Lecture: Beirut Workshop

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Stones and Lives: A Workshop on Proportionality and Non-Human Value in War

19-20 November, 2018, American University of Beirut.

Frederik Rosén presented the paper “Between a Rock and the Soul: The Moral Riddle of Cultural Property in Armed Conflict” — a reflection on the possibility of developing a Just War Theory approach to cultural heritage.

The workshop was co-hosted by the Stockholm Centre for the Ethics of War and Peace, the Open University, and the American University of Beirut, and sponsored by the Society for Applied Philosophy.

Speakers

Maamoun Abdulkarim (University of Damascus). Abdulkarim is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Damascus, and former Director General of Antiquities and Museums in Syria.

Amr Al-Azm (Shawnee State University). Al-Azm is Professor of History and Anthropology at Shawnee State University, Ohio. He was Director of Scientific and Conservation Laboratories at the General Department of Antiquities and Museums (1999-2004) and Head of the Centre for Archaeological Research at the University of Damascus (2003-2006).

Helen Frowe (Stockholm University). Frowe is Professor of Practical Philosophy at Stockholm University, where she directs the Stockholm Centre for the Ethics of War and Peace. She is co-investigator on the AHRC Heritage in War project. 

Bashshar Haydar (American University of Beirut). Haydar is Professor of Philosophy at the American University of Beirut. His research focuses on global justice, the ethics of war and duties to rescue, aesthetics and deontological ethics. 

Gerald Lang (Leeds University). Lang is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Leeds. He works on moral and political philosophy, and is a member of the Heritage in War project’s Core Research Group.

Derek Matravers (Open University). Matravers is Professor of Philosophy at the Open University, and works in aesthetics and value theory. He is co-investigator on the AHRC-funded project Cultural Heritage in War. 

Christina Menegazzi (UNESCO). Menegazzi has worked for UNESCO since 2010, and currently runs the EU-funded programme on the Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage, based at UNESCO Beirut. She has a PhD in Disaster Risk Management of Cultural Heritage.

Massimo Renzo (King’s College, London). Renzo is Reader in Law at the Dickson Poon School of Law at KCL. He works on political authority, the moral standing of states, the ethics of war and punishment. He is also a member of the Heritage in War project’s Core Research Group.

Frederik Rosén (Nordic Center for Cultural Heritage and Armed Conflict). Rosén is the author of the recent NATO report, ‘Nato and Cultural Property’. His research focuses on the politics and practices of global security management with a focus on recent international military operations. He works in the intersection between political science, law, and sociology.

Frederik Rosén