Framing Migration: The Role of Religious Actors in the Production of International Law

Framing Migration: The Role of Religious Actors in the Production of International Law

Organizer
Dr Michel Chambon, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
ZIP
-
Location
Singapore
Country
Singapore
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
10.08.2024 - 08.01.2025
Deadline
09.01.2025
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This workshop explores and analyses the role that Catholic figures, advocacy groups, religious orders, and intellectual resources have played in shaping norms and principals that have shaped and transformed the international law applied to migrants in the contemporary world. It aims at analyzing, in a Euro-Asian perspective, the role of Catholic entities in negotiating the norms that have transformed the international law applied to migrants in the contemporary world (1950-2000).

Framing Migration: The Role of Religious Actors in the Production of International Law

This workshop is jointly organised by the NUS-Paris research collaboration on fostering social scientific research on Asian societies and religious networks. This project is part of the Initiative for the Study of Asian Catholics (ISAC) hosted by the Asia Research Institute at the National University of Singapore.

This workshop explores and analyses the role that Catholic figures, advocacy groups, religious orders, and intellectual resources have played in shaping norms and principals that have shaped and transformed the international law applied to migrants in the contemporary world. It aims at analyzing, in a Euro-Asian perspective, the role of Catholic entities in negotiating the norms that have transformed the international law applied to migrants in the contemporary world (1950-2000). Without assuming that Catholicism is a homogenous and coherent actor, this workshop will discuss and theorize Catholic networks and actors “in action” to document the ways they have intervened in the reception of vulnerable migrant populations in relation to shifting local contexts and international actors.

Since the end of the Second World War, a number of international organizations have been steadily developing new legal standards for the reception of migrants (Desmond 2022). After the introduction of those social rights into the International Declaration of Human Rights, the right to a “normal family life” laid the foundations for a principle of transnational citizenship while the rights of refugees were reformulated and expanded (Moreno Lax 2017).

Historiography has started to identify the way in which diplomatic relations between states have forged this international legal architecture (Rosental 2006, Ballinger 2020). It was promoted by an international network of social reformers who had organized itself since the very beginning of the 20th century. Bringing together, among others, top-ranking civil servants, academics, journalists, trade-unionists, professional experts such as engineers or physicians, it was also supported by non-governmental, philanthropic organizations defending migrants’ rights. Historians have been increasingly interested in the way how this wide international milieu managed to act on state legislation and the diplomacy of social and human rights. But although their presence has often been noticed and hypothesized as being a major one (Heo 2021), little is known about the role played by religious advocacy groups within this complex configuration.

However, since the 1891 papal encyclical Rerum Novarum, the first document to tackle the social problem as a whole, the Catholic Church’s understanding of its role in the world has shifted and the papacy gradually deployed the so-called “social doctrine”, a coherent body of principles on the dignity, nature and destiny of the person and the family. Rerum Novarum, which was confirmed and updated by Quadragesimo anno in 1931, insisted that the Church had a duty to intervene in the social sphere, while the state had a duty to intervene in the defense of those who suffered most from the economic system. This had a considerable influence on the evolution of Catholic movements and on a general awakening of Catholics to social and political action in view of legislation that was to last throughout the twentieth century.

This workshop welcomes research on the collaboration with, and reception of, Asian migrant populations by ecclesial institutions. The workshop is interested in case studies related to migration that have emerged between 1945 and 2000. It welcomes contributions considering the role of missionary and/or religious orders, the diplomatic missions of the Holy See, and humanitarian agencies or NGOs such as Jesuit Refugee Service, the Scalabrini Migration Center, Catholic relief service, the Sant’Egidio community, and the Aggiornamenti Sociali, all active across Asia and Europe. Contributors are invited to explore how these Catholic networks came to interact not only with states diplomats in international organizations devoted to work migrants and refugees, but also with migrant populations and social movements representing the working class and various political ideologies. Whereas some of them were inspired by Christianity, other referred to socialism or communism, the two most structuring ideological forces in many European and Asian countries.

Contributors are also invited to explore how a so-called Catholic doctrine emerged, not only from a top-down perspective fostered by the Holy See and its social encyclicals of the period under study (Populorum Progressio in 1967, Octogesima Adveniens in 1971, Evangelii Nuntiandi in 1975, complemented by Justitia in Mundo from the 1971 synod of bishops), but through the concrete reaction to a series of situations involving flows of vulnerable migrants, whether exiles and refugees, whether suffering from poverty, poor work labor or living conditions, or xenophobia.

The workshop will discuss some of these situations by privileging test cases particularly relevant to understand the intervention of Catholic networks and concerning Euro-Asian migration flows.

WORKSHOP CONVENORS

Dr Michel Chambon | Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
Contact Information

SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS

Paper proposals should include a title, an abstract (300 words maximum), and a brief personal biography (about 150 words) for submission by 10 August 2024. Please also include a statement confirming that your proposed paper has not been published or committed elsewhere and that you are willing to revise the version of your paper presented at the workshop for potential inclusion in an edited volume. Please submit your proposal using the provided template to valerie.yeo@nus.edu.sg.

Authors of selected proposals will be notified by mid-September 2024. Presenters will have to submit drafts of papers (about 4,000-6,000 words) by 1 December 2024. These drafts will be circulated to fellow presenters and discussants in advance.

This workshop will be conducted in person. The Asia Research Institute will provide overseas participants with full or partial airfare funding and three nights of accommodation in Singapore. Please indicate in the proposal form if you require funding support.

Contact (announcement)

valerie.yeo@nus.edu.sg

https://ari.nus.edu.sg/events/framing-migration/
Editors Information
Published on
13.06.2024
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English
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