Call For Paper – International Conference on International System

April 20, 2013, oleh: Admin HI

Call For Paper – International Conference on International System

The End of The Westphalian Settlement?
Contemporary Global Challenges Toward The Nation-State System
Yogyakarta, November 11th 2013
I. Background
The School’s of Realism has been argued as the most persistence paradigm that consistency believe state-centrism world order. It continuously posits state as the most important actor in International Relations. All states are exclusively believed to have authority, control, and sovereignty within their own territory. All also believed as a rational actor pursuing power within anarchical world structure. These theoretical postulates and its consequence on how state behave one into another in “the real world”, has deep long roots in The Westphalian Treaty which had occurred in almost half millennia ago.
Westphalia is a region in the north-west of Germany, it was in this region- the cities of Münster and Osnabrück- that in 1648 the Peace of Westphalia was signed. This peace, formally ending the religious feuds that had led to the 30 –year and 80-year wars. By the treaty, the universal ideas giving cohesion to the medieval world-a cohesion no less important because it contradicted great diversity-gave way to separate states and nations, each capable of defining its own goals and cultural mission.
The loyalty on God & Church as a universal politico-military entity has ended up, and eventually replaced by the loyalty towards specific territory and nationality. The idea of sovereignty took root, though not immediately, and provided the ideological justification for ultimate control within a specific territory at the same time that it provided a basis for (co)recognition from other states (principle of reciprocity) . Sovereigns made treaties with other sovereigns, forged policies to rule inside a territory, attempted to exclude other authorities from interfering in “domestic politics,” developed stronger controls over their own borders, and actively participated in the construction of citizenship and nationalism. The whole principle of nation-state system eventually forms its perfection during the two world war followed by the decolonization era up to the cold war era.
Yet the acceleration of globalization has severely tested the Westphalian System. Globalisation itself may be broadly defined as the migration of human activities from the narrow confines of the nation-state to the much larger theatre of Planet Earth itself. The Revolutionary invention of technological information and transportation have significantly fasten the process of “stretching” ( any states’ and/or non-states’ activities, events, and decisions in one region will affect others), “thickening” (either state or non-state actors have involved in various global and transnational institutions) , “speeding-up” (: shrinking the world into single village), and “deepening” (a significant blurring of the local-global or domestic-foreign divide). Those phenomena eventually create two important aspects that have never been developed before.
The first, global community started to reveal ‘and repudiate several problems that prior to globalization were sealed assumed as “state’s domestic internal business” that could not be interference by others such as minority problems; ethnic conflicts; environmental managements; etc. Secondly, globalization triggers the emergence of several unprecedented global phenomena that surely have challenged state’s dominant role in international relations.
To mention a few of many, George Soros and Osama bin Ladin- by what they have done in East Asia and the US consecutively – have become individual actors that could shock down the world’s state established structure. Multinational Corporations have evolved to become “a new giant creature of economic” that has a fluid mobility of capital and a structural ability to operate not only their distribution but also their production across border. For them state border and the logic of territoriality become meaningless.
Discussing the persistence of the Westphalian Settlement in globalization era, particularly on how state cope with several contemporary global problems, is indisputable important, considering the world politics we live in still based on nation-state system whereas some contemporary global phenomena continuously have challenged on the privilege of nation-state traditional role. Due to that “raison d’etre” Departement of International Relations Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta proudly present “International Conference entitled The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
II. Date and Venue
The Conference will be held on 11th of November 2013 at Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta. Jalan Lingkar Selatan Tamantirto Kasihan Bantu, DIY, Indonesia.
III. Conference Aim
The Conference is constructed to provide a discussion space International Relations’ scholar to discuss the contemporary global problems impacton the state centric system.
IV. Call for Paper
With regard to above, we proudly invite academic to send us a paper regarding to the topic either theoretically or practically. The papers will be presented in our conference based on several different clusters. The cluster can be noted as follow :
1. The Westphalian Nation-State System vs the rest: are there any other alternative?
2. From the concept of state security to human security: the traditional security arrangement quo Vadis?
3. Humanitarian Intervention and State Sovereignty
4. Conflict Resolution (within or between) State(s) in globalized world.
5. The uprising role of unprecedented non-state actors: how nation-state dealt with?
In every cluster, participant will present their paper which been submitted through „call for paper‟ mechanism. All the presented paper will be published as the proceeding on “The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
Abstract will deal with surrounding the topic of “The End of the Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Towards the Nation-State System”. Presenters may choose and analize issues or topic regarding to the clusters given above from various international relations perspectives. Each presentation will take 15 minutes. In the end of each session, one hour is allocated for general discussion. Abstract may be submitted via email to: ICIS@umy.ac.id. Word limit for Abstract : Strictly 250 words maximum. Word limit for paper : 3000-5000 words.
V. Important Dates
Abstract Submission Due on July, 1st 2013
Notification of acceptance on July, 24th 2013.
Paper Submission Due on October, 9th 2013.
Early bird registration Due on September, 20th 2013.(registration fee payment)
Regular registration Due on October 15th 2013.(registration fee payment)
VI. Accomodation
University Residence UMY
Jl. Lingkar Selatan, Tamantirto, Kasihan Bantul, Indonesia,
Phone. (+62)274387656, Fax (+62)274387646. Website: www.unires.umy.ac.id.
Hotel Inna Garuda
Jl. Malioboro No.60, Suryatmajan Danurejan, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
55213, phone (+62)274566353, website: www.innagaruda.com.
Hotel Ibis Jogja.
Jl. Malioboro No.52-58, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta Indonesia 55001,
Phone. (+62)274566222, Fax. (+62)274566220. Website: www.ibis.com.
VII. Registration
Presenter
Abstract and paper should be submitted by email to:
ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Please attach the registration form along with your abstract.
Non-Presenter
Fill in the application form and proof of registration fee payment to ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Download Registration Form here.
Registration Fee

Early Bird Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,000,000 IDR

500,000 IDR

Local Participant

500,000 IDR

100,000 IDR

 

Go Show (on the date)  Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,250,000 IDR

750,000 IDR

Local Participant

750,000 IDR

150,000 IDR

Payment Method
Payment can be made by Bank Transfer.
Bank transfer fee should be paid by the participants
Bank Information:
Bank Name: Bank Mandiri Syariah
Bank Address: Kampus UMY Yogyakarta
Account name: Ali Muhammad QQ
Account number: 7031632638
Swift Code: BSMDIDJA
Deadline for Payment
For the PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS should be made no later than Thursday, October 31st, 2013
For NON-PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS can be made on site, 1 hour before the Re-registration.
Secretariat
International Relations Department
Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta
West Ringroad, Taman Tirto, Kasihan, Bantul, Yogyakarta
e-mail: icis@umy.ac.id
website: hi.umy.ac.id/icis
Liasion Officer
Omi Ongge : email (omiongge_iro@umy.ac.id). Phone (+6281355465171)
Farah Isnaeni: email (farah.isnaeni@yahoo.com).  Phone (+6283869961000)

Call For Paper – International Conference on International System

The End of The Westphalian Settlement?
Contemporary Global Challenges Toward The Nation-State System
Yogyakarta, November 11th 2013
I. Background
The School’s of Realism has been argued as the most persistence paradigm that consistency believe state-centrism world order. It continuously posits state as the most important actor in International Relations. All states are exclusively believed to have authority, control, and sovereignty within their own territory. All also believed as a rational actor pursuing power within anarchical world structure. These theoretical postulates and its consequence on how state behave one into another in “the real world”, has deep long roots in The Westphalian Treaty which had occurred in almost half millennia ago.
Westphalia is a region in the north-west of Germany, it was in this region- the cities of Münster and Osnabrück- that in 1648 the Peace of Westphalia was signed. This peace, formally ending the religious feuds that had led to the 30 –year and 80-year wars. By the treaty, the universal ideas giving cohesion to the medieval world-a cohesion no less important because it contradicted great diversity-gave way to separate states and nations, each capable of defining its own goals and cultural mission.
The loyalty on God & Church as a universal politico-military entity has ended up, and eventually replaced by the loyalty towards specific territory and nationality. The idea of sovereignty took root, though not immediately, and provided the ideological justification for ultimate control within a specific territory at the same time that it provided a basis for (co)recognition from other states (principle of reciprocity) . Sovereigns made treaties with other sovereigns, forged policies to rule inside a territory, attempted to exclude other authorities from interfering in “domestic politics,” developed stronger controls over their own borders, and actively participated in the construction of citizenship and nationalism. The whole principle of nation-state system eventually forms its perfection during the two world war followed by the decolonization era up to the cold war era.
Yet the acceleration of globalization has severely tested the Westphalian System. Globalisation itself may be broadly defined as the migration of human activities from the narrow confines of the nation-state to the much larger theatre of Planet Earth itself. The Revolutionary invention of technological information and transportation have significantly fasten the process of “stretching” ( any states’ and/or non-states’ activities, events, and decisions in one region will affect others), “thickening” (either state or non-state actors have involved in various global and transnational institutions) , “speeding-up” (: shrinking the world into single village), and “deepening” (a significant blurring of the local-global or domestic-foreign divide). Those phenomena eventually create two important aspects that have never been developed before.
The first, global community started to reveal ‘and repudiate several problems that prior to globalization were sealed assumed as “state’s domestic internal business” that could not be interference by others such as minority problems; ethnic conflicts; environmental managements; etc. Secondly, globalization triggers the emergence of several unprecedented global phenomena that surely have challenged state’s dominant role in international relations.
To mention a few of many, George Soros and Osama bin Ladin- by what they have done in East Asia and the US consecutively – have become individual actors that could shock down the world’s state established structure. Multinational Corporations have evolved to become “a new giant creature of economic” that has a fluid mobility of capital and a structural ability to operate not only their distribution but also their production across border. For them state border and the logic of territoriality become meaningless.
Discussing the persistence of the Westphalian Settlement in globalization era, particularly on how state cope with several contemporary global problems, is indisputable important, considering the world politics we live in still based on nation-state system whereas some contemporary global phenomena continuously have challenged on the privilege of nation-state traditional role. Due to that “raison d’etre” Departement of International Relations Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta proudly present “International Conference entitled The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
II. Date and Venue
The Conference will be held on 11th of November 2013 at Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta. Jalan Lingkar Selatan Tamantirto Kasihan Bantu, DIY, Indonesia.
III. Conference Aim
The Conference is constructed to provide a discussion space International Relations’ scholar to discuss the contemporary global problems impacton the state centric system.
IV. Call for Paper
With regard to above, we proudly invite academic to send us a paper regarding to the topic either theoretically or practically. The papers will be presented in our conference based on several different clusters. The cluster can be noted as follow :
1. The Westphalian Nation-State System vs the rest: are there any other alternative?
2. From the concept of state security to human security: the traditional security arrangement quo Vadis?
3. Humanitarian Intervention and State Sovereignty
4. Conflict Resolution (within or between) State(s) in globalized world.
5. The uprising role of unprecedented non-state actors: how nation-state dealt with?
In every cluster, participant will present their paper which been submitted through „call for paper‟ mechanism. All the presented paper will be published as the proceeding on “The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
Abstract will deal with surrounding the topic of “The End of the Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Towards the Nation-State System”. Presenters may choose and analize issues or topic regarding to the clusters given above from various international relations perspectives. Each presentation will take 15 minutes. In the end of each session, one hour is allocated for general discussion. Abstract may be submitted via email to: ICIS@umy.ac.id. Word limit for Abstract : Strictly 250 words maximum. Word limit for paper : 3000-5000 words.
V. Important Dates
Abstract Submission Due on July, 1st 2013
Notification of acceptance on July, 24th 2013.
Paper Submission Due on October, 9th 2013.
Early bird registration Due on September, 20th 2013.(registration fee payment)
Regular registration Due on October 15th 2013.(registration fee payment)
VI. Accomodation
University Residence UMY
Jl. Lingkar Selatan, Tamantirto, Kasihan Bantul, Indonesia,
Phone. (+62)274387656, Fax (+62)274387646. Website: www.unires.umy.ac.id.
Hotel Inna Garuda
Jl. Malioboro No.60, Suryatmajan Danurejan, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
55213, phone (+62)274566353, website: www.innagaruda.com.
Hotel Ibis Jogja.
Jl. Malioboro No.52-58, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta Indonesia 55001,
Phone. (+62)274566222, Fax. (+62)274566220. Website: www.ibis.com.
VII. Registration
Presenter
Abstract and paper should be submitted by email to:
ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Please attach the registration form along with your abstract.
Non-Presenter
Fill in the application form and proof of registration fee payment to ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Download Registration Form here.
Registration Fee

Early Bird Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,000,000 IDR

500,000 IDR

Local Participant

500,000 IDR

100,000 IDR

Go Show (on the date)  Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,250,000 IDR

750,000 IDR

Local Participant

750,000 IDR

150,000 IDR

Payment Method
Payment can be made by Bank Transfer.
Bank transfer fee should be paid by the participants
Bank Information:
Bank Name: Bank Mandiri Syariah
Bank Address: Kampus UMY Yogyakarta
Account name: Ali Muhammad QQ
Account number: 7031632638
Swift Code: BSMDIDJA
Deadline for Payment
For the PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS should be made no later than Thursday, October 31st, 2013
For NON-PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS can be made on site, 1 hour before the Re-registration.
Secretariat
International Relations Department
Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta
West Ringroad, Taman Tirto, Kasihan, Bantul, Yogyakarta
e-mail: icis@umy.ac.id
website: hi.umy.ac.id/icis
Liasion Officer
Omi Ongge : email (omiongge_iro@umy.ac.id). Phone (+6281355465171)
Farah Isnaeni: email (farah.isnaeni@yahoo.com).  Phone (+6283869961000)

Call For Paper – International Conference on International System

The End of The Westphalian Settlement?
Contemporary Global Challenges Toward The Nation-State System
Yogyakarta, November 11th 2013
I. Background
The School’s of Realism has been argued as the most persistence paradigm that consistency believe state-centrism world order. It continuously posits state as the most important actor in International Relations. All states are exclusively believed to have authority, control, and sovereignty within their own territory. All also believed as a rational actor pursuing power within anarchical world structure. These theoretical postulates and its consequence on how state behave one into another in “the real world”, has deep long roots in The Westphalian Treaty which had occurred in almost half millennia ago.
Westphalia is a region in the north-west of Germany, it was in this region- the cities of Münster and Osnabrück- that in 1648 the Peace of Westphalia was signed. This peace, formally ending the religious feuds that had led to the 30 –year and 80-year wars. By the treaty, the universal ideas giving cohesion to the medieval world-a cohesion no less important because it contradicted great diversity-gave way to separate states and nations, each capable of defining its own goals and cultural mission.
The loyalty on God & Church as a universal politico-military entity has ended up, and eventually replaced by the loyalty towards specific territory and nationality. The idea of sovereignty took root, though not immediately, and provided the ideological justification for ultimate control within a specific territory at the same time that it provided a basis for (co)recognition from other states (principle of reciprocity) . Sovereigns made treaties with other sovereigns, forged policies to rule inside a territory, attempted to exclude other authorities from interfering in “domestic politics,” developed stronger controls over their own borders, and actively participated in the construction of citizenship and nationalism. The whole principle of nation-state system eventually forms its perfection during the two world war followed by the decolonization era up to the cold war era.
Yet the acceleration of globalization has severely tested the Westphalian System. Globalisation itself may be broadly defined as the migration of human activities from the narrow confines of the nation-state to the much larger theatre of Planet Earth itself. The Revolutionary invention of technological information and transportation have significantly fasten the process of “stretching” ( any states’ and/or non-states’ activities, events, and decisions in one region will affect others), “thickening” (either state or non-state actors have involved in various global and transnational institutions) , “speeding-up” (: shrinking the world into single village), and “deepening” (a significant blurring of the local-global or domestic-foreign divide). Those phenomena eventually create two important aspects that have never been developed before.
The first, global community started to reveal ‘and repudiate several problems that prior to globalization were sealed assumed as “state’s domestic internal business” that could not be interference by others such as minority problems; ethnic conflicts; environmental managements; etc. Secondly, globalization triggers the emergence of several unprecedented global phenomena that surely have challenged state’s dominant role in international relations.
To mention a few of many, George Soros and Osama bin Ladin- by what they have done in East Asia and the US consecutively – have become individual actors that could shock down the world’s state established structure. Multinational Corporations have evolved to become “a new giant creature of economic” that has a fluid mobility of capital and a structural ability to operate not only their distribution but also their production across border. For them state border and the logic of territoriality become meaningless.
Discussing the persistence of the Westphalian Settlement in globalization era, particularly on how state cope with several contemporary global problems, is indisputable important, considering the world politics we live in still based on nation-state system whereas some contemporary global phenomena continuously have challenged on the privilege of nation-state traditional role. Due to that “raison d’etre” Departement of International Relations Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta proudly present “International Conference entitled The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
II. Date and Venue
The Conference will be held on 11th of November 2013 at Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta. Jalan Lingkar Selatan Tamantirto Kasihan Bantu, DIY, Indonesia.
III. Conference Aim
The Conference is constructed to provide a discussion space International Relations’ scholar to discuss the contemporary global problems impacton the state centric system.
IV. Call for Paper
With regard to above, we proudly invite academic to send us a paper regarding to the topic either theoretically or practically. The papers will be presented in our conference based on several different clusters. The cluster can be noted as follow :
1. The Westphalian Nation-State System vs the rest: are there any other alternative?
2. From the concept of state security to human security: the traditional security arrangement quo Vadis?
3. Humanitarian Intervention and State Sovereignty
4. Conflict Resolution (within or between) State(s) in globalized world.
5. The uprising role of unprecedented non-state actors: how nation-state dealt with?
In every cluster, participant will present their paper which been submitted through „call for paper‟ mechanism. All the presented paper will be published as the proceeding on “The End of Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Toward the Nation-State System”.
Abstract will deal with surrounding the topic of “The End of the Westphalian Settlement?: Contemporary Global Challenges Towards the Nation-State System”. Presenters may choose and analize issues or topic regarding to the clusters given above from various international relations perspectives. Each presentation will take 15 minutes. In the end of each session, one hour is allocated for general discussion. Abstract may be submitted via email to: ICIS@umy.ac.id. Word limit for Abstract : Strictly 250 words maximum. Word limit for paper : 3000-5000 words.
V. Important Dates
Abstract Submission Due on July, 1st 2013
Notification of acceptance on July, 24th 2013.
Paper Submission Due on October, 9th 2013.
Early bird registration Due on September, 20th 2013.(registration fee payment)
Regular registration Due on October 15th 2013.(registration fee payment)
VI. Accomodation
University Residence UMY
Jl. Lingkar Selatan, Tamantirto, Kasihan Bantul, Indonesia,
Phone. (+62)274387656, Fax (+62)274387646. Website: www.unires.umy.ac.id.
Hotel Inna Garuda
Jl. Malioboro No.60, Suryatmajan Danurejan, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
55213, phone (+62)274566353, website: www.innagaruda.com.
Hotel Ibis Jogja.
Jl. Malioboro No.52-58, Yogyakarta City, Yogyakarta Indonesia 55001,
Phone. (+62)274566222, Fax. (+62)274566220. Website: www.ibis.com.
VII. Registration
Presenter
Abstract and paper should be submitted by email to:
ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Please attach the registration form along with your abstract.
Non-Presenter
Fill in the application form and proof of registration fee payment to ICIS@umy.ac.id or Fax to +62274 387646
Download Registration Form here.
Registration Fee

Early Bird Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,000,000 IDR

500,000 IDR

Local Participant

500,000 IDR

100,000 IDR

 

Go Show (on the date)  Participants

Presenter

Non-Presenter

International Participant

1,250,000 IDR

750,000 IDR

Local Participant

750,000 IDR

150,000 IDR

Payment Method
Payment can be made by Bank Transfer.
Bank transfer fee should be paid by the participants
Bank Information:
Bank Name: Bank Mandiri Syariah
Bank Address: Kampus UMY Yogyakarta
Account name: Ali Muhammad QQ
Account number: 7031632638
Swift Code: BSMDIDJA
Deadline for Payment
For the PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS should be made no later than Thursday, October 31st, 2013
For NON-PRESENTERS,
PAYMENTS can be made on site, 1 hour before the Re-registration.
Secretariat
International Relations Department
Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta
West Ringroad, Taman Tirto, Kasihan, Bantul, Yogyakarta
e-mail: icis@umy.ac.id
website: hi.umy.ac.id/icis
Liasion Officer
Omi Ongge : email (omiongge_iro@umy.ac.id). Phone (+6281355465171)
Farah Isnaeni: email (farah.isnaeni@yahoo.com).  Phone (+6283869961000)