000101147 001__ 101147
000101147 005__ 20210405202052.0
000101147 020__ $$a978-84-18321-12-2
000101147 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.26754/uz.978-84-18321-12-2
000101147 037__ $$aBOOK-2021-005
000101147 041__ $$aeng
000101147 100__ $$aLópez, Ivan (ed.)$$b
000101147 245__ $$aAftershocks: Globalism and the Future of Democracy [ISSEI – XVI International Conference]
000101147 260__ $$aZaragza$$bUniversidad de Zaragoza$$c2021
000101147 300__ $$a633
000101147 520__ $$aThis digital publication consists of a selection of 56 papers presented at the 16th International Conference of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas (ISSEI), held at the University of Zaragoza, 2-5 July 2019, the general theme of which was ‘Aftershocks: Globalism and the Future of Democracy’. Sponsored by The Aragonese Association of Sociology, the conference was well-attended – 170 participants from 28 countries met to discuss a wide variety of topics in 29 workshops. The feedback we received from participants confirmed that they had greatly enjoyed the venue of the conference, that they appreciated the warm welcome they had received and the congenial social atmosphere and opportunity to attend workshops on subjects that were not only in their own field of expertise. No one, of course, could have predicted that our world – our work and life as individuals, as communities and as nations – would change so suddenly and radically eighteen months after the conference, with the rapid and devastating spread of the Convid-19 pandemic. The current deepening global crisis along with the challenge of climate change and growing international tensions are a stark reminder of how vulnerable our societies, our civilization, and our species are. The shocks and aftershocks of these crises are felt today in every corner of the world and in every aspect of our global and local economies, and most obviously in the sociopolitical arena. As several of the conference workshops on the multiple crises Europe and the world face today – from the migrant crisis to the rise of populism and deepening inequality between rich and poor – showed – and as the Covid-19 pandemic has so cruelly brought home to us – we simply cannot take the achievements of human civilization for granted and must find ways to meet the fundamental social and political needs of human beings not only in our own neighborhoods, cities and countries, but ultimately in the world as a whole: their living conditions, livelihoods, social services, education and healthcare, human rights and political representation. Several of the workshops, as I mentioned, directly addressed these issues and emphasized the need for building social resilience based on tolerance, solidarity and equity. This too is why, as academics, we should continue to initiate and engage in collective reflection and debate on how to foster and strengthen human communities and human solidarity. Finally, I want to thank the participants and workshop chairs for their contribution to the success of the conference. It was a pleasure for me to work with the university organizing team and with ISSEI’s team in bringing this about, and I am particularly proud that my university and the city of Zaragoza hosted this conference.
000101147 8560_ $$fzaguan@unizar.es
000101147 8564_ $$s3357301$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/101147/files/BOOK-2021-005.pdf$$zTexto completo
000101147 909CO $$ooai:zaguan.unizar.es:101147$$pbooks
000101147 980__ $$aBOOK$$bCONYJOR$$b