2020 Conference on Medicine and Religion

There are presently no open calls for submissions.

True to Tradition?  Religion, the Secular, and the Future of Medicine


The medicine we know today has a history, and that history sets the terms for what we expect medicine to become in the future.  What are the historical sources of contemporary medicine?  What has been lost that should be recovered?  What should be left behind?  In particular, what do we know about the Hippocratic tradition?  How has that tradition been taken up, modified, and developed in Jewish, Christian and Muslim cultures?  What resources, if any, does that tradition offer to practitioners today?  What aspects of the medicine of the past should ground the medicine of the future?  
 

The 2020 Conference on Medicine and Religion invites clinicians, scholars, clergy, students and others to take up these and other questions related to the intersection of medicine and religion.  The conference encourages participants to consider these questions in light of religious traditions and practices, particularly, though not exclusively, those of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The conference is a forum for exchanging ideas from an array of disciplinary perspectives, from accounts of clinical practices to empirical research to scholarship in the humanities.  ​


Abstract Submission Guidelines


1. We invite abstracts for 75-minute panel and workshop sessions, 15-minute paper presentations (with 10 minutes discussion), and posters that address issues at the intersection of medicine and religion, including but not limited to the conference theme. We also invite student participation in an essay contest. Although we invite proposals on the full range of topics related to medicine and religion, preference will be given to those that relate to the conference theme. We encourage a diversity of disciplinary approaches, including empirical work in this area. 

  • A panel session should incorporate more than one perspective on a cohesive theme. The perspectives should compare and contrast and build on one another. A moderator should also be designated. The submitted abstract should not exceed 1,200 words.
  • A workshop session should engage a practical topic of interest to conference attendees. The format may include, for example, an extended teaching seminar or a skills development workshop. The submitted abstract should not exceed 1,200 words, and it should justify the appropriateness of the topic, the target audience, the rationale for the proposed format, and the qualifications of the faculty.
  • A paper session should be a structured discussion or lecture based on a paper or a work-in-progress. The work presented may be empirical or theoretical, descriptive or normative. One or more authors may present, but either the first author or the senior author must present. The submitted abstract should not exceed 500 words. If the presentation is based on published material, the material must have been recently published (published after March 1, 2018). The advisory board may accept some proposals in a different format. You will have an opportunity during the submission process to indicate whether you would be willing to present your abstract as a poster.
  • A poster presentation should demonstrate or explain a concept, work of art, or empirical research project. The submitted abstract should not exceed 500 words.
  • Student essay submissions should be full papers of no more than 6,000 words, relevant to the conference theme. The winner will present the paper at a plenary session during the conference and receive complimentary registration, lodging, and travel. An eligible student is defined as one who is actively pursuing an undergraduate or graduate degree and has not received a doctoral-level degree (e.g., MD, PhD, JD or equivalent degree). Coauthored papers are eligible only if all authors are students.


2. Presenters are limited to two presentations at the meeting. Presentations might occur at a panel session, a paper session, or a poster session. However, presenters are only allowed one paper presentation. Submitted panel moderators will continue to count as presenting at the meeting. This is done in an effort to increase diversity of presenters and also allow for as many different presenters to participate as possible.


3. When selecting a discipline for your submission, please select just one of the six disciplinary categories: Theology/Philosophy/Ethics; History/Literature; Social Sciences/Law; Empirical Research; Clinical and Pastoral Practice; or Interdisciplinary. Proposals can be submitted in the “Interdisciplinary” category when the work involves scholarship that crosses several academic areas. If your proposal has an interdisciplinary element but the focus of the presentation will not be the interdisciplinary nature of the work, please select another category. Proposals can be submitted in the Empirical Research category if the focus of your presentation will be the empirical study. If your proposal has an empirical component but the focus of your presentation is not the empirical component, please select another category.


4. Each submission will be sent as an anonymous proposal to at least three reviewers in the submission category selected. Peer reviews will be blinded. To ensure the integrity of our review process, please do not include identifying information in your abstract or on any attachments that you submit. Their evaluation will be based on the following:

  • Contribution to existing knowledge: whether innovative or on a cutting-edge topic
  • Significance, importance, and relevance to the field of medicine and religion
  • Quality of the written communication

The final slate of abstracts is subject to approval by the conference advisory board.


5. All submissions are final. Accepted abstracts will be available electronically on the conference website, mobile app, and USB drives distributed to conference attendees. We will not be able to accept changes to an abstract after the submission deadline.


6. Presenters are responsible for all personal expenses associated with their attendance. Presenters are required to register online for the conference by January 26, 2020, and should register for the whole conference or for the one day that the presenter is scheduled to speak. One day registration entitles the presenter to attend all sessions on the day he/she is registered only. Submitting a proposal does not mean you are registered for the conference. A failure to register by the deadline may result in the presentation being removed from the program. In the case of multiple presenters, at least one must register on time.


7. All proposals are due by 11:59:59 pm CST, Monday, October 7, 2019. Successful applicants will be notified in December 2019. 

2020 Conference on Medicine and Religion