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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241207T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241207T143000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20241212T160944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T153750Z
UID:10000304-1733565600-1733581800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:What do you think about migration - immigration as a question of national destiny?
DESCRIPTION:  \n56th Römerberg Talks\nImmigration currently seems to be Germany’s most important problem. Elections are won or lost on this issue. The fear of growing crime\, terrorist attacks by foreign perpetrators and the alarm cries of overburdened municipalities form a nightmare scenario with which populist parties are driving the political establishment before them.   \nAnyone who still advocates a welcoming culture\, defends the unrestricted right to asylum or points to the importance of migration for the labor market and social systems is denounced as unworldly and blind to the concerns of a section of the population. \n\n\nTime for a fact check and more differentiation: what is justified concern\, what is media hype\, what is politically motivated scaremongering? What do the crime statistics say? What are the possibilities\, opportunities and limits of politically shaped immigration? And what happens to a society whose awareness of the problem is narrowed down to the issue of containing unwanted migration?    \nModeration: Hadija Haruna-Oelker and Alf Mentzer \nThe event is open to the public. Admission is free.  \nProgram (pdf): Here… \nProgram \n\n10.00 a.m.\nGreeting \n10.15 a.m.\nVolker Heins\nThe Trump effect. A turning point for the migration society?  \n11.00 a.m.\nGina Wollinger and Thomas Hestermann\nAbout fear: migration and crime \n12.00 p.m.\nManuela Bojadžijev\nSolidarity and democracy. In defense of the migration society  \n12.30 p.m.\nLunch break \n1.30 p.m.\nGilda Sahebi and Thomas Biebricher\nProgressive\, conservative\, right-wing. Polarization in the media and political sphere  \nEnd around 14:30 \nUnfortunately omitted: Ulrich Herbert “Migration Processes in Europe after 1945 – A Critical Comparison” and Aladin El-Mafaalani “One-sided Discourse and Complex Truths – The Migration Debate”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/what-do-you-think-about-migration-immigration-as-a-question-of-national-destiny/
LOCATION:Chagallsaal of the Schauspiel Frankfurt\, New Mainzer Str. 17\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60311
CATEGORIES:Römerberggespräche
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/image.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241211T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241211T180000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20241210T154521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T082650Z
UID:10000251-1733911200-1733940000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Peace theory in times of war. From where - to where?
DESCRIPTION:Workshop \nProgram: \n10:15 am Beginning of the Workshop; Welcome \n10:30-11:30 a.m. Anacrusis \n1. talking about peace in war/Speaking peace in war – what for? (input Lothar Brock/ Hendrik Simon)  \nDiscussion in the Forum \n11:30-11:45 a.m. Coffee Break \n11:45-13:15 Panel 1: German peace theory/Theorizing peace in Germany \n2. view from the outside/Looking from the outside in (input Matthew Specter) \n3. beyond iB or: Peace as a Process. What does that mean? /Beyond iR: Regarding Peace as Process. What does that mean? (input Thorsten Bonacker/Mariam Salehi)     \nDiscussants: Lothar Brock and Hendrik Simon \n13:15-14:45 Lunch \n14:45-16:15 Panel 2: Unlearning and Emancipation in Peace Theory \n4 Peace – a civilizing project? Peace – a civilizing project? (input Mathias Albert)   \n5. de-colonial perspectives on peace / Decolonial Peace Theory (input María Cárdenas Alfonso) \n6. Gender und Friede / Gender and Peace (input Simone Wisotzki)\nDiscussant: Jonas Wolff \n16:15-16:30 Coffee Break \n16:30-18:00 Panel 3: Peace and War after the “Turning Point” \n7. Friedensethik nach der Zeitenwende/Peace ethics after the turning point (input Christopher Daase) \n8. Zeitenwende und Völkerrecht / Turning point and international law (input Thilo Marauhn) \n9 Peace\, War and Social Discourse / Friede und sozialer Diskurs (input Nicole Doerr) \nDiscussant: Stefan Kroll \nAfterwards: Dinner
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/peace-theory-in-times-of-war-from-where-to-where/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, Room 5.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Workshop_Simon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20241216
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20241218
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20241216T150618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T154438Z
UID:10000258-1734307200-1734479999@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:After Surveillance. Digital Intermediaries of Trust\, Confidence\, and Security
DESCRIPTION:Conference with two keynotes by Nicole Starosielski\, UC Berkeley and Nick Couldry\, LSE \nSurveillance capitalism\, platform capitalism\, data colonialism. Over the past decade\, scholars have coined a spate of new terms that attempt to periodize our present. But what if data extraction capitalism as we know it has already peaked? What if its seemingly powerful and robust digital platforms\, logistical infrastructures\, and market dominance do not herald a new era\, but rather a transitional period marked by security breaches\, precarious business models\, waste of energy\, and loss of trust? What if we think of our current situation as repercussions of the long 20th century and its Western modes of logistics\, distribution\, and audience research\, but one that is slowly fading away? What comes next as they give way to new global digital fabrics that operate on their own terms? How does society’s reliance on digital media and networks translate into new\, distributed forms of accountability and trust? And what are the theoretical implications of approaching today’s global digital society as unstable\, crisis-ridden\, and transitional?        \n“After Surveillance” explores the growing importance of digital intermediaries and mediation processes at a moment when they are becoming the new organizational realities of society. The conference brings together new comparative and global approaches to theorizing digital intermediaries in their own terms as ways of creating\, maintaining\, and disrupting coherence and trust. This perspective connects to a rich interdisciplinary field in media studies\, infrastructure studies\, and social theory. Concepts such as logistical media (Hockenberry et al. 2021; Peters 2015)\, digital media distribution (McDonald et al. 2021)\, (media) infrastructures (Parks & Starosielski 2015; Larkin 2008\, Edwards 2002)\, maintenance (Graham & Thrift 2007)\, cultures of risk\, trust and security (Goerzen and Coleman\, 2022; Bodó 2021; Galison 2010; MacKenzie 2001)\, or coproduction (Jasanoff 2004) offer ways of understanding digital intermediaries as media that organize and mediate (Beyes et al. 2022; Hoof & Boell 2019) while also emphasizing the ephemerality of such entanglements.    \nIn this regard\, “After Surveillance” focuses on the basic socio-material structures that underpin and shape how digital entanglements are organized\, how they are kept trustworthy and secure-or not. It pays attention to how digital technologies are refracted\, deployed\, mediated by\, and mediate existing social forms and practices. Specifically\, the conference will explore: intermediaries of trust-building and securitization; geographies and discourses of digital (mis)trust; socio-material imbrications of digital technology in pre-existing institutions and relations; new conceptual frameworks for describing current developments and processes; new proposals for historicizing\, naming\, and periodizing the present. The focus on digital intermediaries offers new ways of analyzing and understanding how institutions\, infrastructures\, discourses\, standards\, technologies\, business practices\, and networks give way to new global geographies\, and how digital entanglements are kept entangled\, but also how this gives rise to fundamental threads that shape the conditions of our lives.    \nThe conference is jointly funded and organized by Goethe University Frankfurt and Harvard University and will take place on December 16-17 in Frankfurt. \nMore on the event on its website aftersurveillance.info \nOrganizers\nHarvard University\, ConTrust and Normative Orders
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/after-surveillance-digital-intermediaries-of-trust-confidence-and-security/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, Room 5.02\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Poster_final_1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241217T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241217T200000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T141007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T141239Z
UID:10000399-1734458400-1734465600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Legal battles in the Anthropocene. A legal-theoretical discussion of legal procedures for climate protection
DESCRIPTION:Lecture as part of the event series “Climate in court/Climate Contested“ \nwith Prof. Dr. Dr. Maximilian Pichl (RheinMain University of Applied Sciences) \nThe event series “Klima vor Gericht/Climate Contested. Interdisciplinary perspectives on law(s) in the ecological crisis” addresses the complex interplay between climate change and law. Lectures\, panel discussions and debates will discuss from an interdisciplinary perspective how the law is struggling to deal with the ecological crisis.  \nFurther information and dates: Here… \nAn event by Dr. Johan Horst (Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory)\, Marie-Theres Piening & Prof. Dr. Tobias Singelnstein (Chair of Criminology and Criminal Law\, ConTrust\, Goethe University)\, Prof. Dr. Doris Schweitzer & Alina Wandelt (Chair of Sociology with a focus on Sociological Theory and History of Theory\, Goethe University) \nParticipation also possible via Zoom: Here…\nID code: 401979 \nOr by dialing in via the app:\nWebinar ID: 650 7980 7777\nID code: 401979 \nOrganizer\n“ConTrust. Trust in conflict. Political coexistence under conditions of uncertainty”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/legal-battles-in-the-anthropocene-a-legal-theoretical-discussion-of-legal-procedures-for-climate-protection/
LOCATION:SH 2.104 in the seminar house Campus Westend\, Theodor W. Adorno Square 1\, Frankfurt am Main\, Hesse\, 60323
CATEGORIES:Klima vor Gericht / Climate Contested
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Klima-vor-Gericht-WS-scaled-1.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241219T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241219T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T141617Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T141651Z
UID:10000401-1734638400-1734649200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:MANDABI The Postal Money Order (SN 1968. D: Ousmane Sembene)
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film “Black Atlantic Cinema” \nLecture: Daniel Fairfax (Frankfurt) \nLecture: Symbolic Capital: Mandabi (1968) by Ousmane Sembene\nAn adaptation of his own novella Le Mandat\, Ousmane Sembene’s Mandabi (1968) was the first feature-length film made in the Wolof language\, following Senegalese independence in 1960. The protagonist Ibrahima (Makhouredia Gueye)\, an endearingly feckless unemployed man who lives with his two wives and a brood of children in Dakar\, has his life turned upside down when a money order for 25\,000 CFA francs arrives from his nephew in France. Working in an ironic mode\, Sembene’s focus on the trans-national capital flows symbolized by Ibrahima’s money order highlights the continued economic control that France wields over its former African colonies.\nDaniel Fairfax teaches film at Goethe-University Frankfurt\, where he coordinates the international master degree in Audiovisual and Cinema Studies. He is the author of The Red Years of Cahiers du Cinéma (1968-1973 (Amsterdam University Press\, 2021))\, has translated the writings of Jean-Louis Comolli\, Christian Metz and Jean-Pierre Meunier.  \nFilm: MANDABI (The Postal Order. SN 1968. D: Ousmane Sembene)\n“Ibrahima\, an amiable unemployed man living in Dakar with his two wives and a host of children\, is thrown off balance when a money order for 25\,000 CFA francs arrives from his nephew in France. While he is supposed to keep most of the money for his nephew’s return to Senegal\, Ibrahima becomes entangled in a bureaucratic nightmare as he tries to establish his identity status in order to cash the money order. Ousmane Sembene’s MANDABI\, an adaptation of his own satirical novel Le Mandat\, was the first feature-length film to be made in the Wolof language after Senegal’s independence in 1960.” (Daniel Fairfax)   \n  \nFurther information and program: Here…
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/mandabi-the-postal-money-order-sn-1968-d-ousmane-sembene/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/BAC-plakat-990x1400-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250116T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250117T160000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T142558Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T142558Z
UID:10000403-1737050400-1737129600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Police\, racism and civil society - (im)possibilities of coming to terms with the past
DESCRIPTION:Keynote and symposium \nPlease register at frickel@em.uni-frankfurt.de. \nProgram (pdf): Here… \n  \nProgram \nJanuary 16\, 2025\, 6 p.m.\nKeynote\nVanessa E. Thompson (Queen’s University Canada | International Independent Commission to Investigate the Death of Oury Jalloh) \n  \nSymposium\nJanuary 17\, 2025 \n10.00-11:30\nPanel 1\n20 years of struggle for clarification: the Oury Jalloh case\nInitiative in memory of Oury Jalloh and Vanessa E. Thompson \n11:30-12:00\nCoffee break \n12:00-13:30\nPanel 2\nRacism and the police: current problems and continuities\nCampaign for Victims of Racist Police Violence (KOP)\, Lina Mitschke (AntiRaktiv)\, Halil Can (InRa study) \n13:30-14:30\nLunch break \n14:30-16:00\nPanel 3\nOpportunities for change: Challenges and solutions\nSolidarity Circle Justice4Mouhamed\, Laila Abdul-Rahman (German Institute for Human Rights)\, Heike Kleffner (VBRG)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/police-racism-and-civil-society-impossibilities-of-coming-to-terms-with-the-past/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/01-2025_Fachtag-Polizei-Rassismus-Zivilgesellschaft.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250116T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250116T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T143121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T143121Z
UID:10000405-1737057600-1737068400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:SAMBIZANGA (1972. D: Sarah Maldoror)
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film “Black Atlantic Cinema” \nLecture: Jennifer Blaylock (Rowan University) \nLecture:  The Thin Green Line Between Canons and Revolutions. On Sarah Maldoror’s Sambizanga (1972) \nWhat happens to the revolutionary grainy aesthetics\, the militancy of the imperfect image\, the subversive qualities of the damaged 16mm print\, when a film enters the artistic canon? This talk will compare the degradation of 16mm Sambizanga prints in circulation in the United States during the #BlackLivesMatter movement with the recent restoration of the film and its new edit of a critical scene centered on “Black joy\,” to argue that the scratches of small gauge material history release a revolutionary affect that is different from the aestheticization of revolution emphasized in the conservative act of Sambizanga‘s restoration.\nDr. Jennifer Blaylock is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Radio\, Television & Film at Rowan University. \nFilm: SAMBIZANGA (AO/FR/CD 1972. D: Sarah Maldoror)\nSAMBIZANGA is set in 1961: the liberation struggle is also gaining momentum in Angola. Sarah Maldoror uses everyday images to tell the story of Maria’s search for her husband Domingos\, who was arrested for joining the revolution. Maldoror sensitively reveals the loneliness of a woman on an arduous journey and focuses on the time and effort required to cover this distance. Maria’s march\, her quest\, turns out to be a sensitive and powerful metaphor for the suffering of the Angolan people and their “development of a revolutionary consciousness”. (S. Maldoror)     \n  \nFurther information and program: Here…
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/sambizanga-1972-d-sarah-maldoror/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2024_2025_Black_Atlantic_Cinema.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250123T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250124T150000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250403T105558Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250409T142641Z
UID:10000358-1737644400-1737730800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Trust and Conflict: Taking stock and looking ahead
DESCRIPTION:Final annual conference of the ConTrust initiative \nProgram \nJanuary 23\, 2025 \n15:00\nWelcome (Spokespersons of ConTrust) \n15:15\nPanel 1\nThe Justification of Trust\nModeration: Prof. Greta Wagner (Goethe University)\nProf. Rainer Forst (Goethe University)\, Dr. Chiara Destri (Goethe University)\, Dr. Regina Schidel (Goethe University)\, Prof. Mark Warren (University of British Columbia) \n17:15\nCoffee Break \n18:00\nRoundtable “Trust\, Conflict and Beyond”\nModerated by Prof. Tobias Wille (Goethe University)\nProf. Nick Couldry (London School of Economics and Political Science)\, Prof. Martin Hartmann (University of Lucerne)\, Prof. Dietlind Stolle (McGill University\, Montréal\, Canada)\, Prof. Lisbeth Zimmermann (Goethe University) \nJanuary 24\, 2025 \n10:00\nPanel 2\nMediations of Trust\nModeration: Dr. Hanna Pfeifer (IFSH at the University of Hamburg)\nProf. Balazs Bodo (University of Amsterdam)\, Prof. Keith Breckenridge (University of the Witwatersrand)\, Prof. Vinzenz Hediger (Goethe University)\, Prof. Laliv Melamed (Goethe University)\, Dr. Linda Welgl (University of Amsterdam) \n12:00\nLunch \n13:00\nPanel 3\nTrust in Political Conflict\nModeration: Prof. Nicole Deitelhoff (Goethe University / PRIF)\nProf. Tobias Wille (Goethe University)\, Dr. Hendrik Simon (Goethe University / PRIF)\, Dr. lrene Weipert-Fenner (PRIF)\, Prof. Michael Zürn (Free University of Berlin/ WZB)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/trust-and-conflict-taking-stock-and-looking-ahead/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Annual conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/ConTrust_JK_final_A1_pdf-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250123T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250123T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T143436Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T143436Z
UID:10000407-1737662400-1737673200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Key Works of Afro-Brazilian Short Film
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film: Black Atlantic Cinema \nLecture: Janaína Oliveira (Rio de Janeiro) \nLecture: Key Works of Afro-Brazilian Short Film\nJanaína Oliveira has a Ph.D. in History and is a professor at the Federal Institute of Rio de Janeiro (IFRJ). She is Head Programmer at the Zózimo Bulbul Black Film Festival in Rio de Janeiro and on the programming committees for FINCAR (Festival Internacional de Cinema de Realizadoras) and International Women Filmmakers Festival in Recife.   \nMovie: tba \n  \nFurther information and program: Here…
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/key-works-of-afro-brazilian-short-film/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2024_2025_Black_Atlantic_Cinema.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250128T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250128T200000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T143712Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T143712Z
UID:10000409-1738087200-1738094400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Law in the Anthropocene
DESCRIPTION:Lecture as part of the event series “Climate in court/Climate Contested“ \nwith Dr. Johan Horst (Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory) and  Prof’in. Dr. Doris Schweitzer   (Goethe University) from the DFG network “Law in the Anthropocene”. \nThe event series “Klima vor Gericht/Climate Contested. Interdisciplinary perspectives on law(s) in the ecological crisis” addresses the complex interplay between climate change and law. Lectures\, panel discussions and debates will discuss from an interdisciplinary perspective how the law is struggling to deal with the ecological crisis.  \nFurther information and dates: Here… \nAn event by Dr. Johan Horst (Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory)\, Marie-Theres Piening & Prof. Dr. Tobias Singelnstein (Chair of Criminology and Criminal Law\, ConTrust\, Goethe University)\, Prof. Dr. Doris Schweitzer & Alina Wandelt (Chair of Sociology with a focus on Sociological Theory and History of Theory\, Goethe University) \nParticipation also possible via Zoom: Here…\nID code: 401979 \nOr by dialing in via the app:\nWebinar ID: 650 7980 7777\nID code: 401979
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/law-in-the-anthropocene/
LOCATION:SH 2.104 in the seminar house Campus Westend\, Theodor W. Adorno Square 1\, Frankfurt am Main\, Hesse\, 60323
CATEGORIES:Klima vor Gericht / Climate Contested
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Klima-vor-Gericht-WS-scaled-1.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250130T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250131T180000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T145223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T145223Z
UID:10000411-1738252800-1738346400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Materialism. Between Totality and Plurality
DESCRIPTION:Workshop \nPlease register at: jonas.heller@normativeorders.net \nThursday\, January 30th\, 16:00-18:00\n\n Introduction: Simon Gurisch \nPanel 1: Race\nReference: Saidiya Hartman\, Scenes of Subjection\nParticipants: Penny Deutscher (Northwestern)\, Juliane Rebentisch (Hamburg)\nModeration: Rime Abd Al Majeed \nFriday\, January 31st\n\n 10:00-12:00: Panel 2: Gender\nReference: Judith Butler\, Bodies That Matter\nParticipants: Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky (Bochum)\, Adriana Zaharijević (Beograd)\nModeration: Hannah Hübner \n14:00-16:00: Panel 3: Work\nReference: Herbert Marcuse\, One-Dimensional Man (chaps. 2\, 3 and 6)\nParticipants: Christoph Menke (Frankfurt)\, Maria Muhle (Munich)\nModeration: André Möller \nProgram (PDF): Here… \nThe workshop\, which will take place during and on the occasion of Penelope Deutscher’s Humboldt Prize residency at the University of Frankfurt\, aims to bring two different models and methods of critical theory into conversation with one another. These two models can be characterized by how they describe the power formations of contemporary societies. On the one hand\, there is a type of theory that seeks to explain the various power formations (in the subject\, love\, families\, institutions\, the economy\, politics\, etc.) as coherently as possible. This is the aim of the concept of “totality”. On the other hand\, there is a type of theory that assumes an irreducible diversity\, even heterogeneity\, of power formations and describes their contrasts and connections as a game of permanent change; in this perspective\, totalization is impossible\, even falsifying. Both types of theory have different historical sources and lines of development; they work with different “conceptual persons” and methodologies. But they also experience that they speak about the same thing and can mutually illuminate – and perhaps even change – each other in their attempts to grasp a concrete object.\nThe workshop is accordingly an experiment in dialog between the two forms of critical theory. This dialog will unfold here in the field of materialism\, which we have in turn divided – in the simplest and therefore most conventional way possible – into the questions of race\, gender and work.\nIt is intended that each of these three dialogs will refer to a relevant text\, which we hope many of the participants will be familiar with and have re-read in advance. Accordingly\, the invited speakers will be asked to develop their perspective on the topic and the state of the discussion in a 20-minute input. This will then be followed by a discussion\, first on the podium and then with the other participants.          \n___________________________ \nThe workshop\, which will take place during and on the occasion of Penelope Deutscher’s Humboldt Prize residency at the University of Frankfurt\, aims to bring two different models and methods of critical theory into conversation with one another. These two models can be characterized by how they describe the power formations of contemporary societies. On the one hand\, there is a type of theory that seeks to explain the various power formations (in the subject\, in love\, families\, institutions\, the economy\, politics\, etc.) as different elements in a coherent and self-enclosed “totality”. The other type of theory\, in turn\, assumes an irreducible diversity\, even heterogeneity\, of power formations and describes their contrasts and connections as a game of permanent transformation; in this perspective\, totalization is impossible\, even distorting. Both types of theory have different historical sources and lines of development; they work with different “conceptual persons” and methodologies. But they also share the experience that they talk about the same thing and can mutually illuminate – and perhaps even change – each other in their attempts to grasp a concrete object.\nAccordingly\, the workshop is an experiment in dialog between these two forms of critical theory. This dialog will unfold here in the field of materialism\, which we have in turn divided – In the simplest and therefore most conventional way possible – into the questions of race\, gender and labor.\nIn order to facilitate discussion\, we propose that each of these three dialogues will refer to a relevant text\, which we hope many of the participants will be familiar with and have re-read in advance. Accordingly\, the invited speakers will be asked to develop their perspective on the topic and the state of the discussion in a 20-minute input with reference to the respective text. This will then be followed by a discussion\, first on the podium and then with the other participants.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/materialism-between-totality-and-plurality/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250211T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250212T163000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T145805Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T145836Z
UID:10000413-1739295000-1739377800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Democratic cohesion
DESCRIPTION:In contemporary political discussions\, diagnoses of a crisis of democracy are often linked to the statement that social cohesion is at risk and needs to be strengthened. However\, the answers to the question of what form of cohesion is characteristic and desirable for a democracy are diverse. They range from nationalist to cosmopolitan positions\, from those that emphasize the importance of cultural equality\, to those that emphasize social diversity and conflict\, to those that see social and economic equality as indispensable. So it’s time to take stock and reflect on the current situation: what does “democratic cohesion” mean?    \nFrom February 11 to 12\, 2025 – and thus immediately before the new Bundestag elections – the conference Democratic Cohesion will take place in Frankfurt. The conference will kick off with an evening debate on February 11 in Frankfurt’s Paulskirche\, a central venue in the history of German democracy. On 12 February\, all conference participants will discuss key areas of tension in current democracy research\, including increasing radicalization\, the constitution of democratic institutions and drivers of polarization and populism. The Market of Opportunities with actors and initiatives from all over Hesse will offer very practical insights into concrete democracy work and basic research.        \n  \nProject goals\nThe event is part of the immediate program 11+1 for Hesse and the resulting funding line Strengthening Democracy Research Hesse of the Hessian Ministry of Science and the Arts (HMWK). Our conference in February is explicitly aimed at the interested public\, particularly in view of the debate in St. Paul’s Church on Tuesday evening. The second day offers the specialist public from research\, politics\, administration and civil society the opportunity for mutual exchange and networking. The Market of Opportunities\, which is also open to the public    also signals the strong integration of concrete democracy work and application-oriented basic research into the overall picture of the new democracy format. \nThe conference is fully booked. You can find the link to the livestreams below.  \nFurther information: Here… \n  \nProgram\n\nKick-off event: 11 February 2025\nVenue: Frankfurt Paulskirche (Paulsplatz 11\, 60311 Frankfurt a. M.) \nTo the livestream of the kick-off event: Here… \nfrom 17:30\nAdmission \n6:00 pm\nGreetings \n18:30\nKeynote: Prof. Dr. Jan-Werner Müller (Princeton University) \n19:00\nPanel discussion with Prof. Dr. Jan-Werner Müller\, Prof. Dr. Nicole Deitelhoff (PRIF)\, Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst (Normative Orders) and the Hessian Minister of Science Timon Gremmels \n20:00\nReception\nThe launch event can be followed via our livestream if you can no longer find a seat in St. Paul’s Church or can only attend the event online. \n\nConference and market of opportunities: February 12\, 2025\nLocation: Casino building of the Goethe University Frankfurt (Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 2\, 60323 Frankfurt a. M.) \nTo the livestream of the conference: Here… \nOpening and welcome (9:00 – 9:15 a.m.) \nProf. Dr. Enrico Schleiff (President of Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) \nPanel 1: Radicalization and resilience (9:15-10:45 a.m.) \nProf. Dr. Andreas Zick (Bielefeld University)\nProf. Dr. Johanna Sigl (RheinMain University of Applied Sciences)\nDr. Reiner Becker (Philipps University Marburg) \nPanel 2: Institutions and innovations (11:15-12:45) \nProf. Dr. Claudia Landwehr (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)\nProf. Dr. Wolfgang Schröder (University of Kassel)\nProf. Dr. Brigitte Geißel (Goethe University Frankfurt) \nLunch break: Market of opportunities (12:45-14:45)\nPresentation and exchange of initiatives and democracy projects from universities\, colleges\, foundations and civil society organizations from all over Hesse \nPanel 3: Populism and polarization (14:45-16:15)\n\nProf. Dr. Regina Kreide (Justus Liebig University Giessen)\nProf. Dr. Dirk Jörke (TU Darmstadt)\nProf. Dr. Oliver Decker (University of Leipzig) \nConclusion and outlook (16:15-16:45) \nProf. Dr. Nicole Deitelhoff (PRIF)\nProf. Dr. Rainer Forst (Normative Orders)\nProf. Dr. Julian Junk (HöMS) \n  \nOrganizers:\nPeace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF)\, Research Center “Normative Orders”\, Goethe University Frankfurt\, Research Institute Social Cohesion (RISC)\, Frankfurt am Main location\, Hessian Ministry of Science and Art\, Hessian University of Applied Sciences for Public Management and Security (HöMS)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/democratic-cohesion/
LOCATION:St. Paul’s Church\, Paulsplatz 11\, Frankfurt am Main\, Hesse\, 60311
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Demokratischer-Zusammenhalt.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250211T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250211T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T151059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T151059Z
UID:10000415-1739304000-1739314800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The Law in These Parts
DESCRIPTION:The Record and the Narrative. The Documentary Cinema of Ra’anan Alexandrowicz  \nRa’anan Alexandrowicz\, born in Jerusalem in 1969\, is one of the most important documentary filmmakers of our time. His award-winning cinematic investigations into questions of law\, power and testimony in Israel and Palestine are shown at all the world’s major festivals. “The Law in These Parts” (2011) received the award for best international documentary film at the Sundance Festival. “The Viewing Booth” (Der Spiegel\, 2021) screened in the Forum of the Berlinale and was voted best documentary of the year by Rolling Stone. Alexandrowicz is currently working on a new project as a fellow in the ConTrust excellence project at Goethe University. As part of this fellowship\, the DFF is showing three of his films\, each with an introduction and subsequent discussion with experts.      \nCan a modern democracy maintain a military occupation without damaging its values? In a dialog with the responsible military lawyers\, “The Law in These Parts” traces the framework conditions that were established in Israel in the decades following the Six-Day War in 1967 to legally safeguard the occupation of Gaza and the West Bank.  \nFilm screening of “The Law in These Parts”\, Ra’anan Alexandrowicz\, Israel 2011\, 101 min. \nWith an introduction by Laliv Melamed\, Professor of Digital Film Cultures at Goethe University Frankfurt\, followed by a discussion with the director and Itamar Mann\, Professor of Public International Law at the University of Haifa. \n  \nOrganizer:\nA series of events by ConTrust\, DFF and the Institute for Theatre\, Film and Media Studies at Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-law-in-these-parts/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2025_Raanan-Alexandrowicz.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250212T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250212T180000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214000
CREATED:20250509T151402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T151402Z
UID:10000417-1739376000-1739383200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The Inner Tour
DESCRIPTION:The Record and the Narrative. The Documentary Cinema of Ra’anan Alexandrowicz  \nRa’anan Alexandrowicz\, born in Jerusalem in 1969\, is one of the most important documentary filmmakers of our time. His award-winning cinematic investigations into questions of law\, power and testimony in Israel and Palestine are shown at all the world’s major festivals. “The Law in These Parts” (2011) received the award for best international documentary film at the Sundance Festival. “The Viewing Booth” (Der Spiegel\, 2021) screened in the Forum of the Berlinale and was voted best documentary of the year by Rolling Stone. Alexandrowicz is currently working on a new project as a fellow in the ConTrust excellence project at Goethe University. As part of this fellowship\, the DFF is showing three of his films\, each with an introduction and subsequent discussion with experts.      \n“The Inner Tour” is a documentary road movie\, filmed on the eve of a new wave of violent conflict in the Middle East in 2001. A group of Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza embark on a three-day bus tour of Israel – an emotional exploration of what is probably the most complicated and painful national conflict of the present day.  \nFilm screening of: The Inner Tour\, Ra’anan Alexandrowicz\, Israel 2001\, 94 min. \nWith an introduction by Laliv Melamed followed by a discussion with the director.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-inner-tour/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2025_Raanan-Alexandrowicz.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250212T181500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250212T204500
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T151631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T151631Z
UID:10000419-1739384100-1739393100@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The Viewing Booth
DESCRIPTION:The Record and the Narrative. The Documentary Cinema of Ra’anan Alexandrowicz  \nRa’anan Alexandrowicz\, born in Jerusalem in 1969\, is one of the most important documentary filmmakers of our time. His award-winning cinematic investigations into questions of law\, power and testimony in Israel and Palestine are shown at all the world’s major festivals. “The Law in These Parts” (2011) received the award for best international documentary film at the Sundance Festival. “The Viewing Booth” (Der Spiegel\, 2021) screened in the Forum of the Berlinale and was voted best documentary of the year by Rolling Stone. Alexandrowicz is currently working on a new project as a fellow in the ConTrust excellence project at Goethe University. As part of this fellowship\, the DFF is showing three of his films\, each with an introduction and subsequent discussion with experts.      \nWhy does the publication of videos of human rights violations on platforms such as YouTube not lead to their immediate prosecution and correction? “The Viewing Both” explores this question in a kind of laboratory situation in which Maya Levi\, an American-Jewish student\, watches videos about everyday life in the West Bank and talks about her thoughts and feelings in front of the camera. A film about the limits of the power of the documentary and the documentary in the fight against disinformation.   \nFilm screening of “The Viewing Booth”\, Ra’anan Alexandrowicz\, Israel/USA 2019\, 71 min. \nWith an introduction by Vinzenz Hediger\, Professor of Film Studies at Goethe University Frankfurt and PI of ConTrust\, followed by a discussion with the director
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-viewing-booth/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2025_Raanan-Alexandrowicz.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250213T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250213T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T152051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T152051Z
UID:10000421-1739476800-1739487600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:LA PERMISSION (FR 1967. D: Melvin van Peebles)
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film “Black Atlantic Cinema” \nLecture: Greg de Cuir Jr \nLecture: A Black American in Paris\nMelvin van Peebles left the United States to live and work in Europe in 1959\, and was invited to Paris for screenings on the strength of the short films he had made a few years earlier. After finding success as a journalist and novelist he would go on to direct his debut feature film La Permission in 1967 – in French – making him a pioneer of not only independent but also international Black cinema. This talk will explore van Peebles’ film work as something of a missing link in the history of French cinema\, also a fascinating outlier in the history of Black cinema\, and for its subversive depiction of the modern forms of “double consciousness” that Black men must negotiate both at home and abroad.\nGreg de Cuir Jr is co-founder + artistic director of Kinopravda Institute in Belgrade. In 2024 he organized programs for the Whitney Biennial in New York and was visiting lecturer at Universität Basel.  \nFurther information and program: Here… \n  \nOrganizer\nInstitute for Theatre\, Film and Media Studies at Goethe University and Kino im deutschen Filmmuseum in cooperation with the research center “Normative Orders”\, the research cluster “ConTrust – Trust in Conflict” and the Hessian Film and Media Academy; realized with funds from the Adickes Fund of Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/la-permission-fr-1967-d-melvin-van-peebles/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2024_2025_Black_Atlantic_Cinema.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250219T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250219T190000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T152359Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T152359Z
UID:10000423-1739959200-1739991600@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The Power of Democracy
DESCRIPTION:Please register in advance: haeusler@soz.uni-frankfurt.de \n  \nPrograms \n10:00\nWelcome and Introduction: Martin Saar \n10:30\nKeynote: Clarissa Hayward: “Power: A Structural View”\n(Moderation: Martin Saar) \n11:45\nCoffee \n12:15\nRainer Forst: “Noumenal Power and Democracy”\nRegina Kreide: “Digital Power. The Mimicry of Authoritarianism ”\nUwe Volkmann: “The Power of Democracy: A Legal Perspective”\n(Moderation: Elif Oezmen) \n14:15\nLunch \n15:00\nClaudia Landwehr: “How Can We Trust Democratic Institutions?”\nSandra Seubert: “Power and Political form”\nGreta Wagner: “Democratic Solidarity as Counter-Power?”\n(Moderation: Dirk Jörke) \n17:00\nCoffee \n17:30\nKeynote: Steven Lukes: “Whatever Happened to Shared Understandings?” \n (Moderation: Rainer Forst) \n  \nPresented by:\nResearch Centre “Normative Orders” and the Research Initiative “ConTrust: Trust in Conflict – Political Life under Conditions of Uncertainty”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-power-of-democracy/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Plakat_ThePowerOfDemocracy_web.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250304T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250304T200000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T153030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T153030Z
UID:10000425-1741109400-1741118400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Philosophy and Public Policy
DESCRIPTION:Tandem Workshop \nwith Jonathan Wolff (Oxford) and Louis Larue (Aalborg) \nOrganized by Katarina Pitasse Fragoso (JQYA Fellow) \nPlease register here… \n  \nPrograms \n17h30h – Introduction – Katarina Pitasse Fragoso (Frankfurt Goethe University)\n17h45 – The Philosophers Have Only Interpreted the World – Jonathan Wolff (Oxford University)\n18h15 – Respondent – Louis Larue (Aalborg University)\n18:35 – Q&A\n19h – Closing remarks \n  \nPresented by:\nChair for International Political Theory and Philosophy and Research Center Normative Orders of Geothe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/philosophy-and-public-policy/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, Room 5.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Philosophy-and-Public-Policy.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250314T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250315T150000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T153619Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T153619Z
UID:10000427-1741960800-1742050800@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Critique of punitive reason. Studies on justice\, vulnerability and pain
DESCRIPTION:Book workshop \nIntroduction to the debate: Klaus Günther & Benno Zabel \nRegistration requested at: office.zabel@jur.uni-frankfurt.de \nMarch 14 and 15\, 2025  \n  \nProgram \nMarch 14\, 2025 \n14.00 to 16.00\nPanel I\nModeration: Jochen Bung\nCritique of the resilient and sovereign subject of punishment (chapters 3\, 5 and 6)\nDoris Schweitzer\, Max Pichl and Klaus Günther\nWhat critical potential does the concept of vulnerability mobilize\, what concept of autonomy and subject does criminal law work with and what problems does it entail? Can the semantics of vulnerability bring out the social background of legal subject constructions and social pathologies to a greater extent than has been the case to date?  \n16.00 to 16.30\nBreak \n16.30 to 18.30\nPanel II\nModeration: Katrin Höffler\nThe “miracle” of reasonable coercion: A critique of body politics in criminal law (chapters 5 and 6)\nMarkus Abraham\, Esther Neuhann and Michael Kahlo\nTo what extent can punitive pain be understood as state-sanctioned body politics\, how is individual suffering translated into social meaning and what does this mean for a humane approach to deviance? \nMarch 15\, 2025 \n10.00 to 12.00 a.m.\nPanel III\nModeration: Cornelius Prittwitz\nLaw and gender (chapters 4 and 6)\nKatrin Höffler\, Franziska Dübgen and Anja Schmidt\nCan the concept of vulnerability be used to better describe the precarious relationship between criminal law and gender relations\, for example by focusing on the still patriarchal and masculinist interpretation of the legal subject\, conflict patterns and conflict management? In addition to dealing with abortion\, the diverse constellations of partner violence should also be considered here.  \n12.00 to 13.00\nBreak \n13.00 to 15.00\nPanel IV\nModeration: Doris Schweitzer\nNarratives and practices of exclusion (chapters 6 and 7)\nJochen Bung\, Christoph Burchard and Simon Kneip\nLiberal criminal law claims not to be a medium of exclusion\, despite the infliction of pain and the various stigmatizing practices. However\, a literary reconstruction based on Shakespeare’s Shylock and a genealogical contextualization can make it clear that the practices of criminal law were and are much more ambivalent\, even in their liberal epoch. We experience this ambivalence even in the present day\, including in the debate about a criminal law against enemies or in dealing with migration.   \n  \nOrganizer:\n“ConTrust. Trust in Conflict. Political Coexistence under Conditions of Uncertainty” – a cluster project of the State of Hesse at the Research Center “Normative Orders” at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/critique-of-punitive-reason-studies-on-justice-vulnerability-and-pain/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, Room 5.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Plakat_Zabel_FF.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250315T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250315T170000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T154951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250527T125631Z
UID:10000429-1742032800-1742058000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The end of the West - What's next?
DESCRIPTION:57th Römerberg Talks \nDie globale politische Landschaft hat sich verändert. Ist es zu früh\, das „Ende des Westens“ zu verkünden? Die Wertegemeinschaft\, die ihn einst ausmachte\, scheint jedenfalls gespalten und geschwächt. Nicht nur Europas Verhältnis zu den USA muss in den nächsten Jahren neu austariert werden. Global sind autoritäre Regime\, denen Rechtsstaat und Menschenrechte nichts bedeuten\, auf dem Vormarsch\, während Tech-Milliardäre in oligarchischer Manier neue Vorstellungen von Politik und Gesellschaft entwerfen\, in denen liberale Wertevorstellungen hinter wirtschaftlichen Interessen zurückzustehen haben. Die deutsche Bundestagswahl und die anschließenden Koalitionsverhandlungen werden auch im Kontext dieser Veränderungen der transatlantischen Wertegemeinschaft stattfinden. Welche Perspektiven für Deutschland & Europa\, seine Wertevorstellungen und seine Wirtschaftskraft\, lassen sich derzeit ausmachen? Was kann man sich für unsere Stellung in der neuen globalen Konstellation erwarten? Wie sehen Gegenentwürfe aus\, die die neue Weltordnung nicht den extremistischen Feinden liberaler\, demokratischer Gesellschaften überlassen wollen?         \nThe event will be moderated by Hadija Haruna-Oelker (political scientist\, journalist and presenter) and Cécile Schortmann (journalist and TV presenter). \nImpressions of the event \nYou can find all video recordings here. \n      \nProgram \n10.00 a.m.\nWelcome\nTimon Gremmels\, Hessian Minister for Science\nand Research\, Art and Culture\nIna Hartwig\, Head of the Department of Culture and Science of the City of Frankfurt am Main \n10.15 a.m.\nClaus Leggewie\nReckoning. A critical reflection of the West in post-colonialism  \n11.00 a.m.\nAnnika Brockschmidt and Irina Scherbakowa\nRussia & the USA – Old and new authoritarian systems \n12.00 p.m.\nSebastian Conrad\nWhat was the “West”? A global history  \n1.00 p.m.  \nLunch break \n2.00 p.m.\nKatharina Nocun\nNet politics becomes power politics – How digital platforms shape the public sphere \n3.00 p.m.\nSvenja Behrendt\nHow do autocracies develop? On the stability and erosion of democracies  \n16.00 hrs\nGunther Hellmann\nDer „Westen“ in einer neuen Weltordnung \nOrganizer:\nRömerberggespräche e.V. in cooperation with the “Normative Orders” research center at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main and other partners \nYou can find the presentations on our YouTube channel.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-end-of-the-west-whats-next/
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/2025/05/57.-Roemerberggespraeche-15.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250327T141500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250328T091500
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T075438Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T075459Z
UID:10000431-1743084900-1743153300@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Fundamental and human rights in Europe. 75 years of the ECHR\, 25 years of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
DESCRIPTION:XXIV Walter Hallstein Colloquium  \nThe 24th Walter Hallstein Colloquium is taking two anniversaries as an opportunity to look at the protection of fundamental and human rights in Europe. The year 2025 will mark the 75th anniversary of the signing of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR)\, and 25 years will have passed since the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union was proclaimed. The past decades were initially characterized by the constant expansion and deepening of the European Union of fundamental rights. Thematically\, new questions of adaptation to changing social\, technological and global political conditions and upheavals have arisen time and again. European fundamental rights have been the scene of judicial conflicts between the European and national levels and have undergone various cycles of reform as well as political disputes over the dismantling of European protection. Most recently\, illiberal tendencies\, migration movements and the war in Ukraine have challenged European human rights protection. These topics will be discussed in four panels with experts from academia\, jurisdictions and European institutions.       \nRegistration until March 21\, 2025 to: psaila@jur.uni-frankfurt.de (Prof. Dr. Stefan Kadelbach Secretariat) \n  \nProgram\n\nThursday\, March 27\, 2025 \n14.15\nGreeting\nStefan Kadelbach\, Rainer Hofmann\nWilhelm Merton Center \n14.30\nPANEL 1: Civil liberties and the rule of law (ECHR and CFR)\nModeration: Rainer Klump\, Wilhelm Merton Center\nMattias Wendel\, Leipzig: European citizenship and the European Charter of Fundamental Rights\nStefanie Schmahl\, Würzburg: Climate protection and the ECHR \n15.30\nDiscussion \n16.00\nCoffee break \n16.30\nPANEL 2: Social rights\nModeration: Andrea Kießling\, Frankfurt\nClaudia Hofmann\, Frankfurt a. d. Oder: Social rights in Europe\nAchim Seifert\, Saarbrücken: International Labor Organization and European Fundamental Rights \n17.30\nDiscussion \nFriday\, March 28\, 2025 \n09.15\nPANEL 3: Human rights before constitutional courts\nModeration: Astrid Wallrabenstein\, Karlsruhe/Frankfurt\nChristine Langenfeld\, Karlsruhe/Göttingen: The BVerfG and human rights\nFranz Merli\, Vienna: Comparative legal aspects \n10.15\nDiscussion \n10.45\nCoffee break \n11.00\nPANEL 4: Fundamental and human rights against the backdrop of armed conflicts\, disagreements over migration and challenges from illiberal regimes: Where do we go from here?\nModeration: Stefan Kadelbach\, Rainer Hofmann\nChristoph Grabenwarter\, Vienna; Frank Hoffmeister\, Brussels\, Andreas Paulus\, Göttingen \n12.15\nDiscussion \n12.45\nConcluding words\nRainer Hofmann\, Wilhelm Merton Center \n13.00\nEnd of the colloquium \n  \nOrganizer:\nWilhelm Merton Center for European Integration and International Economic Order in cooperation with the Research Center “Normative Orders” at Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/fundamental-and-human-rights-in-europe-75-years-of-the-echr-25-years-of-the-eu-charter-of-fundamental-rights/
LOCATION:Eisenhower Hall (IG-1.314)\, Norbert-Wollheim-Platz 1\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250503T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250504T163000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T080836Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T080959Z
UID:10000433-1746280800-1746376200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Justice as a topic of jurisprudence - continuity and change from an intergenerational perspective
DESCRIPTION:Scientific symposium in honor of Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Ute Sacksofsky\, M.P.A. (Harvard) \nThe symposium is dedicated to the still underexposed questions of the connection between statutory law and justice\, as they arise in particular in cases of discriminatory exclusion of categorically defined groups of people\, such as the disadvantage of women.\nWith this topic\, the symposium also serves to honor the life’s work of Prof. Dr. Dr. h. c. Ute Sacksofsky\, whose endeavor has always been and still is to focus on the question of justice in such cases. She is to be honored as one of the founders of feminist jurisprudence\, a Frankfurt pioneer of feminist legal policy and theory who has significantly influenced and advanced the discussions on equality.\nThe aim of the symposium is to explore the development and current status of Ute Sacksofsky’s work based on central research topics and to think about Ute Sacksofsky’s contributions further. The temporality of feminist interventions and the shaping of feminist traditions through personal and content-related disruptions and discontinuities will be proactively considered and an intergenerational approach will be deliberately enabled: using five thematic areas as examples\, three people from different academic generations will discuss change\, further development and questioning based on Ute Sacksofsky’s central texts.   \n  \nContact:\nProf. Dr. Anna Katharina Mangold\, LL.M. (Cambridge)\na.mangold@uni-flensburg.de \nProf. Dr. Berit Völzmann\nberit.voelzmann@jura.uni-hannover.de
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/justice-as-a-topic-of-jurisprudence-continuity-and-change-from-an-intergenerational-perspective/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2025-03-17-Voelzmann-Ehrensymposium-Sacksofsky_posterAH-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250508T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250508T200000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T081924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T085727Z
UID:10000435-1746727200-1746734400@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Sustainability and justice
DESCRIPTION:Lecture as part of the series “Shaping the future – between climate change\, technology and social responsibility” \nLecture by Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst (Professor of Political Theory and Philosophy at Goethe University\, Director of the “Normative Orders” Research Centre) \nAs part of the exhibition “FIXING FUTURES: Planetary Futures between Speculation and Control”\, the MGGU – Museum Giersch of Goethe University\, together with the research center “Normative Orders”\, invites you to the lecture series “Shaping the Future – Between Climate Change\, Technology and Social Responsibility”.\nBetween May and July 2025\, experts from various scientific disciplines will shed light on key issues and challenges in dealing with shaping the future in the face of climate change.\nTopics such as the fair distribution of resources\, the use of artificial intelligence and algorithms as well as alternative futures will take center stage. The lectures offer an interdisciplinary dialogue between science\, art and activism and invite us to question the complex interactions between social processes and social norms that climate change and increasing technologization entail.\nThe series of events encourages us to ask questions such as whether and to what extent modern technologies can help us shape a sustainable future and what ethical\, political and social implications this entails. The dialog between the speakers and visitors opens up new perspectives and provides food for thought for actively shaping our future.   \nThe events are open to the public. Admission is free.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/sustainability-and-justice/
LOCATION:MGGU – Giersch Museum of the Goethe University\, Schaumainkai 83\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Shaping the future
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Fixing-Futures-quer.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250508T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250508T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T082334Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T082421Z
UID:10000437-1746734400-1746745200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Flânoirie: inscribing mobility through walking in Black German film
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film “Black Atlantic Cinema” \nKarina Griffith (Berlin) \nA young university student searches for a room to let. An American GI searches for love between visiting record stores and gigging with his band.\nOlingo and They Call It Love\, respectively\, are both black and white student films featuring wandering Black male protagonists in Germany. In her lecture\, Karina Griffith introduces the termflânoire films\, which she uses to describe works spearheaded by Black authors of German cinemas that refuse the stagnation of affects such as consternation (Betroffenheit) in exchange for active vibes. Flânoire filmsare characterized by their representations of unfettered Black mobility in Europe and a focus on respect rather than belonging.  \nDr. Karina Griffith teaches in the Faculty of Architecture\, Media and Design as Professor of Intersectional Visual and Media Theory at the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK). She holds a PhD in Cinema Studies from the University of Toronto and a Masters in Feature Film from Goldsmiths College London. She has been part of the curatorial team of the Berlinale Film Festival section Forum Expanded sinc 2021\, and she is one of 12 fellows selected for the 2025 VILA SUL residency program in Salvador de Bahia\, Brazil.   \nFilms: They Call It Love\, King Ampaw\, FRG 1972\, Olingo\, Emile Itolo\, GDR 1966\, 11 min.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/flanoirie-inscribing-mobility-through-walking-in-black-german-film/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2024_2025_Black_Atlantic_Cinema.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250513T161500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250513T174500
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T082706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T083003Z
UID:10000439-1747152900-1747158300@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:"Motivation\, attitudes and violence in the everyday lives of police officers": The MEGAVO study
DESCRIPTION:Lecture series: Racism in the police – empirical findings\, methodological approaches and controversies \nLecture by Dr. Jochen Wittenberg (DHPol) \nReports from people affected by racism about unprovoked police checks\, humiliation or problematic use of force by the police continue unabated. They occupy the public debate; numerous political initiatives have been fighting for clarification\, in some cases for decades. In recent years\, empirical social research and police research have also increasingly taken up the topic.\nRacism in the police has various dimensions – from individual attitudes to structural forms – and can be investigated in different ways. As part of the lecture series\, researchers will present current empirical studies on racist attitudes and knowledge structures\, institutional reproduction mechanisms of racism and the perspectives of those affected in three lectures.    \n  \nOrganizer:\nProfessorship for Criminology and Criminal Law at the Institute for Criminal Sciences and Philosophy of Law at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main in cooperation with the Research Center “Normative Orders”
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/motivation-attitudes-and-violence-in-the-everyday-lives-of-police-officers-the-megavo-study/
LOCATION:Auditorium Center HZ 15\, Theodor W. Adorno Square 5\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Lecture series,Racism in the police force
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Screening_Singelnstein_Polizei_Ringvorlesung.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250515T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250516T133000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250509T120828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T135800Z
UID:10000385-1747306800-1747402200@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Sociological knowledge of the environment. Between Gaia and atmosphere\, milieu and environment
DESCRIPTION:Spring Conference of the Sociological Theory Section of the DGS \nPlease register at: bogner@soz.uni-frankfurt.de \n  \nProgram \nThursday\, May 15\, 2025 \n11.00-11.15 a.m.\nGreeting \n11.15-13.30\nPanel I: Historical perspectives\nMartin Hauff: The social organism and its surrounding sphere. The concept of the environment in Albert Schäffle\, a systems theorist avant la lettre\nArne Dreßler: Physical determinism as a revenant in the sociological theorization of the environment of action\nCharlotte Renda: The background as a “co-designer” of social order. From the psychology of perception to a sociological concept   \n13.30-14.45\nLunch break \n14.45-16.15\nPanel II: Habitability/carrying capacity\nVicky Kluzik: Beyond carrying capacity. Contours of a political knowledge theory of economy and ecology\nMartin Repohl: What it takes for planetary habitation. Transformative notions of totality and the concern for planetary habitability from a theoretical sociological perspective   \n16.15-16.45\nCoffee break \n16.45-18.15\nPanel III: Environmental knowledge in the ethnographic research process\nKarl Homuth: ‘Mimic the future’. The anticipation of climate change in the ecosystem manipulation experiment\nSung Un Gang: The homeostasis of the field and the ethnographic self. A reflection from field research on queer everyday spaces in Seoul   \n18.15-18.30\nBreak \n18.30\nBook launch: Ich-Sagen. A genealogy of situatedness with Florian Sprenger\, Katharina Hoppe and Andreas Langenohl  \nFriday\, May 16\, 2025 \n9.30-11 a.m.\nPanel IV: Inside and outside\nVeit Braun: Intra muros\, extra muros. On the return to the oikos\nJan Overwijk: A Radical Ecology of Wealth. Niklas Luhmann and Karl Marx   \n11-11.30 a.m.\nCoffee break \n11.30-13 h\nPanel VI: (Anti-)Capitalist Relations to Nature\nChristian Helge Peters: Sociology of the Garden. Renegotiating environmental relations in labor\nAlexander Schröder: Thinking like a green strip. Static spaces and living networks in the Capitalocene   \n13-13.30\nFinal discussion
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/sociological-knowledge-of-the-environment-between-gaia-and-atmosphere-milieu-and-environment/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Tagung_Soziologisches-Umgebungswissen_15-16-Mai-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250515T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250515T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T084049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T084049Z
UID:10000441-1747339200-1747350000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Encruzilhadas das águas / Water Crossings\, routes for the Black Brazilian Cinemas' experiences
DESCRIPTION:Lecture & Film “Black Atlantic Cinema” \nLecture: Janaína Oliveira (Rio de Janeiro) \n“We are always in the middle of the journey\,” says essayist and poet Dionne Brand in A Map to the Door of No Return. The crossing of the Atlantic marks Black people’s historical and aesthetic experiences\, bringing fragmentation and incompleteness\, but also the crossroads that shape lives in the African diasporas. The Encruzilhadas das águas / Water Crossings program offers a path for thinking about the Atlantic routes that shape Black cinemas in Brazil\, proposing the encounter of contemporary works with Zózimo Bulbul’s pioneering film\, in a kind of cinematographic panorama through the waters.   \nJanaína Oliveira holds a Ph.D. in History and is a professor at the Federal Institute of Rio de Janeiro (IFRJ). She is Head Programmer at the Zózimo Bulbul Black Film Festival in Rio de Janeiro and on the programming committees for FINCAR (Festival Internacional de Cinema de Realizadoras) and International Women Filmmakers Festival in Recife.   \nFilm Program:\nAlma no Olho (Soul in the eye)\, Zózimo Bulbul (Brazil\, 1973\, 13 min)\nNoirBlue\, Displacents of a dance\, Ana Pi\, Brazil\, 2018\, 27 min.\nSe o mar tivesse varandas (If the sea had balconies)\, Aline Motta\, Brazil\, 2017\, 9 min.\nMal di Mare (Seasick)\, João Vieira Torres\, France/Brazil\, 2021\, 15 min.\nMar de Dentro\, Lia Letícia\, Brazil\, 2024\, 8 min.\nDe um lado do Atlântico (On One Side of the Atlantic)\, Milena Manfredini\, Brazil\, 2017\, 7 min. \n  \nOrganizer\nInstitute for Theatre\, Film and Media Studies at Goethe University and Kino im deutschen Filmmuseum in cooperation with the research center “Normative Orders”\, the research cluster “ConTrust – Trust in Conflict” and the Hessian Film and Media Academy; realized with funds from the Adickes Fund of Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/encruzilhadas-das-aguas-water-crossings-routes-for-the-black-brazilian-cinemas-experiences/
LOCATION:Cinema of the German Film Institute & Film Museum\, Schaumainkai 41\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596
CATEGORIES:Black Atlantic Cinema,Lecture & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2024_2025_Black_Atlantic_Cinema.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250521T181500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250521T194500
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T084708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250519T130207Z
UID:10000443-1747851300-1747856700@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:The discreet charm of the old Indies: Congo\, Brazil\, and colonial fantasy in a French baroque tapestry
DESCRIPTION:Kantorowicz Lecture  \nLecture by Cécile Fromont (Professor of History of Art and Architecture and Faculty Director of the Cooper Gallery of African and African American Art at Harvard University) \nA tropical menagerie set in a lush landscape surrounds almost imperceptible human characters and architectural structures in the eight tableaux of the Old Indies\, a Baroque tapestry from the French Royal Factory of the Gobelins. Interrogating the sources\, provenance\, and reception of the visual program that made their success from the 17th century to today\, this talk sheds light on the long-forgotten African sources of their iconography and analyzes the long-invisible colonial dimension embedded in their alluring exotic tableaux. It puts into dynamic dialogue the context of their creation in the ebbs and flows of the early modern Atlantic World with the contemporary debates about their display as historically and socially charged objects of European artistic patrimony. \nCécile Fromont is Professor of History of Art and Architecture and Faculty Director of the Cooper Gallery of African and African American Art at Harvard University. Her writing and teaching focus on the visual\, material\, and religious culture of Africa and Latin America with a special emphasis on the early modern period (ca 1500-1800)\, on the Portuguese-speaking Atlantic World\, and on the slave trade. \n  \nPresented by:\nForschungszentrum Historische Geisteswissenschaften der Goethe-Universität in cooperation with the research center “Normative Ordnungen” and the Institut Franco-Allemand. With the kind support of the Friends and Sponsors of Goethe University
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/the-discreet-charm-of-the-old-indies-congo-brazil-and-colonial-fantasy-in-a-french-baroque-tapestry/
LOCATION:Casino building room 1.812\, Norbert-Wollheim-Platz 1\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Kantorowicz Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/2025_05_21_Kantorowicz_Fromont_tapis.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250522T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250522T200000
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250512T085613Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250519T132409Z
UID:10000445-1747936800-1747944000@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:"Planetary Crime" - on the end of the political in the polycrisis
DESCRIPTION:Lecture as part of the series “Shaping the future – between climate change\, technology and social responsibility” \nLecture by Prof. Dr. Christoph Burchard (Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure\, International and European Criminal Law\, Comparative Law and Legal Theory at Goethe University\, founding spokesperson of the Center for Critical Computational Studies (C3S)\, Research Center “Normative Orders”) \nAs part of the exhibition “FIXING FUTURES: Planetary Futures between Speculation and Control”\, the MGGU – Museum Giersch of Goethe University\, together with the research center “Normative Orders”\, invites you to the lecture series “Shaping the Future – Between Climate Change\, Technology and Social Responsibility”.\nBetween May and July 2025\, experts from various scientific disciplines will shed light on key issues and challenges in dealing with shaping the future in the face of climate change.\nTopics such as the fair distribution of resources\, the use of artificial intelligence and algorithms as well as alternative futures will take center stage. The lectures offer an interdisciplinary dialogue between science\, art and activism and invite us to question the complex interactions between social processes and social norms that climate change and increasing technologization entail.\nThe series of events encourages us to ask questions such as whether and to what extent modern technologies can help us shape a sustainable future and what ethical\, political and social implications this entails. The dialog between the speakers and visitors opens up new perspectives and provides food for thought for actively shaping our future. \nThe events are open to the public. Admission is free.
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/planetary-crime-on-the-end-of-the-political-in-the-polycrisis/
LOCATION:MGGU – Giersch Museum of the Goethe University\, Schaumainkai 83\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60596\, Deutschland
CATEGORIES:Shaping the future
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Fixing-Futures-quer.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="MGGU - Giersch Museum of the Goethe University":MAILTO:info@mggu.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250603T181500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250603T194500
DTSTAMP:20260422T214001
CREATED:20250529T073438Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250602T065237Z
UID:10000471-1748974500-1748979900@normativeorders.net
SUMMARY:Is there a future for deliberative democracy? Democratic theory in the age of oligarchs\, autocrats\, and patriarchs
DESCRIPTION:Lecture by Professor Simone Chambers (Professor and Chair of Political Science at UC Irvine\, currently Fellow at the Research Centre Normative Orders)
URL:https://normativeorders.net/veranstaltungen/is-there-a-future-for-deliberative-democracy-democratic-theory-in-the-age-of-oligarchs-autocrats-and-patriarchs/
LOCATION:Building “Normative Orders”\, EG.01\, Max-Horkheimer-Strasse 2\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Deutschland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://normativeorders.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/poster_chambers_june03-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR