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LE GROUPE DE RECHERCHE SUR LES SOCIÉTÉS PLURINATIONALES PRÉSENTE LE COLLOQUE

civic freedom in an age of diversity JAMES TULLY’S PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY

PROGRAMME Du 24 au 26 avril 2014 Salon Orange du Centre Pierre-Péladeau 300 boulevard de Maisonneuve Est www.creqc.uqam.ca Civic Freedom in an Age of Diversity: James Tully’s Public Philosophy Organized by the Groupe de recherche sur les sociétés plurinationales

24 AVRIL

3:00 Mot de bienvenue

Session 1 (3:15 – 6:00): Political Theory as a Critical Activity

3:15 Cressida Heyes (University of Alberta), Feminist philosophy as a critical activity

3:35 Michael Temelini (University of Ottawa / Université d’Ottawa), Tully’s diaological approach to political science

3:55 – 4:25 Discussion

4:25 – 4:45 Pause café

4:45 Jocelyn Maclure (Université Laval) and Daniel Weinstock (McGill University), Two conceptions of public philosophy

5:05 Duncan Ivison (University of Sydney), Liberty as a political value

5:25 – 5:55 Discussion

5:55 – 6:15 Pause café

Session 2 (6:15 – 7:45): Keynote Lecture

Charles Taylor (McGill University), Crises of democracy

7:45 Vin d’honneur et bouchées 25 AVRIL

8:45 – 9:15 Café

Session 3 (9:15 – 11:55): Civic Freedom and Democratic Struggles

9:15 Robin Celikates (Universiteit van Amsterdam), Civic freedom and non-institutionalized political contestation

9:35 Dominique Leydet (UQAM), Democratic struggles “from below” and the institutions of constitutional representative democracy

9:55 – 10:25 Discussion

10:25 – 10:45 Pause café

10:45 Antje Wiener (Universität Hamburg), Cultural Cosmopolitanism: Contestedness and Contestation

11:05 Geneviève Nootens (UQAC), Popular sovereignty, political contention, and the boundaries of democracy

11:25 – 11:55 Discussion

12:00 – 1:15 Lunch

Session 4 (1:15 – 3:00): Democracy and the Public Sphere

1:00 Simone Chambers (University of Toronto), Putting reason back into reasonable

1:20 Jeremy Webber (University of Victoria), Negotiation and democratic decision-making

1:40 Melissa Williams (University of Toronto), Glocalizing the public sphere

2:00 – 2:45 Discussion

3:00 – 3:15 Pause café

Session 5 (3:15 – 5:00): Indigenous Intellectual Culture, Legal Traditions, and Self-Determination

3:15 Dale Turner (Dartmouth College), James Tully’s political thought and contemporary Indigenous intellectual culture

3:35 Val Napoleon (University of Victoria), Rebuilding civility and citizenry from Indigenous legal traditions

3:55 Mike Murphy (UNBC), Self-Determination: A basic human right and a basic human need

4:15 – 5:00 Discussion

5:00 – 5:15 Pause café

Session 6 (5:15 – 6:45): Keynote Lecture

Taiaiake Alfred (University of Victoria), The failure of reconciliation

8:00 Souper 26 AVRIL

8:45 – 9:15 Café

Session 6 (9:15 – 11h00): Federalism and Multinational Democracies

9:15 Stephen Tierney (University of Edinburgh), Enlightening Federalism: the Philosophy of James Tully

9:35 Helder de Schutter (KU Leuven), Reimagining supranational belonging

9:55 Alain-G Gagnon (UQAM), Competing conceptions of as a political community

10:15 – 11:00 Discussion

11:00 – 11:15 Pause café

Session 7 (11:15 – 1:00): Thinking and Acting Differently

11:15 Jonathan Havercroft (University of Southampton), Excuses, politics, and pluralism

11:35 Dimitri Karmis (Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa), Dialogue, listening, and difference

11:55 David Owen (University of Southampton), The power of examplars

12:15 – 1:00 Discussion

1:00 – 2:30 Lunch

Session 8 (2:30 – 4:30): Conférence de clôture

James Tully (University of Victoria), On civic freedom

Groupe de recherche sur les sociétés plurinationales

Eugénie Brouillet Jocelyn Maclure Alain-G. Gagnon Geneviève Nootens Dimitrios Karmis François Rocher Guy Laforest James Tully André Lecours José Woehrling