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Academia & Activism: War and Peace 11 April 2024 16:30 - 18:00

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Public Lectures 2024: Academia & Activism - Opportunities and Tensions of a Strange Relationship: War and Peace

In the academic world, research is undertaken, theories are developed, topics are being discussed. In the Humanities as well as in the field of Religion and Theology, this is very often linked to analyzing existing conflicts – personal, political, public – developing alternative models.  

At the same time, we see large movements of activists, who are addressing existing conflicts in society by active and direct engagement – see for example the challenges of climate change, migration, racism, or war. They, too, analyze and develop alternatives, yet aiming at direct change and transformation.  

Given the relevance, the urgency, and the massiveness of today´s crises, we invite a conversation here, between academics and activists. Are their worlds as separated as it sometimes seems?

Academia & Activism

Albert Einstein was a theoretical physicist and campaigned for the civil rights of African Americans and called for resistance to war. Jane Goodall was a leading Biologist and Animal Rights Activist...    

In the academic world, research is undertaken, theories are developed, topics are being discussed. In the  Humanities as well as in the field of Theology and Religion, this is very often linked to analyzing existing conflicts – personal, political, public – developing alternative models.

At the same time, we see large movements of activists, who are addressing existing conflicts in society by active and direct engagement – see for example the challenges of climate change, migration, racism, or war. They, too, analyze and develop alternatives, yet aiming at direct change and transformation.    

In which way are these different realms (dis-) connected? And why? Do “academic standards” require some necessary distance to the studied contexts? Are the laboratories of the universities detached from political realities? Are activists always biased? – Or, could academia and activism support each other – for example by providingare more research into complexities of societal conflicts?  

Given the relevance, the urgency, and the massiveness of today´s crises, we invite a conversation here, about academi and activism. Are their worlds as separated as it sometimes seems? To start this process, we are interested in the personal motivation of people who embody academia and activism in diverse ways. What drives them? How are they defining the goals of their engagement? Do they negotiate the tension between academia and activism? – Or is this tension an artificial one from the start? And: What are their spiritual roots – if they have some – and, in how far is that an indispensable, integrative foundation that holds everything together? 

Programme

This the second of four lectures:

About Academia & Activism: War and Peace

Starting date

  • 11 April 2024

Time

  • 16:30 - 18:00

Location

  • HG-1E-24

Language

  • English

Speakers

Speakers

Yolande Jansen

Yolande Jansen is professor of Social and Political Philosophy at the UvA, and holds the chair  ‘Humanism in relation to religion and secularity’ at the VU Faculty of Religion and Theology. In her research she focuses on secularism and post-secularism, multiculturalism, human rights, and framing of Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. She is involved in several societal issues.​

Janneke Stegeman

Janneke Stegeman does research into Dutch identity in relation to colonialism and Protestantism. She is a lecturer at the VU in the Emoena course on interfaith cooperation. She is also president of Kairos-Sabeel Netherlands and a member of the liturgical team of the ecumenical Dominicus Church in Amsterdam. For the past 15 years, she has been working as a public theologian and activist around social issues related to theological legacies, such as gender, racialization and Israel and Palestine.

Moderator: 

Fernando Enns

Prof. Fernando Enns is professor of Peacetheology and Ethics, and is director of the Amsterdam Centre for Religion Peace and Justice studies.

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