Managing Director of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University) \n— \nKeynote \nThursday\, November 23\, 5 – 6:30 p.m.\n \nProf. Dr. Hauke Brunkhorst (Europa-Universität Flensburg):\nNormative Orders in Crisis – Conditions of Democratic Solidarity within the Capitalist World System \n— \nFriday\, November 24\, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.\n \nPanel 2 \nHistorical Interpretations in Crisis – The Search for Concepts beyond the Secularization Paradigm \nProf. Dr. Chris Hann (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology\, Halle/Saale):\nA Concept of Eurasia \nProf. Dr. Bernhard Jussen (Goethe University):\nBildbasierte Versuchsanordnungen. From the crisis of the secularization paradigm to the search for new models of historical argumentation  \nJudith Blume (Göttingen University):\nReprint\, Revision\, Renew. Dealing with crises in the medium of the scrapbook  \nChair: Prof. Dr. Annette Warner (Goethe University) \n— \nFriday\, November 24\, 1:30 – 3:30 p.m.\n \nPanel 3 \nThe Crisis of the ‘Liberal World Order’ \nProf. Dr. Vivienne Jabri (King’s College London):\nCrisis and World Order: A Postcolonial Political Ontology \nProf. Dr. Christopher Daase (Goethe University):\nThe Contradictions of the Liberal World \nDr. Stefan Kroll (Goethe University):\nThe Crisis of the Liberal World Order: And the Politics of its Defense \nChair: Prof. Dr. Stefan Kadelbach (Goethe University)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/crisis-interdisciplinary-perspectives/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120130
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120201
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155621Z
UID:10000318-1327881600-1328054399@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Philip Pettit: Republican justice and democracy
DESCRIPTION:I. The distinction between justice and democracy\nII. The priority of democracy over justice   \nJustice is not the only virtue of political institutions; legitimacy is just as important. After all\, it is democracy\, not justice\, that establishes institutional legitimacy. At least this is the case from a republican view of democracy.   \nPolitical institutions may be more just but less democratic\, less just but more democratic. So which value is more important? In political theory\, which addresses citizens as the makers of institutions\, democracy has an important priority.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/philip-pettit-republican-justice-and-democracy/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/image-6.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20130701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20130703
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153759Z
UID:10000316-1372636800-1372809599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:R. Jay Wallace: Bilateralism in morality
DESCRIPTION:R. Jay Wallace (Professor of Philosophy at the University of California\, Berkeley) \nI: The main features of bilateral normativity\nII: Claim\, injustice and requirement \nAccording to one promising approach\, morality is about a particular kind of interpersonal relationship. More precisely\, adherence to moral norms enables us to deal with other persons on the basis of mutual respect. Moral normativity is therefore bilateral\, insofar as it has to do with demands that are based on the demands of other individuals. The aim of the lectures will be to elaborate and critically examine some important presuppositions of this bilateral understanding of morality.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/r-jay-wallace-bilateralism-in-morality/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/image-5.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20131121
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20131123
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T102525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155634Z
UID:10000338-1384992000-1385164799@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Normative orders of the future
DESCRIPTION:International Annual Conference of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders” \nProgram\nThursday\, November 21\, 2013\n14:30 – 14:45\, Room EG 01+02 \nOpening of the Annual Conference 2013: Normative Orders of the Future\nProf. Dr. Klaus Günther\, Co-Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders” \n14:45 – 16:45\, Room EG 01+02 \nPanel of the research field III:\nThe controversial nature of international orders\nChair: Prof. Olivier Jouanjan (Université de Strasbourg) \nProf. Dr. Michael Zürn (Social Science Research Center Berlin)\nThe politicization of international institutions – harbinger of a post-national conflict line? \nProf. Dr. Gunther Hellmann (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nMultilateralism\, Minilateralism and Global Governance \nDr. Sara Dezalay (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nPrevent\, Pacify and Punish. Non-governmental organizations in the international governance of social violence on the African continent  \n16:45 – 17:15\, foyer on the first floor: coffee and cake \n17:15 – 19:15\, Room EG 01+02 \nPanel of Research Field II: Culture and Power\nChair: Prof. Dr. Thomas M. Schmidt (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) \nProf. Dr. Claudia Rapp (University of Vienna)\nKaiser\, Christentum und Macht\, oder: Wer war schuld an der Institutionalisierung der Kirche? \nProf. Dr. Susanne Schröter (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nThe phenomenon of neo-Islamism. Religious culture and political entanglements  \nDr. des. Daniel Föller   (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nPolitical power and warrior culture in Carolingian Europe \nFriday\, November 22\, 2013\n10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. \, Room EG 01+02 \nPanel of Research Field I:\nThe present of the future. Sustainability and ecological justice\nChair: Prof. Dr. Katharina Michaelowa (University of Zurich) \nProf. Dr. Thomas Pogge (Yale University)\nStemming Climate Change and Eradicating Poverty: Competing Imperatives? \nProf. Dr. Darrel Moellendorf (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nDangerous Climate Change and Responsibility for Mitigation \nDr. Anja Karnein (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nAddressing (Past) Pollution: The Beneficiary Pays Principle Revisited \n12:00 – 13:00: Room 5.01 and Lounge: small lunch snack \n13:00 – 15:00\, Room EG 01+02 \nPostdoc panel: Crisis and emergence\nChair: Dr. Dr. Milan Kuhli (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) \nDr. Kerstin Weiand (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nPapacy and fear of the Turks. The Ottoman Expansion as a Mobilizing and Dynamizing Factor in Papal Politics  \nDr. Lisa Herzog (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nPersonal trust\, legal trust\, systemic trust. On the nature of credit and the causes of the financial crisis  \nDr. Matthias C. Kettemann (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)\nThe normative order of the Internet. Problems\, potential and perspectives of Internet governance  \n15:00 End of the Annual Conference 2013
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/normative-orders-of-the-future/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20141120T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20141121T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T102850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155636Z
UID:10000340-1416470400-1416589200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Normative orders in transition: global challenges
DESCRIPTION:Seventh Annual International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders” \nProgram\nThursday\, November 20\, 2014 \n14.30 to 14.45 \nOpening of the 2014 Annual Conference “Normative Orders in Transition: Global Challenges”\nProf. Dr. Rainer Forst and Prof. Dr. Klaus Günther (Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \n14.45 to 16.45 \nPanel I: The juridification of the world and its critics \nChair: Prof. Dr. Stefan Kadelbach (Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) \nProf. Michelle Everson (Birkbeck University of London):\nCrisis past and crisis yet to come: the fault of (European) law \nDr. Matthias Goldmann (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law\, Heidelberg):\nCouper la tête du roi? The juridification of informal public authority as a challenge for jurisprudence  \nProf. Dr. Jens Steffek (Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Technical University of Darmstadt):\nArbitrariness\, contingency and international law \n16.45 to 17.15\, foyer on the first floor\, café and cake \n17.15-19.15 \nPanel II: Multinormativity – constellation analyses \nChair: Prof. Dr. Thomas Duve (Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Max Planck Institute for European Legal History) \nProf. Dr. Marie-Claire Foblets (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology):\nA plea for Accommodation of Diversity within the State Legal Framework \nProf. Dr. Miloš Vec (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, University of Vienna):\nNormcore: Social Rules and the Law of Fashion \nDr. Stefan Kroll (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main):\nThe destabilization of expectations through the denial of justice \nFriday\, November 21\, 2014 \n10-12 o’clock \nPanel III: Challenges of normativity on the Internet \nChair: Dr. Thorsten Thiel (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) \nDr. Matthias C. Kettemann (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main):\nThe protection of the Internet in the common interest: Implications for states and non-state actors \nProf. Dr. Alexander Peukert (Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main):\nPrivatization and automation of law enforcement on the Internet \nProf. Dr. Jeanette Hofmann (Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society\, Berlin):\nMulti-stakeholder semantics in Internet governance: Actor formation and space of opportunity \n12.00 to 13.00\, room 501 and lounge\, light lunch \n13.00 to 15.00 \nPanel IV: (Post)Secularism – Theoretical and Empirical Findings on a Contested Category \nChair: Prof. Dr. Susanne Schröter (Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main): \nDr. Jocelyne Cesari (Harvard University):\nBridging the Gap Between Political Theory and Political Reality: Revisiting the Dominant Concepts of Secularism \nProf. Dr Hartmut Zinser (Freie Universität Berlin):\nSecularization – the Return of Religions – Postsecularism. Remarks on the Conceptual Landscape  \nDr. Dominik Müller (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main):\nAnti-Secular Modernity and the Rise of Pop-Islamism in Southeast Asia \n3 p.m. End of the Annual Conference 2014
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/normative-orders-in-transition-global-challenges/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2014_Jahreskonferenz_Plakat.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150603
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T181006Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153758Z
UID:10000314-1433116800-1433289599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:James Scott: The Late-Neolithic Multi-species Re-settlement Camp and the Earliest States
DESCRIPTION:Prof. Dr. James Scott (Yale University) \nI. The Domestication of Fire\, Animals\, Grain and….Us\nThe Early State: its Fragility and the Golden Age of “Barbarians” \nAll of the presumed civilizational steps required for state-making: agriculture\, domestic animals\, sedentism\, towns and substantial commerce were in place several millennia before anything we might call a “state” appears in the historical record. Why the long delay? As long as other\, broader subsistence options were open\, Homo sapiens avoided substantial reliance on agriculture because of disease\, drudgery\, and risk. The creation of the state requires confinement\, unfree labor and a cereal grain as a tax crop. Hence there are no cassava\, sweet potato\, banana\, lentil\, chick pea states\, only millet\, wheat\, barley\, rice and maize states. How the hegemony of these grains transformed our culture\, our society\, the domus and our bodies is part of this story.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/james-scott-the-late-neolithic-multi-species-re-settlement-camp-and-the-earliest-states/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/gif:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/image.gif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20151119T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20151120T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T103628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155637Z
UID:10000342-1447920000-1448038800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Europe's justice
DESCRIPTION:Eighth Annual International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders” \nProgram \nThursday\, November 19 \n13.00 to 13.15\n\n Opening of the Annual Conference 2015: EUROPE’S JUSTICE\nWelcome: Prof. Dr. Klaus Günther & Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst (Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \n13.15 to 15.15 \nPanel I: EUROPE AS A CONTEXT OF JUSTICE \nChairs: Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst & Prof. Dr. Klaus Günther (Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \nProf. Dr. Kalypso Nicolaïdis (Oxford University): How can a Demoicratic Polity be Just? The Puzzles of Solidarity\, Reciprocity and Choice in the EU  \nDr. Lisa Herzog (Goethe University): Prices and Dignity in the Eurozone \nProf. Dr. Christoph Burchard (Goethe University): The Contexts of Europe as a Context of Justice – in Light of the Administration of Criminal Justice \n3:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.\, foyer on the first floor\nCoffee and cake \n3:45 pm to 5:45 pm \nPanel II: CRISES IN THE EUROZONE\n\n Chairs: Rebecca Caroline Schmidt (Managing Director of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) & Prof. Dr. Rainer Klump(University of Luxembourg) \nProf. Dr. Francesco Mongelli (ECB\, Goethe University) & Jean-Francois Jamet (ECB): How to Exit the Crisis: Reflections on the 4 Unions. Why Do We Need Them?  \nProf. Dr. John Milios (National Technical University of Athens): Crisis and Austerity. Is there a Chance for the Welfare State?  \nDr. Kolja Möller (Goethe University): From the Constitutionalization of Austerity to Destituent Power: Democratic Challenges in the Context of the Euro-Crisis\n \n18:00 to 20:00\nKeynote: Questions of guilt in the European debt crisis\nEvening lecture\nProf. Dr. Claus Offe (Hertie School of Governance\, Berlin) \nFriday\, November 20 \n10:00 to 12:00 \nPanel III: INEQUALITIES IN EUROPE \nChair: Dr. Dominik Müller (Goethe University) \nProf. Dr. Hartmut Kaelble (Humboldt University Berlin): Why did social inequality in Western Europe decrease during the 20th century? \nProf. Dr. Susanne Schröter (Goethe University): Justice in the immigration society \nDr. Kerstin Weiand (Goethe University): Inequality as a political-social explosive? On the (dis)order function of a structural principle in the early modern period  \n12:00 to 13:00\, Room 5.01 and Lounge\nSmall lunch snack \n13:00 to 15:00 \nPanel IV: POLICIES OF JUSTICE – ON THE EU’S PROBLEM WITH DRAWING BORDERS BY LEGAL MEANS\n\n Chair: Prof. Dr. Stefan Kadelbach (Goethe University) \nProf. Dr. Helene Sjursen (Arena Centre for European Studies\, Oslo): A Duty to Expand? The Question of Obligations Towards “the Other” in a European Context  \nProf. Dr. Harald Müller (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt): International Political Justice in Europe: The Distribution of Security and Opportunity for Influence in Security Policy \nDr. Michael Ioannidis (Max Planck Institute Heidelberg): Weak Members and the EU Rule of Law: The Case of Greece \n15:00\nEnd of the 2015 annual conference
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/europes-justice/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2015_jahreskonferenz_plakat.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20160502
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20160504
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T180850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153757Z
UID:10000312-1462147200-1462319999@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Liam B. Murphy: Private Law and Public Illusion
DESCRIPTION:Liam B. Murphy (Herbert Peterfreund Chair of Law and Professor of Philosophy at New York University) \nI: Artificial Morality\nII: The Persistence of an Illusion \nIn the public at large\, property and contract law are commonly thought to reflect moral proprietary and promissory rights. Contemporary philosophers are mostly skeptical about natural property rights\, but not about promissory rights. I argue that contract and promise\, no less than property\, can only be justified instrumentally – by appeal to the social good that these conventional practices produce. The etiology of the tenacious and harmful public illusion that the law of the market reflects individual natural rights deserves investigation.    \nI argue that the inevitably deontological form of contract and property law plays a significant role in sustaining this illusion.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/liam-b-murphy-private-law-and-public-illusion/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20161024
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20161026
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T180755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153756Z
UID:10000310-1477267200-1477439999@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Friedrich Kratochwil: Theory of political practice?
DESCRIPTION:Prof. Dr. Friedrich Kratochwil (Professor emeritus of International Relations) \nI. Critical comments on the “practice turn”\nII. Critical comments on “ideal theory” \nThe two lectures deal with the problem of the possibility of a theory of practice. The first sheds light on these problems through a critical examination of the “practice turn” in international relations and the Humean critique of an approach based on the modern scientific understanding of the social world. The second lecture attempts to take these ideas further by critiquing attempts at an “ideal theory”\, which have been common since the early Habermas and Rawls and have also become dominant in political theory
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/friedrich-kratochwil-theory-of-political-practice/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/image-3.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20161124T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20161125T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T103834Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155638Z
UID:10000344-1479974400-1480093200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Normative (B)Orders. Migration and Citizenship in a Time of Crisis
DESCRIPTION:9th International Annual Conference \nSchedule \nThursday\, November 24th\, 2016\n\n2:00 p.m. – 2:15 p.m.\, Ground floor Room 01+02 \nOpening of the Annual Conference 2016 \nOpening Address\nProf. Dr. Klaus Günther & Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst (Directors of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \n2:15 p.m. – 4:15 p.m.\, Ground floor Room 01+02 \nPanel I – The Politics of Migration: Problems\, Principles and Policies \nChairs: Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst & Prof. Dr. Klaus Günther (Directors of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \nProf. Dr. Steffen Mau (Humboldt University of Berlin) & Prof. Dr. Jens Steffek (TU Darmstadt):\nExploring the Global Mobility Divide: the Case of Visa Waiver Policies \nDr. Eszter Kollár (Goethe University):\nFairness in Labour Migration. A Radical Liberal Egalitarian Proposal  \nProf. Dr. Lea Ypi (London School of Economics):\nRealism on Migration \n4:15 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.\, Ground floor Lobby \nCoffee and Cake \n5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.\, Ground floor Room 01+02 \nKeynote Address\nBordering Migration: Legal Cartographies of Membership and Mobility\nProf. Dr. Ayelet Shachar (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity\, Göttingen) \nFriday\, November 25th\, 2016\n\n10:00 a.m. – 12:00 a.m.\, Ground floor Room 01+02 \nPanel II – The Institutional\, Legal and Normative Challenges of Europe’s Contemporary Migration Crisis \nChair: Prof. Dr. Gunther Hellmann (Goethe University) \nProf. Dr. Rainer Hofmann (Goethe University):\nCurrent Challenges to International Refugee Law \nProf. Dr. Christopher Daase & Prof. Dr. Nicole Deitelhoff (Goethe University):\nThe European Union and Refugees: Crisis Without Borders \nNele Kortendiek (TU Darmstadt):\nGlobal Migration Governance at the European External Border – The Case of Chios \n12:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.\, Room 5.01 and Lounge \nLunch snack \n1:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.\, Ground floor Room 01+02 \nPanel III – Discourses on Migration and Citizenship in a Globalized World \nChair: Prof. Dr. Susanne Schröter (Goethe University) \nProf. Dr. Leo Lucassen (Leiden University):\nMigration and the Formation of Normative Orders in Western Europe: from the Rushdie Affair to the ‘Refugee Crisis’ \nProf. Dr. Mamadou Diawara (Goethe University):\n“Lose your Passport!” Migration and Citizenship in a so-called Globalized World \nDr. Dominik M. Müller (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology\, Halle):\nEconomies of Attention and Selective Empathy in Times of Multiple Refugee Crises: The Case of Rohingya in Southeast Asia \n3:00 p.m. End of the Annual Conference 2016
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/normative-borders-migration-and-citizenship-in-a-time-of-crisis/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/image.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180428T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180428T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20241212T144759Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T100625Z
UID:10000260-1524909600-1524934800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:INTERVENTION 1968-2018 What is left? Achievements and burdens of a political awakening
DESCRIPTION:The international protest movement of 1968 had a local West German focus in Frankfurt. 50 years later\, the revolt seems to be a cause for either idealizing nostalgia or furious defamation. Time to ask what “68” still has to say to us today.   \nWhat can we learn from the protests of 2018 in Europe? What has remained of the uprising and the awakening\, and what should be carried forward politically into the future? Do we need a political renaissance? What social incrustations must we revolt against today – and with what moral legitimacy?    \nThe Römerberg Talks take the historical anniversary as an opportunity for current and personal self-assurance: What changes do we need today\, and to what extent do the experiences of the global protest movement of 1968 help or hinder us? \n10:15 – Armin Nassehi\nReflection and moralization as a pose – what remains of 1968 \n11:15 – Priska Daphi\nWhat does protest culture look like today? \n12:15 – Ulrich Herbert\nReform and revolt – 1968 in diachronic and transnational perspective \n13:00 – LUNCH BREAK \n14:15 – Wolfgang Kraushaar\nThe benefits and disadvantages of the history of 1968 for left-wing politics \n15:30 – Christina von Hodenberg and Gisela Notz in conversation\nHow emancipatory was 1968? \n17:00 – Martin Saar\nWhat was (and is) the “democratization of democracy”? \n18:00 – END
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/intervention-1968-2018-what-is-left-achievements-and-burdens-of-a-political-awakening/
LOCATION:Chagallsaal of the Schauspiel Frankfurt\, New Mainzer Str. 17\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60311
CATEGORIES:Römerberggespräche
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/image-5.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180525T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180525T220000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250410T140326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T140326Z
UID:10000375-1527276600-1527285600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Democracy for all: Is the '68 awakening in danger?
DESCRIPTION:Frankfurt Citizens’ University event “50 years in motion – 1968 and the consequences” in summer semester 2018 and winter semester 2018/19 \nIn his 1969 government declaration\, Willy Brandt coined the formula: “Daring more democracy”. The opening evening will first examine the background to this democratic deficit (perceived and real) and discuss the extent to which 1968 and the subsequent socio-political reforms have actually succeeded in reducing such a deficit. After all\, Jürgen Habermas spoke of a “fundamental liberalization” in the 1980s. However\, observers now note a “backlash”. The rise of right-wing populist parties and authoritarian regimes\, which are constitutionally pluralistic democracies\, are seen as signs of a countermovement. Is the era of emancipatory optimism coming to an end?      \nThese and other questions will be discussed by: Jürgen Kaube\, editor of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung; Prof. Rainer Forst\, political philosopher\, spokesperson of the Cluster of Excellence Normative Orders; Jutta Ditfurth\, author\, sociologist\, Frankfurt city councillor; Albrecht von Lucke\, legal and political scientist\, publicist\, editor of Blätter für deutsche und internationale Politik. Prof. Nicole Deitelhoff\, political scientist\, member of the Cluster of Excellence and Managing Director of the Leibniz Institute Hessian Foundation for Peace and Conflict Research (HSFK)\, will moderate the event.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/democracy-for-all-is-the-68-awakening-in-danger/
LOCATION:Foyer\, PA building\, Westend campus\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1\, Frankfurt\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Bürger-Universität
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2018_Buergeruni_Plakat_webneu.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180608T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180608T220000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250410T140449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T140449Z
UID:10000377-1528486200-1528495200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Unleashed ego. 1968 and the experiment with new forms of life
DESCRIPTION:Event of the Frankfurt Citizens’ University “50 Years in Motion – 1968 and the Consequences” in the summer semester 2018 and winter semester 2018/19 \nPanel: Matthias Horx (trend and futurologist)\, Prof. Till van Rahden (historian\, Canada Research Chair in German and European Studies\, Université de Montréal)\, Prof. Sibylla Flügge (lawyer and women’s rights activist\, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences)\, Gisela Getty (photographer\, director\, writer\, former member of the Communist Party\, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences). (retired) Sibylla Flügge (lawyer and women’s rights activist\, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences)\, Gisela Getty (photographer\, director\, writer\, former member of Kommune 1)\nModeration: Thomas Thiel\, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/unleashed-ego-1968-and-the-experiment-with-new-forms-of-life/
LOCATION:Foyer\, PA building\, Westend campus\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1\, Frankfurt\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Bürger-Universität
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2018_Buergeruni_Plakat_webneu.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181103T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181103T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20241212T144602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T100635Z
UID:10000365-1541239200-1541264400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The new desire for destruction. Or how democracy keeps its composure
DESCRIPTION:The public climate is currently becoming harsher. A new desire for destruction is spreading in society and politics. International and national\, digital and analog\, right and left: it is better to stand in front of a pile of broken glass than to be forced into the corset of the established order.   \n\n\n\nThe disenchantment with politics seems to have developed into a weariness with democratic and civil manners. The destructive character of Donald Trump suddenly appears as a standard-setting role model that is being imitated in\nGermany and abroad.  \nWhat is behind the desire to set society on fire and deliberately break taboos? How should society and politics deal with this radicalization and emotionalization of the public beyond the widespread bewilderment? Can anger\, indignation\, destructiveness and hatred be transformed into a willingness to engage in dialog? How can we reconcile the courage to contradict with the patience to listen?    \n10:00 – Opening \n10:15 – Nicole Deitelhoff\nDemocracy needs conflict! On the integrative power of social conflicts  \n11:15 – Thorsten Thiel\nTrouble spot digital public sphere \n12:15 – Ute Frevert\nThe new desire for feelings \n13:15 – Lunch break \n14:15 – Christoph Möllers\nStrategic or principle-driven communication: the basic law and the limits of negotiability \n15:15 – A question of form. On the art of democratic conviviality \nA conversation with Robert Habeck\, Till van Rahden and Anatol Stefanowitsch \n16:30 – Rainer Forst\nTwo bad halves don’t make a whole. On the crisis of democracy  \n17:30 – End
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-new-desire-for-destruction-or-how-democracy-keeps-its-composure/
LOCATION:Chagallsaal of the Schauspiel Frankfurt\, New Mainzer Str. 17\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60311
CATEGORIES:Römerberggespräche
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/image-4.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181122
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181124
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250403T104239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T155640Z
UID:10000348-1542844800-1543017599@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Revolution\, reaction\, restoration: upheavals of normative orders
DESCRIPTION:11th Annual International Conference \nProgram \nThursday\, November 22\, 2018 \n14:00 – 14:15\n \nOpening of the annual conference\n \nProf. Dr. Klaus Günther (Co-Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”) \n\n14:15 – 16:15\n \nPanel I – Upheavals in international orders \nProf. Benno Teschke (University of Sussex):\nRevolution\, Restoration & 19th Century International Ordering: Challenges for IR Theory \nProf. Armin von Bogdandy (MPI for Comparative Public Law and International Law\, Heidelberg; Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”):\nThe particularist reaction against multilateral institutions \nXimena Soley and Silvia Steininger (MPI for Comparative Public Law and International Law\, Heidelberg; Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”):\nHuman Rights Courts Under Pressure: Backlash and Resilience in the European and Inter-American Human Rights System \nChair: Prof. Gunther Hellmann (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University) \n  \n16:15 – 17:00\nCoffee and cake \n  \n17:00 – 19:00\n \nKeynote: Democracy and Disrespect\n \nProf. Jan-Werner Müller (Princeton) \nIntroduction and moderation: Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University) \n  \nFriday\, November 23\, 2018 \n10:00 – 12:00 a.m.\n \nPanel II: The revolution and the people\n \nProf. Dirk Jörke (TU Darmstadt):\nPopulism – or the end of the liberal age \nProf. Christoph Menke  (Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University):\nThe possibility of revolution \nDr. Sophie Møller (Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University):\nHindsight and foresight in Kant’s Opposition to Revolution \nChair: Prof. Martin Saar (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University) \n\n13:00 – 15:00\n \nPanel III: Violence\, culture and politics in times of social upheaval\n \nProf. Gudrun Gersmann (University of Cologne):\nTerror\, death\, mourning\, trauma: the conflict surrounding the French Revolution during the Restoration \nProf. Susanne Schröter (Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University):\nIslamic revolutions – the examples of Syria and Iraq in 2014 and Iran in 1979 \nJason Mast\, PhD (Cluster of Excellence\, “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University):\nCultural Codes in Brexit and the 2016 US Presidential Election \nChair: Hakim Khatib (Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”\, Goethe University)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/revolution-reaction-restoration-upheavals-of-normative-orders/
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/image-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181122T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181122T220000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250410T140553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T140553Z
UID:10000379-1542915000-1542924000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Remembering\, confessing\, guilt\, coming to terms: 1968 and the Holocaust
DESCRIPTION:Frankfurt Citizens’ University event “50 years in motion – 1968 and the consequences” in summer semester 2018 and winter semester 2018/19 \nPanel: Prof. Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber (psychoanalyst\, former director of the Sigmund Freud Institute)\, Prof. em. Michael Stolleis (legal historian\, Goethe University)\, Dr. Tobias Freimüller (historian\, deputy director of the Fritz Bauer Institute)\nModeration: Sandra Kegel\, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/remembering-confessing-guilt-coming-to-terms-1968-and-the-holocaust/
LOCATION:Foyer\, PA building\, Westend campus\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1\, Frankfurt\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Bürger-Universität
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2018_Buergeruni_Plakat_webneu.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181206T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20181206T220000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250410T140847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T140847Z
UID:10000381-1544124600-1544133600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The main thing is a theory? 1968 and the exclusivity of discourse
DESCRIPTION:Frankfurt Citizens’ University event “50 Years in Motion – 1968 and the Consequences” in the summer semester 2018 and winter semester 2018/19 \nPanel including: Jürgen Kaube (editor of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung)\, Prof. Klaus Günther (lawyer and philosopher of law\, spokesperson for the Cluster of Excellence Normative Orders)\, Prof. Philipp Felsch (cultural scientist\, HU Berlin\, author of “Der lange Sommer der Theorie”)\, Dr. Rolf Wiggershaus (philosopher and publicist\, author of “Die Frankfurter Schule. History\, Theoretical Development\, Political Significance”)\nModeration: Dr. Olaf Kaltenborn\, Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-main-thing-is-a-theory-1968-and-the-exclusivity-of-discourse/
LOCATION:Foyer\, PA building\, Westend campus\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1\, Frankfurt\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Bürger-Universität
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2018_Buergeruni_Plakat_webneu.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190511T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190511T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20241212T144418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T100644Z
UID:10000261-1557568800-1557594000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:INTERVENTION. Last Exit after Brexit Can Europe still be saved?
DESCRIPTION:Europe has never been under such attack as it is now. There are calls for integration to be reversed or this has already led to concrete steps being taken in some EU member states. The criticism is accompanied by very different assessments of the omissions and mistakes made in the past. In addition\, global political players such as Trump and Putin are more or less openly hostile to the EU.    \nIn contrast\, the forces of cohesion appear to be waning and the defense of the EU as a political project is comparatively weak. European integration has many enemies\, nationalism has become state doctrine in many countries\, while the dream of a united Europe is hardly attractive anymore.  \nTwo weeks before the European elections\, the Römerberg Talks in the “European City of Frankfurt” would like to know whether Europe can still be saved in view of the widely articulated disappointments and the rampant hatred of “Brussels”. And if so\, what would the necessary steps for such a rescue look like? And what can we hope for?   \n10:15 – Philip Manow\nEuropean elections as European protest elections \n11:15 – Christine Landfried\nWhere is the European public hiding? \n12:15 – Andreas Rödder\nEurope\, become essential! A plea against overstimulation and moralization  \n13:00 – LUNCH BREAK \n14:15 – Stefan Kadelbach\n“European sovereignty” or back to the nation state? Possible scenarios for the future of the European Union  \n15:30 – What reforms does the European Republic need?\nMara-Daria Cojocaru and Ulrike Guérot in conversation with Alf Mentzer \n17:00 – Daniel Röder\nAt the pulse of Europe? \n18:00 – END
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/intervention-last-exit-after-brexit-can-europe-still-be-saved/
LOCATION:Chagallsaal of the Schauspiel Frankfurt\, New Mainzer Str. 17\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60311
CATEGORIES:Römerberggespräche
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/image-3.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20191028T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20191028T220000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250410T132427Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T132427Z
UID:10000371-1572291000-1572300000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Unequal Germany. Social and geographical cohesion in democracy
DESCRIPTION:Event as part of the Citizens’ University “Thinking Democracy Forward” in the winter semester 2019/2020 \n“Now what belongs together is growing together”\, said Willy Brandt\, and Helmut Kohl predicted “blooming landscapes”. Three decades later\, this optimism seems to have faded. Objectively speaking\, too\, there are still clear differences between East and West\, for example in terms of income and management: the vast majority of bosses in the East come from the West; according to a survey published at the beginning of the year\, none of the rectors of East German universities were born in the former GDR. Despite prospering regions such as Leipzig or Jena\, many East Germans seem to feel left behind and that their life’s work is not appreciated. But it is not only a “gap” between East and West that is becoming apparent. Recent studies indicate that there are also major structural problems in the territory of the old Federal Republic\, for example in the Ruhr region.      \nDiscussing on the podium: Prof. Dr. Birgitta Wolff (President of Goethe University)\, Prof. Dr. Matthias Middell (Speaker FGZ Leipzig)\, Prof. Dr. Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln (Economist\, Goethe University)\, Prof. Dr. Uwe Cantner (Chairman of the Expert Commission on Research and Innovation of the Federal Government & Vice President University of Jena). Meinhard Schmidt-Degenhard (TV presenter & author) will moderate the event.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/unequal-germany-social-and-geographical-cohesion-in-democracy/
LOCATION:Senckenberg Society for Nature Research\, Arthur-von-Weinberg-Haus\, Lecture Hall\, Robert-Mayer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt\, 60325\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Bürger-Universität
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20191102T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20191102T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20241212T144155Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T100652Z
UID:10000262-1572688800-1572714000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:#47 30 years after the fall of the Wall. Daring more change!
DESCRIPTION:47th Römerberg Talks \n1989 not only marked the end of an era in German history. The East-West divide also seemed to have been happily overcome\, open European borders and the democratization of former dictatorships promised a better future\, but this spirit of optimism has long since given way to a political hangover. New divisions have emerged within Europe\, and walls and borders are also back in fashion globally. Concerns about social security\, future prosperity and visions of ecological fear have replaced the euphoria of ’89.    \nThe Römerberg Talks take the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall as an opportunity to take a critical look at the global present: where are the major lines of conflict and divides today\, and where should a similarly courageous departure into a new era be dared in 2019? \n10:00 – Welcome Angela Dorn\nHessian State Minister for Science and the Arts \n10:15 – Ivan Krastev\nMaking Sense of the Long 1989 (in English) \n11:00 – A discussion with Gunther Hellmann and Ivan Krastev (moderated by Rebecca C. Schmidt and Uwe Berndt)\nWhat happened to the Future of the Liberal International Order? \n12:00 – Thomas Biebricher\n1989 – the beginning of a spiritual and moral turning point? \n13:00 – LUNCH BREAK \n14:00 – Steffen Mau\nThe broken society – resentment and system skepticism in East Germany \n14:50 – Patrice G. Poutrus\nFor a narrative of East Germany beyond victim myths and misanthropy \n15:10 – Manuela Bojadžijev\nDangerous conjunctures. The East\, migration and an understanding of exclusion and belonging  \n15:30 – Discussion\nwith Manuela Bojadžijev and Patrice G. Poutrus \n16:00 – Jana Hensel\nWhy everything remains different \n17:00 – Stephan Lessenich\nThe lives of others: Rethinking solidarity \n18:00 – END
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/47-30-years-after-the-fall-of-the-wall-daring-more-change/
LOCATION:Chagallsaal of the Schauspiel Frankfurt\, New Mainzer Str. 17\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60311
CATEGORIES:Römerberggespräche
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/image-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191104
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191106
DTSTAMP:20260421T111753
CREATED:20250327T180649Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153755Z
UID:10000308-1572825600-1572998399@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Anne Peters: Rights\, duties and responsibilities in the post-humanist constellation
DESCRIPTION:Prof. Dr. iur. Anne Peters\, LL.M. (Harvard) (Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg)   \nRights of animals and nature\nDuties\, responsibility and artificial intelligence \nThe boundaries between animals\, humans and machines are becoming increasingly blurred. The primacy of humans\, who are in the process of destroying the planet\, is also being questioned. In this constellation\, does it make sense and is it necessary to grant rights to animals\, mountains\, rivers and forests\, as courts in Latin America and India do? What are the practical consequences for our treatment of nature and animals\, especially those that we exploit and kill by the billions? On the other hand\, should we impose legal obligations on intelligent machines? Could an unmanned drone make itself liable to prosecution if it violates international humanitarian law? Do we need to establish a new legal community in which humans\, animals and cyborgs have a place?
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/anne-peters-rights-duties-and-responsibilities-in-the-post-humanist-constellation/
CATEGORIES:Frankfurt Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/image-12.jpeg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR