Program Unit Online June Annual Meeting 2025

Religions, Social Conflict, and Peace Unit

Call for Proposals

Decolonizing “Internationalism”: Impoverishing the Nations
2025 marks the 80th anniversary of World War II's end, the United Nations's formation, and the beginning of global conflicts often framed as the “Cold War.” The Liberation Theologies Unit and the Religion and Peace Unit invite proposals for a special panel that examines the complex relationships between international organizations, Western conceptions of global peace, and the rising intra- and extra-state conflicts over the past eight decades. We particularly welcome proposals that explore the role of religion in both fueling these conflicts and offering alternatives to violence and oppression. We invite submissions for both the June online meeting and the November in-person meeting in Boston. To foster inclusivity, we may prioritize international scholars who are typically unable to attend the in-person meeting for the June session, while reserving space in November for our usual constituencies. Proposals may address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • international law and the Gaza genocide against Palestinians
  • Unjust peace and the role of international organizations.
  • Pacification plans from above that failed.
  • "The North is Cold because the South is Hot": Cold War lessons from Global South/East perspectives.
  • International networks of repression in the Global South.
  • Why do Western democracies support non-Western autocracies?
  • Are we living through a new red scare?
  • The Spirit of Bandung as an international network today.
Statement of Purpose

Relationships between religions and the causes and resolution of social conflict are complex. On the one hand, religion is a major source of discord in our world, but on the other, religious agents have often played a central role in developing and encouraging nonviolent means of conflict resolution and sustainable peace. While religion as a factor in conflicts is often misunderstood by military and political leaders, it is also the case that the popular call for an end to injustice is quite often a religious voice. We seek to add a critical dimension to the understanding of how religion influences and resolves social conflict. We want to develop and expand the traditional categories of moral reflection and response to war and also to investigate kindred conflicts — terrorism, humanitarian armed intervention, cultural and governmental repression, ecological degradation, and all of the factors that inhibit human flourishing. We also hope to encourage theoretical and practical reflection on religious peace-building by examining the discourses, practices, and community and institutional structures that promote just peace. Through our work, we hope to promote understanding of the relationships between social conflict and religions in ways that are theoretically sophisticated and practically applicable in diverse cultural contexts.

Chair Mail Dates
Atalia Omer, University of Notre Dame aomer1@nd.edu - View
Santiago H. Slabodsky santiago.slabodsky… - View
Review Process: Participant names are visible to chairs but anonymous to steering committee members until after final acceptance/rejection
Please refrain from submitting panels that lack diversity