Join us for an exciting upcoming conference, Democracy in Crisis: An International & Interdisciplinary Conference. This conference will take place over multiple days, March 28-30.
Constitutional democracies used to be seen as such a stable and legitimate form of government that the spread of democracies globally was thought to herald the “end of history.” But now—under pressure from war, economic instability, climate change, demographic shifts, and rival political movements—it is unclear whether constitutional democracy will survive as a workable form of government.
Please visit the Democracy in Crisis: An International & Interdisciplinary Conference website to learn more about the conference!
Event Speakers:
Friday March 28
- Nate Ela (Temple Law)
- George Pavlakos (Glasgow Law)
- Cormack MacAmlaigh (Edinburgh Law)
- Ana Cannilla (Glasgow Law)
- Mitch Berman (Penn Law)
Saturday March 29
- Bosko Tripkovic (Glasgow Law)
- Sonia Cruz Davila (Max Planck Institute)
- Turku Isiksel (Columbia Political Science)
- Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox (Quinnipiac)
- Daniel Wodak (UPenn Philosophy)
Sunday March 30
- Marco Goldoni (Glasgow Law)
- Eduardo J. Martinez (Cincinnati Philosophy)
- Jón Ólafsson (Iceland Cultural Studies)
- Cansu Hepçağlayan (Jefferson Philosophy)
This conference is a collaboration between Temple’s Philosophy Department and the University of Glasgow School of Law, and is hosted by the Temple University Libraries and the Public Policy Law.