The Central and Eastern European Forum of
Young Legal, Political and Social Theorists (CEE Forum) was initiated by
a group of young researchers working in those fields at the University
of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. It was the aim of the initiators to
change the currently dominant practice of following the paths created
mainly in other parts of the world and to try to establish a community
able to provide a competitive environment for original investigations in
the field of legal, political and social theory. They were dissatisfied
with the situation in which they were unaware of what colleagues from
their neighbourhood were working on and wanted to stress the intention
of establishing ties allowing exchanging ideas, leading to independent
and original developments.
The motivating ideas behind the Forum are twofold. Primarily, the
annual conferences are academic events which provide the opportunity for
junior legal scholars, political and social scientists to present their
research. The first conference took place at the Silesian University in
Katowice, Poland in May 2009. The following conferences were held at
the Pázmány Péter Catholic University in Budapest, Hungary, in May 2010
and at the University of Belgrade, Serbia, in March 2011 (for the
details see Annual Conferences). So far, half of the papers were
theoretical, the others discussed topical legal, political and
socio-economic issues in Central and Eastern Europe. A number of
researchers put a special emphasis on the impact of theoretical insights
in particular national or regional contexts; others addressed local
problems in a comparative manner and in wider theoretical contexts.
After the conferences, selected papers are published in an edited
volume.
Second, the Forum contributes to establishing and maintaining ties
and networks for future common projects. With an increased academic
mobility within Europe, young researchers from Central and Eastern
Europe follow different strategies. Some are working at universities in
their home country, others study or seek jobs at academic institutions
in Western Europe and beyond, still others combine these strategies.
These people often face difficulties in finding contacts to scholars
with similar interests at other places of the world often even if they
are working in the neighboring countries. The Forum shall contribute to
establishing a genuine community of young legal, social and political
theorists in Europe.