18th Pan-European Conference on International Relations, University of Bologna, 25-29 August 2025

 

We are delighted to invite you to the 18th EISA Pan-European Conference on International Relations (PEC), to be held at the University of Bologna, 25-29 August 2025.

Our flagship event will take place in the oldest university in Europe, in a country with a lively tradition of International Relations. As per our tradition, PEC 2025 will be organized in thematic sections, both standing and new ones, and will welcome colleagues from a diversity of disciplines from Europe and beyond. Plenary sessions will highlight key issues in current debates in international relations, with leadings experts from our association. We will also offer opportunities through our Early Career Workshops, social events, and professional development activities to nurture our community. In order to make PEC 2025 more inclusive, we will provide help for those in financial need to attend through our increased Mobility Fund. Over and above, we are committed to making the 18th edition of our conference as diverse and rewarding as possible, where ideas can be formulated, debated, criticized, shaped and sharpened through mutual respect and understanding. It is this spirit which has made EISA’s Pan-European Conferences the leading annual event in International Relations in Europe and we are looking forward to keeping this up in Bologna!

Conference Theme

International Rela_[404 Not Found]: Politics for a Broken World 

Since the EISA community’s first discussion of ‘multiple crises’ at the 2013 PEC in Warsaw, talking about ‘crisis’ has become omnipresent. Yet, the term ‘crisis,’ no matter of the prefix (multiple, poly, hyper), fails to capture the full extent of the challenges facing our planet. The idea of being in a crisis gives the impression that we are in an exceptional situation, one we can overcome and leave behind. As the planetary changes become increasingly evident, and the erosion of the so-called international liberal order accelerates, the consequences of climate change, wars, and economic marginalization become more and more widespread. Something in world politics is fundamentally broken. 

Where does this leave International Relations? How did we reach the point where we seemingly have learned to live with failure, destruction, atrocities and injustices? Is this due to denial or have we simply learned to ignore them, despite the constant exposure provided by modern media? For PEC 2025, we invite contributors to reflect on the possibilities of politics for a broken world. The acceptance that there is no return to previous orders, that something is irreversibly lost and fundamentally broken, opens new possibilities for political action. This call is less about a vision for the future of the discipline and more about taking stock. Instead of looking forward, a questionable endeavor in times of extreme uncertainty, we ask participants to look backward, sideways, downwards, upwards, inwards and outwards, engaging with a multiplicity and plurality of both established and alternative epistemologies in IR and beyond. In what spaces can we find opportunities for cooperation amidst rising tensions, patches of peace in the face of war, relationships of care, practices of repair, or new political collectivities and actions? 

Let us use PEC 2025 to gather these fragmented and scattered patches of hope and let’s together do the patch-work of uniting them into new political configurations. While we would like to offer three possible avenues for exploration here, we are also open to other possibilities:  

1. A Politics of witnessing

Witnessing violence, destruction and decay can have a paralyzing and depoliticizing effect. Media reports of war, climate change or humanitarian crises can trigger affective reactions like suppression or denial. Furthermore, the active production of ignorance and non-knowledge, for example on migration or climate change, challenges effective political contestation. Against this background, we invite participants of PEC 2025 to reconceptualize witnessing as a form of political action, as well as reflect upon methodologies that would allow us to bear witness. How can we create new ‘sense-abilities’ to make forms of (slow) violence visible that would otherwise remain hidden? How can witnessing enable new forms of care and solidarity? What forms of political mobilization and organization can emerge around assemblages and practices of witnessing?  

2. A politics of repair

A politics of repair involves practices and projects that – while acknowledging that there is no panacea for existing global challenges – seek to reform, rework, or reorder international politics and governance in the wake of the current disorder. Reparative accounts of international relations must account for the physical damage and loss brought about by crises but also for affects, trauma and identity loss. Repair, in this sense, means establishing and maintaining relations that address the fragility of our and others’ worlds. How can we reinvent and reappropriate the toolbox of traditional IR approaches, such as (neo-)realism, constructivism and institutionalism, for a politics of repair? How can we decolonize and provincialize international relations through relational Indigenous ontologies? Or how can we mobilize feminist theories to provide a new normative foundation for the international order? What forms of repair can be observed empirically from local grassroot movements to international attempts at reforming the UN? 

3. A politics of crafting and making

Another path toward a new politics for a broken world stresses the critical potential of crafting, making and designing by bringing the literature on critical making in IR and beyond into dialogue with work on policy design and the design of political institutions. Such contributions could range from proposals for designing new institutions and governance structures to cope with planetary change to tinkering with new forms of political organization, digital technologies, or new economic models beyond growth-based capitalism. Methodological contributions are also welcome, for example, participatory approaches that mobilize art and craft for transformative change in post-conflict contexts. How can a focus on making and crafting help overcome the inertia of the moment, move beyond mere adaptation to a planet out of control, and remake IR for a broken world?   

Conference is held under auspices:
Beste İşleyen

Beste İşleyen

University of Amsterdam

EISA President (2023-2025)

Georgios Glouftsios

Georgios Glouftsios

University of Trento

Programme Chair

Nora El Qadim

Nora El Qadim

University of Paris 8

 EISA Governing Board Liaison

Michela Ceccorulli

Michela Ceccorulli

University of Bologna

Local Organiser

Beatrix Futák-Campbell

Beatrix Futák-Campbell

Leiden University

EISA Governing Board Liaison

Giovanni Agostinis

Giovanni Agostinis

University of Bologna

Local Organiser

Delf Rothe

Delf Rothe

University of Hamburg 

Programme Chair

Important Dates

30 September 2024

Call for Section Chairs Open 

29 November 2024

Call for Section Chairs Deadline

20 January 2025

Abstract Submission Opens

24 March 2025

Abstract Submission Extended Deadline

17 April 2025

Acceptance Emails Sent

17 April 2025

Registration Opens

15 May 2025

Registration Deadline for Participants in the Programme

26 May 2025

Registration Deadline for Participants Placed on the Reserve List

1 July 2025

Online Programme Published

Conference Secretariat

C-IN
Prague Congress Centre
5. kvetna 65
140 21 Prague 4
Czech Republic
Tel.: +420 296 219 600
Website: www.c-in.eu