Meine Merkliste Geteilte Merkliste PDF oder EPUB erstellen

NECE - Networking European Citizenship Education – Conference "1914-2014: Lessons from History? Citizenship Education and Conflict Management" | NECE - Networking European Citizenship Education | bpb.de

NECE - Networking European Citizenship Education About NECE NECE Conference 2020 Newsletter Archive Country Profiles: Citizenship Education Around the World Russian Country profiles Editorial Europe (NECE) Austria Bulgaria Czech Republic Denmark Germany Netherlands Poland Slovenia Spain United Kingdom Eastern Partnership and Russia (EENCE) Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Georgia Moldova Russia Ukraine Arab Region (NACE) Algeria Egypt Lebanon Eastern and Southern Africa (CENESA) Malawi Uganda Citizenship Education in Kenya Other Regions Ecuador Country Profiles in Arabic (العربية) Editorial (افتتاحية) Algeria Austria Bulgaria Czech Republic Denmark Egypt Germany Lebanon Netherlands Poland Slovenia Spain United Kingdom Country Profiles in Russian (русский) От редакции Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Ecuador Georgia Moldova Russia Ukraine Выходные данные

NECE - Networking European Citizenship Education – Conference "1914-2014: Lessons from History? Citizenship Education and Conflict Management"

/ 3 Minuten zu lesen

16-18 October 2014, Vienna (Austria)



Interner Link: Online Documentation of the NECE Conference 2014:
Please find detailed information on the programme as well as the workshop reports and thesis papers here.

For the on-site documentation with a variety of photos, interviews and articles as well as the workshop reports and thesis papers, please visit the Externer Link: NECE Blog 2014.

One hundred years after the start of the First World War, this 'great seminal catastrophe of the 20th century' (George F. Kennan), the NECE initiative is organising its annual conference in Vienna. The focus of the conference will be on current crises and conflicts inside and outside Europe. Internationally renowned experts, such as Aleida Assmann, Lynn Davies, Ivan Krastev, Luuk van Middelaar and Philipp Blom have already confirmed their participation and will enter into a dialogue with the participants.

Heinz Fischer, President of the Republic of Austria, will open the conference on 17 October.

The 2014 NECE Conference will address challenges in Europe against the background of its history of war and conflict in the 20th century. It will ask how citizenship education can deal with the great variety of conflicts in and around Europe today. These include conflicts at Europe’s periphery (Syria, Ukraine, Egypt) and the influx of refugees at the shores of the Mediterranean. Inside Europe political and social conflicts in the wake of the economic crisis have led to a serious loss of trust into the European project. The results of the 2014 European elections have given rise to fears that the populist earthquakes in France, the United Kingdom and other countries will have an impact on the European Union's future agenda. The implicit consensus that shaped the citizens’ attitude towards ‘Europe’ for a long time is fundamentally called into question. Nationalistic and xenophobic resentments represent a risk for Europe’s democratic constitution. The economic crisis has turned into a political one.

European philosophers from Hobbes to Kant dealt with peace and war in human societies centuries ago. However, it was not until after the catastrophes of the 20th century that European elites developed a ‘culture of constructive conflict management’ with the European Union as its most important institutional expression. Citizenship education focused on human rights and democracy was created only then. The variety of citizenship education formats and initiatives ideally provide citizens with opportunities for reflection, for dialogue, but also for controversial debates in order to negotiate, attenuate and solve the conflicts that inevitably arise in democracies.

The 2014 NECE Conference offers a platform for pursuing current issues in citizenship education in Europe: Are our current patterns of thinking and discourse still appropriate for dealing with the particular challenges and crises of the European democracies today? Workshops at the conference will deal, among other aspects, with the following questions:

  • How can new arguments and methods for dealing with the populist movements in Europe be developed?

  • What citizenship education instruments can be utilized for managing and solving conflicts? What role can dialogic approaches and attitudes play? Are there limits to intervention, for instance, in Ukraine or Egypt?

  • What are the tasks of citizenship education in terms of analysing power structures and fostering the participation of citizens? How much controversy can citizenship education bear?

  • How can we develop formats for handling conflicts, diversity and democracy as an ‘institutionalised uncertainty’ (Jan Werner Müller)?



Interner Link: Programme (3.560 KB)
Interner Link: Dossier of biographies (1.362 KB)
Interner Link: List of participants

Fussnoten