We are delighted to
announce details of the ‘Two Centuries of Peacemaking’ conference, which will be held at Newcastle University and Northumbria University on 7 and 8 June. This event asks big questions about the direction and vitality of the peace movement
over 200 years. It is a forum where scholars and activists will reflect on the
past, present and future of the peace movement. Participants will consider the
shifts that occurred in the peace movement, addressing issues such as
conscientious objection and the importance of feminist/women’s activist roles,
the geographical and historical coordinates and influence of the civil rights
movement, King’s distinctive nonviolence, global peace movements, and much
more.
We are organising this conference as 2016 is an anniversary year that encourages us to contemplate our
understanding of peace and the paths towards it. Firstly, it is the centenary
of Britain’s enactment of conscription during World War One, reminding us of
those who rejected military service and became conscientious objectors.
Secondly, June 2016 is the bicentenary of the establishment of the (London)
Peace Society. Alongside the formation of the New York Peace Society, its
appearance is commonly seen as the beginning of the modern peace movement.
Thirdly, 2016 is the start of a year of activities that commemorate the 50th
anniversary of Martin Luther King’s visit to Newcastle, where he accepted an
honorary doctorate in November 1967. His impromptu address, which fused
together the issues of poverty, war and racism, has inspired research at the
city’s two universities and informs the work of the Martin Luther King PeaceCommittee which seeks to honour King’s legacy by ‘building cultures of peace’.
In addition to around 25 academic papers, the conference will feature keynote lectures by Martin Ceadel, David Cortright, Kate Hudson
and Thomas F. Jackson. Kate Hudson’s talk is a free public lecture. It is
preceded by Peace Fair at which local initiatives on peace and conflict will
present their work.
The conference is
jointly organised and hosted by academics from Newcastle University (Nick
Megoran, Ben Houston) and members of the 'Histories of Activism' research group at Northumbria University (Jon Coburn, Daniel Laqua,
Sarah Hellawell).
Registration both for the conference itself and for the free public lecture and peace fair has now closed. If you would like to get in touch with the organisers, feel free to email twocenturiesofpeacemaking@gmail.com.
PROVISIONAL
PROGRAMME
Tuesday, 7 June
09:30 – 10:00
Registration and coffee
10:00 – 11:15 Plenary I: Martin Ceadel (University of
Oxford) – 'The Peace Society in retrospect'
11:15 – 11:45 Refreshments
11:45 – 13:15 Panel sessions A
a cENTURY OF Transnational peace aCTIVISM, 1825 TO 1925
- Michael Clinton (Gwynedd Mercy University) – Making friends of peace: exchanges
between British and French peace advocates during the nineteenth century
- Daniel Laqua (Northumbria University) – The transnational trajectories of Leopold Katscher
- Sarah Hellawell (Northumbria University) – WILPF and transnational campaigning in the 1920s and 1930s
RETHINKING KING
- Simon Hall (Leeds University) – 1956: the year that made Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Peter Ling (Nottingham University) – King’s performance of Gandhian nonviolence
- Jake Hodder (Nottingham University) – American pacifists and the political construction of Kingiji
13:15 – 14:30 Lunch
14:30 – 16:30 Panel sessions B
THE PEACE SOCIETY
- Ben Houston, Nick Megoran and Matthew Scott (Newcastle
University) – The
Newcastle Upon-Tyne Auxiliary Peace Society, c. 1817–1850
- David Saunders (Newcastle University) – Peace In North-East England, 1816–1914
- Keith
Edghill (UCL) – Early nineteenth-century
Christian pacifists and the Concept of defensive war
- Richard Allen (University of South Wales) – ‘The disgrace of a Christian society’ (William Wilberforce): The Herald
Of Peace and its reports on duelling in the 1820s
NEW DIRECTIONS
IN THE STUDY OF NONVIOLENCE
- Sherrill W. Hayes (Kennesaw State University) – 'Peacejacking' and social policy: a case study of Martin Luther King and the Fair Housing Act of 1968
- Maia Hallward (Kennesaw State University) – Exploring the tensions and contradictions of nonviolence: the case
of academic boycott
- Andreas Hackl (Edinburgh University) – Civility and resistance: debating the case of Palestinians in Tel
Aviv
- Roberto Baldoli (Exeter University) – Reconsidering nonviolence: a revolutionary ideology for freedom and plurality
17:15 – 18:30
Peace fair with stalls by 14 groups and initiatives
as well as refreshments, snacks and music
18:30 – 20:00 Plenary II / public lecture: Kate Hudson
(CND) – 'Peace activism in twentieth-century Britain'
Wednesday, 8
June
09:00 – 09:30 Registration and coffee
09:30 – 10:45 Plenary III: Thomas F. Jackson (University
of North Carolina) – 'Chicago to Newcastle: jangling disords of Martin Luther King's nonviolent strategy in November 1967'
10:45 – 11:15 Refreshments
11:15 – 12:45 Panel sessions C
Peace Activism AND THE GREAT WAR
- Sabine Grimshaw (Leeds University) – Writing about peace: self-representations of peace activists during
the First World War
- Matt Perry (Newcastle University) – The Black Sea Mutinies: war, peace and revolution in mutineer subjectivity
- André Keil (Durham University) – Civil liberties and human rights activism during the Great War: the Bund Neues Vaterland and the Union of Democratic Control
CRITIQUING EMPIRE AND IMPERIALISM
- Christian Hogsbjerg (UCL) – 'Peace and empire are irreconcilable': C.L.R. James, Pan-Africanism and peacemaking in the Age of Extremes
- Ellen Crabtree (Newcastle University) – Books for Vietnam: French
academic activism during the Vietnam War
- Discussant: Joe Street (Northumbria University)
12:45 – 13:45 Lunch
13:45 – 15:15 Panel sessions D
WOMEN AND
INTERNATIONALISM
- Laurie Cohen (Universität Innsbruck) and Helen Kay (independent researcher) – Connected enemies: German
and British peace women communications during World War One
- Ingrid Sharp (Leeds University) – An unbroken family? Restoring the international community of
women after World War I
- Laura Beers (Birmingham University) – Liberal and socialist collaboration in the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
THINKING ABOUT PEACE AND WAR SINCE 1945
-
Jon Coburn (Northumbria University) – And the beat goes on: past, present and future in a peace
activist’s memoirs
- Christoph Laucht (Swansea University) – Hiroshima, Nagasaki and transnational
medical activism against nuclear weapons in Britain, West Germany and the
United States during the 1980s
- Tom Bishop (Nottingham University) – Salesmen, fallout shelters and consumer protest during the Nuclear Age
15:15 – 16:30 Plenary IV: David Cortright (University of
Notre Dame) – 'Peace: the past, present and future of an idea and a movement'