A conference where rigorous scholarship and lived debate practice are in genuine conversation.

Edition
ICDD III
Dates
June 1–2, 2027
Location
Doha, Qatar
Languages
Arabic & English

About ICDD III

Argumentation and debate are not merely academic disciplines, they are the means through which civilisations have reasoned together, resolved disagreement, and advanced knowledge. This conviction has guided QatarDebate Center since its founding under Qatar Foundation more than a decade ago. Through its flagship programs, the International Universities Debating Championship (IUDC, launched 2011) and the International Schools Debating Championship (ISDC, launched 2012), the Center has built the first structured Arabic debate ecosystem and cultivated active debate communities among young people aged 15 to 25 across dozens of countries.

The International Conference on Debate and Dialogue (ICDD) is the Center's academic platform, dedicated to advancing knowledge at the intersection of debate, dialogue, and argumentation, and drawing on related fields including philosophy, education, linguistics, and Islamic sciences. What distinguishes ICDD from conventional academic conferences is its deliberate bridging of scholarly inquiry and lived practice, a space where theoretical questions are tested against the experience of those who debate, coach, and teach.

Its second edition, ICDD II, held in Doha in May 2025, marked a significant milestone for the field. The conference brought together more than 800 participants from 36 countries and featured 60 peer-reviewed papers selected through a rigorous double-blind process, spanning Islamic legal reasoning and debate traditions, cross-cultural argumentation, informal logic, political discourse, artificial intelligence in debate education, and the civic impact of debate practice. All accepted papers were published in the conference proceedings on the Manara platform; the five strongest contributions under the theme of Theoretical Exploration of Argumentation were selected for a special issue of Informal Logic (Vol. 45, No. 3, September 2025), one of the field's leading peer-reviewed journals.

Building on two editions of growing scope and reach, ICDD III invites researchers, scholars, educators, and debate practitioners to contribute theoretical, empirical, and applied work across three themes: argumentation theory and its applications, debate in education, and the emerging relationship between debate and artificial intelligence. The conference will be held in Doha on 1–2 June 2027, and welcomes contributions in both Arabic and English.

Informal Logic Journal

A selection of papers presented at ICDD III will be considered for publication in Informal Logic, a leading Canadian journal in argumentation theory (Q1, open access). Papers submitted under the theme of Theoretical and Applied Argumentation are eligible for this track.

View Special Issue from ICDD 2025 →

QD Research Fellowship - Cycle 3

Accepted contributions to ICDD III are eligible for consideration under the third cycle of the QD Fellowship Program, which offers two-year funded research grants to a number of selected projects. Fellowship applications run alongside the conference submission process and require no separate application.

A look at the 2nd ICDD

800+

Participants
from 36 Countries

60

Research Papers
Double-Blind Peer-Reviewed

12

Research Fellows
QD Funded (2-Year Program)

Conference Themes

Papers are invited across three interrelated themes. Click any theme to read the full description and explore possible directions for contributions.

1
Theme 01
Theoretical and Applied Argumentation
Argumentation theory sits at the crossroads of philosophy, linguistics, rhetoric, and Islamic intellectual history — encompassing both foundational theoretical inquiry and its application to concrete social, political, and media contexts.
Argumentation theory sits at the crossroads of philosophy, linguistics, rhetoric, and Islamic intellectual history. This theme encompasses both foundational theoretical inquiry and its application to concrete social, political, and media contexts.
Possible Directions
Islamic Argumentation

The Islamic scholarly tradition has produced a rich and sophisticated body of argumentation theory, spanning ʿilm al-munāẓara, uṣūl al-fiqh, kalām, and philosophical dialectics. We invite papers that critically engage with this tradition by reconstructing its epistemic norms, examining the distinctive features of its dialogical reasoning, and tracing its transmission and transformation across intellectual history, while also addressing broader questions such as how Islamic argumentative traditions can inform contemporary deliberative practices.

Comparative Argumentation

We particularly encourage scholarship that bridges Western argumentation theories — such as pragma-dialectics, Toulmin's model, and the new rhetoric — with the Arabic-Islamic tradition. Contributions may explore points of convergence and divergence in criteria of argument validity, the ethics of disagreement, and the epistemology of dialogue. Contributions may also address questions such as: What are the limitations of current Western models in non-Western contexts? Comparative work that moves beyond descriptive comparison toward deeper philosophical engagement is especially welcome.

Societal, Political, and Media Applications

This strand focuses on the role of argumentation in real-world contexts, including political discourse, conflict resolution, and digital media environments. We invite both empirical and analytical studies that examine how argumentation shapes public reasoning, particularly in polarized or fragmented media landscapes. Relevant topics include visual argumentation, algorithmic framing, and cross-cultural dialogue in multilateral settings, as well as the role of argument in constructing narratives of peace and conflict, with particular attention to Arabic and Islamic contexts.

2
Theme 02
Debate and Education
Debate is increasingly recognized as a high-impact pedagogical practice. This theme calls for research that engages the educational ecosystem as a whole — with particular attention to curriculum design, teachers' professional development, and students' learning outcomes.
Debate is increasingly recognized as a high-impact pedagogical practice. However, its empirical foundation remains underdeveloped, particularly in Arabic-speaking educational contexts. In response, this theme calls for research that engages the educational ecosystem as a whole, with particular attention to three key areas: curriculum design, teachers' professional development, and students' learning outcomes.
Possible Directions
Curriculum and Pedagogy

Possible directions include integrating debate into school and university curricula across disciplines; training educators in argumentation pedagogy and dialogic teaching methods; and measuring the impact of debate practice on 21st-century skills such as critical thinking, collaboration, and communication, as well as on ethical reasoning, identity formation, and academic performance.

Empirical and Experimental Research

Experimental and quasi-experimental studies are especially welcome, particularly those that examine the measurable effects of structured debate programs on critical thinking outcomes across K–12 and higher education. Research designs, including pre-registered studies with ongoing data collection, are also eligible for submission.

3
Theme 03
Debate and Artificial Intelligence
The rapid growth of large language models and AI-assisted reasoning tools raises urgent questions for the argumentation community. This theme explores AI's transformative role in debate practice, drawing on computational linguistics, ethical theory, and human–AI interaction.
The rapid growth of large language models and AI-assisted reasoning tools raises urgent questions for the argumentation community. This theme explores AI's transformative role in debate practice, drawing on computational linguistics, ethical theory, and human–AI interaction.
Possible Directions
Argument Mining and Arabic NLP

The capacity of contemporary AI systems to detect, model, and evaluate argument schemes, fallacies, and dialogical moves in Arabic natural language, alongside the development of computational approaches to argument mining and culturally sensitive Arabic argumentation corpora.

AI Tools for Debate Training

The design and assessment of AI-powered tools for debate training, coaching, and adjudication, as well as the use of large language models in simulating munāẓara and structured dialogue.

Bias, Credibility, and the Ethics of AI-Mediated Persuasion

Particular attention is invited to questions of bias, credibility, and manipulation in AI-generated arguments, and to the broader ethical and epistemic implications of AI-mediated persuasion for public deliberation and collective reasoning.

Submission Guidelines

  • Word Count: 3,000–4,500 words, excluding references, footnotes, and appendices.
  • Abstract: 200–250 words, including 4–6 keywords and the selected conference theme.
  • Citation Style: Any recognized academic style (APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.), applied consistently.
  • Formatting: Times New Roman (12pt) or Arial (11pt), with standard margins.
  • Submission: Via the conference portal only.

Important Dates

Date Milestone
May 17, 2026 Start of abstract submissions (AoE)
August 1, 2026 Deadline for abstract submissions (AoE)
September 15, 2026 Announcement of accepted abstracts & opening of full paper submissions
December 1, 2026 Deadline for full paper submission (AoE)
February 17, 2027 Announcement of accepted papers
March 28, 2027 Deadline for submitting final camera-ready papers (AoE)

Submissions will be received through the conference's dedicated platform. For more information, we invite you to visit the conference's official website. You are also welcome to contact us via email for any inquiries at: qdacademic@qf.org.qa.

Conference Committees

Steering Committee

Dr. Hayat Maarafi
Executive Director, QatarDebate Center
Mr. Abdulrahman Al-Subaie
Director of Administration and Strategy, QatarDebate Center
Mr. Mohammad Khader
Research Fellow, QatarDebate Center
Dr. Elmekdad Shehab
Academic & Research Advisor, QatarDebate

Scientific Committee

Christopher W. Tindale, Ph.D.
Director of the Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation, and Rhetoric and a Distinguished University Professor — University of Windsor, Canada
Heba Raouf Ezzat, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Political Theory — Ibn Haldun University, Türkiye
Katharina Stevens, Ph.D.
Co-editor of the Informal Logic Journal
Assistant Professor of Philosophy — University of Lethbridge, Canada
Abdellatif Sellami, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Director of Education Research Center — Qatar University, Qatar
AbdulGabbar Al-Sharafi, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow (2023 - 2025)
Associate Professor of Linguistics — Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
Ali Al-Sanad, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Islamic Philosophy — PAAET, Kuwait
Ali Al-Omari, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Theology & Islamic Philosophy — Fatih Sultan Mehmet Vakif University, Türkiye
Rahmi Oruç, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature — Ibn Haldun University, Türkiye
Walter Edward Young, Ph.D.
Senior Researcher & Lecturer of Islamic Studies — McGill University, Canada
Mutaz Al-Khatib, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Methodology & Ethics — Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Qatar
Andrew Abardin, Ph.D.
Professor and Chair of Humanities — Florida Institute of Technology, USA
Wajdi Zaghouani, Ph.D.
Associate Professor — Northwestern University in Qatar, Qatar
Daifallah Al-Subhi, Ph.D.
QD Advisor
Doctoral in Law — University of Pittsburgh, USA
Hayat Maarafi, Ph.D.
Executive Director · Ph.D. in Psycholinguistics — QatarDebate Center
Elmekdad Shehab, Ph.D.
Academic & Research Advisor · Ph.D. in Gulf Studies & PhD in Civilizational Studies — QatarDebate Center
Ali Al-Zawqari, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Postdoctoral Researcher in Artificial Intelligence — Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Onder Kucukural, Ph.D.
Associate Professor — Ibn Haldun University, Türkiye
Zouhair Mednini, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Islamic Philosophy — Ez-zitouna University, Tunisia
Said Bentajar, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Associate Professor — University of Hassan II, Casablanca
Abdelqader Bekhoush, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor — Qatar University, Qatar
Bader Al-Shatti, M.A.
QD Advisor
Public Schools Educational District Supervisor, Ministry of Education — Kuwait
Maja Nenadović, Ph.D.
Debate Coach & Political Consultant — Croatia
Muhammad A. Rehman, M.A.
English Debate Instructor · M.A. in Education Public Policy — QatarDebate Center
Mohammad Khader, M.A.
QD Research Fellow
M.A. in Digital Humanities & Societies — QatarDebate Center
Muhammed Komath, M.A.
QD Research Fellow
Researcher in Islamic History & Philosophy — QatarDebate Center
Saad Elasad, J.D.
Senior Debate Instructor — QatarDebate Center
Hamza Alsioufy, M.Sc.
Learning and Development Specialist — Qatar University, Qatar
Khalid Al-Khatib, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Assistant Professor — University of Groningen, Netherlands
Karim Sadek, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Assistant Professor — Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar
Manuele De Conti, Ph.D.
QD Research Fellow
Researcher, Universitas Mercatorum; Head of Research, Italian Debate Society — Italy
Ronnie Haidar, Ph.D. Candidate
QD Research Fellow
University of Windsor, Canada
Salman Ali, Ph.D.
Senior Debate Instructor — QatarDebate Center
More to be announced soon.

ICDD III Reference Guide

For a detailed breakdown of the conference rationale, thematic directions, and academic objectives, please download the official background paper.

PDF
Download Paper

Do You Have More Questions?

Email the Academic & Research Program team directly:

qdacademic@qf.org.qa

Submissions are received exclusively through the conference's dedicated submission platform.

© QatarDebate Center — Qatar Foundation  |  3rd International Conference on Debate & Dialogue · Doha, June 1–2, 2027  |  qdacademic@qf.org.qa