過去のカンファレンス(1998年)
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| Apr. | May | Jun.
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Jul.
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Oct.
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開催予定のカンファレンス(2003年)
開催予定のカンファレンス(2002年)
過去のカンファレンス(2001年)
過去のカンファレンス(2000年)
過去のカンファレンス(1999年)
過去のカンファレンス(1998年)
過去のカンファレンス(1997年)
January
-
3-5 : Allied Social
Sciences meeting at Chicago, IL. A plan of The History of Economics
Society. E-mail to HES Vice-President Roger Backhouse (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk).
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Session 1 -- On the road again: the influence of travel and travel writing
on classical political economy
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Session 2 -- Taxation, Rationality and Group Rationality
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Session 3 -- Wesley Clair Mitchell after 50 Years (Round Table Discussion)
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Session 4 -- Wicksell's Influence on Modern Economic Theory: In Honor of
the 100th Anniversary of Interest and Prices
February
-
2-5 : The International Association for Feminist Economics (IAFFE), IAFFE
conference will be held, in cooperation with the Out of the Margin Organization,
in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. IAFFE web page is http://www.fee.uvanl/vak_troep/vbee/oom2.htm.
As you will note from the call for papers, if you would like to present
at the conference, you need to submit an abstract by one of two deadlines.
The first deadline, November 1, 1997, is for more formal papers on one
of the first five conference themes. (The themes are listed in the call
for papers.) Abstracts of papers selected in this first round will be printed
in a book available to participants prior to the conference. For those
who wish to present on-going work at a more explorative and informal session,
the deadline for abstracts of the work to be presented is March 15, 1998.
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5-8 : "Globalization
From Below: Contingency and Contestation in Historical Perspective"
an international conference at Duke University, Durham, NC. Second call
for papers: abstracts due November 1st 1997. E-mail to jpb8@acpub.duke.edu,
vabviv@acpub.duke.edu,
husbands@acpub.duke.edu.
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26-1 March: The fifth "New Directions in Value/Price Theory" mini-conference
at the Eastern Economic Association conference, at the Crowne Plaza Hotel,
Manhattan, New York (USA). Deadline for abstracts to be considered for
presentation: November 1st; Speakers in panels to be informed by November
15th; Deadline for papers: January 15th. See two sites;
www.greenwich.ac.uk/~fa03
or www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/econ-value/files.
E-mail to Andrew Kliman (andrew_kliman@msn.com),
Dept. of Social Sciences, Pace University.
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27-28: 'Making And Unmaking History', The Annual Interdisciplinary English
Graduate Conference, The University of Southern California. 1-2 page abstracts
are due by November 15, 1997. E-mail to Arnab Chakladar (chaklada@scf.usc.edu).
-
27 February - 1 March: European
Society for the History of Economic Thought, University of Bologna.
E-mail to Roberto Scazzieri (bordoni@economia.unibo.it).
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27 February - 1 March: INTERNATIONAL
WORKING GROUP IN VALUE THEORY, FIFTH ANNUAL MINI-CONFERENCE, AT THE
EASTERN ECONOMIC ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE, CROWNE PLAZA MANHATTAN HOTEL,
NEW YORK CITY. For further information contact the IWGVT co-organizers:
Andrew Kliman (Andrew_Kliman@classic.msn.com),
Alan Freeman (a.freeman@greenwich.ac.uk).
March
-
5-7 : The Second European Social Science
History Conference, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. The deadline for submission
of abstracts and sessions has been extended until 31 May 1997. E-mail to
European Social Science History Conference 1998 (esshc@iisg.nl).
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13-15 : Geschichte und konomie - ein Spannungsverh獲tnis in Marx' Studien
Wissenschaftliches Kolloquium. /Vorschlag f die Tagesordnung/Freitagabend:
Berichte und Informationen 歟er die Herausgabe der MEGA u.a. Projekte.
/Samstagvormittag: Fran腔is Melis: Politik und Wirtschaft in Marx' T閣igkeit
als Redakteur der "Neuen Rhinsischen Zeitung" Michael Kr閣ke: Marx "volkswirtschaftliche"
Studien. Jannis Milios: Zur Ausarbeitung von Marx' Krisentheorie. /Samstagnachmittag:
Akira Miyakawa: Neue Erkenntnisse ueber Marx' Manuskript zum 3. Buch des
"Kapitals" Carl-Erich. Vollgraf: Zum Problem der historischen Illustration
von Therie in den Volksausgaben des "Kapital" 1929 und 1933. Diethard Behrens:
Einheit von Erkenntnis, Politik und konomie. Zu Marx' Locke-Rezeption.
/Samtstagabend: Manfred Lauermann: Verh獲tnis von Geschichte und konomie
im ML, Schwerpunkt Geschichtsphilosophie. Alessandreo Mazzone: Zur "Einheit
von Theorie und Gesellschaft". /Sonntagvormittag: Rolf Hecker: Zur Gr殤dungsgeschichte
des Frankfurter Instituts f殲 Sozialforschung und die Arbeit an der ersten
MEGA (1924/25) - bisher unbekannte Dokumente Planung der folgenden Kolloquien.
eMail:
r.hecker@t-online.de.
F殲 alle Computerfreaks: es gibt was Neues: http://home.t-online.de/home/r.hecker/marxnf.htm.
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25-28 : International Economics and Philosophy Society Session at the 1998
Pacific Division Conference of the American Philosophy Association, the
Westin Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles. If you would like to have a paper
considered for this session you should email below an abstract by October
19. You are also welcome to submit a complete session for consideration
(the maximum for a 2 hour slot is 2 speakers and 2 commentators). E-mail
to Julian Lamont (Centre for the Study of Ethics, Queensland University
of Technology) (J.Lamont@qut.edu.au).
April
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2-4 : Nineteenth-Century Studies Association, 17th annual conference, University
of Alabama in Huntsville. All materials should reach the Program Directors
by mail no later than 1 October 1997. E-mail to David Stewart (stewartd@email.uah.edu)
or Julie English Early (earlyj@email.uah.edu).
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3-4 : The (RE)TURNS of
MARXISM, The journal Rethinking MARXISM presents A Five College Spring
Conference at UMass-Amherst. Contact: Merrilee Mardon, mardon@econs.umass.edu
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3-5 : Economists and Art, Historically Considered, Thomas Center, Fuqua
School of Business, Duke University. For more information: Craufurd Goodwin
(goodwin@econ.duke.edu).
-
15-18 : The annual meeting of the Association for Institutional Thought
(AFIT), in conjunction with the 40th Annual Conference of the WESTERN SOCIAL
SCIENCE ASSOCIATION. Denver, Colorado. AFIT is a national organization
dedicated to advancing the discipline of economics and developing contemporary
and relevant policy analyses which utilize the perspective of Institutional
Economics. The Western Social Science Association is a professional organization
dedicated to interdisciplinary scholarship. All interested scholars are
cordially invited to participate by submitting complete panel proposals,
individual paper proposals, serving as discussants, or as session chairs.
Complete panels are particularly welcomed. For more information Larry Shute
(LShute@CSUPomona.Edu).
-
17-18 : "Practicing
Space, Time, and Place: The Next Social History", The Social History Workshop
at the University of Chicago.
-
17-20 : THE ASSOCIATION FOR CORE TEXTS AND COURSES (ACTC) Fourth Annual
Conference CORE TEXT EDUCATION: KNOWLEDGE, ACTION, CREATION? Sponsored
by the University of North Carolina, Asheville. Radisson Hotel Asheville,
North Carolina. For more information: J. Scott: sleeactc@blue.vm.temple.edu.
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23-25 : European Conference
on the History of Economics : Exchange at the Boundaries, Antwerpen,
Belgium. E-mail to Guido Erreygers (dse.erreygers.g@alpha.ufsia.ac.be).
The deadline for the submission of paper proposals is August 15, 1997.
Notice of acceptance/rejection will be sent on September 15, 1997. Completed
papers will be due on February 15, 1998. The organizing committee consists
of Jose Luis Cardoso (Lisbon), Philippe Fontaine (Paris), Albert Jolink
(Rotterdam), Robert Leonard (Montreal), Michalis Psalidopoulos (Athens),
and Guido Erreygers (Antwerp).
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23-25 : Economic and Business Historical Society, Annual Meeting, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. The EBHS welcomes proposals for panels and for papers on all
aspects of North American, European, and non-Western economic and business
history, all time periods. The deadline for proposals and abstracts in
January 16, 1998. E-mail to Gene Smiley (smiley@mail.busadm.mu.edu),
EBHS President and Program Chair, Department of Economics, Marquette University
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24-26 : Southwest Labor Studies Association, 24th Annual Conference, St.
Edward's University Austin, Texas. Please send a brief paper or panel proposal
along with a c.v. to Kathleen Brown (kathyb@admin.stedwards.edu)by
November 1, 1997.
-
25 : TRINITY COLLEGE GLOBAL SCHOLARS PROGRAM, METHODOLOGY AND THE FUTURE
OF ECONOMICS. E-mail to Erika Wojnarowicz (erika.wojnarowicz@mail.trincoll.edu).
May
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1-3 : "Passions of the Soul, Passions of the Body", THE MIDWEST SEMINAR
IN THE HISTORY OF EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY and CENTRE D'ETUDES CARTESIENNES.
Humanities Institute of the University of Chicago. More information to
Steven Nadler (NADLERS@macc.wisc.edu).
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? : A conference on Integrating New Technologies in the Undergraduate Teaching
of Economics will be held at the University of Pittsburgh in May 1998 with
the support of the National Science Foundation and co-sponsorship of the
Journal of Economic Education (JEE). The deadline for submitting proposals
is October 15, 1997. More detailed descriptions of the Conference, possible
topics, and the format for proposals may be found at the JEE
web site. E-mail to Arnie Katz (Arnie.Katz@bristol.ac.uk).
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13-16 : Rencotre International, Paris. "Le Manifeste communiste, 150 ans
apres Quelle alternative au capitalisme? Quelle emancipation humaine?"
Coordinator's adress: Francette Lazard (manifeste@internatif.org).
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19-22 : Global Access,
Local Support: Social Science Computing in the Age of the World Wide Web,
joint 1998 Conference of the
International Association for Social Science Information Service and Technology
(IASSIST) and the Social Science
Computing Association (SSCA), the Yale University campus in New Haven
CT.
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28-31 : Meeting of the Canadian Economics Association (CEA). Suggestions
for topics of sessions are also welcome, and may be sent by fax, e-mail,
or regular mail. The CEA encourages electronic submission of abstracts.
A web-based form is available on the CEA website at http://economics.ca.
Alternatively, please send submissions by regular mail before January 16,
1998 to: Craig Riddell, CEA Program Chair Department of Economics University
of British Columbia #997 - 1873 East Mall Vancouver, B.C., V6T 1Z1, Canada
Tel: (604) 822-2313 (CEA Hotline) Fax: (604) 822-5915 e-mail: cea98@econ.ubc.ca.
June
-
12-13 : Classical and Marxian Political Economy: The Legacy of Claudio
Napoleoni, The Department of Economics of Bergamo University. The programme
is also on the web at http://www.unibg.it/convegni/napoleonic.htm.
-
13 : Fourth Meeting of the Japanese Society for the History of American
Economic Thought, Nihon University, Tokyo. E-mail to Prof Toshihiro Tanaka
(ttanaka@kwansei.ac.jp).
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15-17 : "Philosophy, Methodology and Economics", The International Network
for Economic Method (INEM), the Review of Political Economy (ROPE), and
the Center for the Humanities at the University of New Hampshire, the University
of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H.. E-mail: Steve Pressman (pressman@christa.unh.edu)
or Bruce Caldwell (Bruce_Caldwell@uncg.edu).
-
18-19 : The Thorstein Veblen Conference on Institutional Analysis of the
Economy Today: Conceptual Cores, Analytical Applications and Challenges
to Institutional Analysis, Norwegian School of Management/Fridtjof Nansen
Institute/Norwegian Agricultural University, Oslo. E-mail: Per Ingvar Olsen
(per.i.olsen@bi.no).
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18-21: CHEIRON (History of Psychology Society), XXXth Annual Meeting. University
of San Diego, San Diego, California. ALL SUBMISSIONS MUST BE POSTMARKED
BY FEBRUARY 2, 1998. PAPERS: Submit a completed paper (7-8 double-spaced
pages plus short abstract), or a 500-700 word abstract plus bibliography.
POSTERS: Submit an abstract. SYMPOSIA: Submit an abstract (250 words) describing
the symposium as a whole and an abstract (500 words each) from each of
the participants. WORKSHOPS: Anyone interested in organizing a workshop
should contact the program chair. PROGRAM SUBMISSIONS: Prof. Leila Zenderland:
lzenderland@fullerton.edu. STUDENT TRAVEL AWARDS: Available to help
defray travel expenses of students who present papers or posters. Please
indicate if you are a student and wish to be considered for an award. LOCAL
ARRANGEMENTS: Prof. Steven Gelb: sgelb@acusd.edu.
CHEIRON MEMBERSHIP: Prof. Benjamin Harris: harris@it.uwp.edu.
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19-22: The 25th annual meetings of the History of Economics Society, University
of Quebec at Montreal, Canada. The web sites are
http://orbit.unh.edu/hes/call.htm and http://www.eh.net/HisEcSoc/Conferences/society_conferences.shtml.
Proposals on all aspects of history of thought and methodology are invited.
The conference volume will likely be loosely organized around the theme
of complexity, and how earlier writers' view of complexity influenced their
methodology and the way they analyzed the economy. The keynote speaker
at the conference will be Nathan Rosenberg who will speak on Charles Babagge's
treatment of complexity in his analysis of the economy. All persons wishing
to organize a session or present a paper should submit a proposal or a
complete session by February 1st to David Colander. Information on submitting
papers is found below. When submitting complete sessions full abstracts
of all papers are not necessary--only titles. E-mail to David Colander
(President Elect, History of Economics Society) (Colander@Middlebury.edu).
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22-26 : The Art of Entrepreneurship
Babson International Colloquium for Entrepreneurship Educators, Ljubljana,
Slovenja. For more information please contact either program coordinator
by e-mail: Dr. Larry Godtfredsen (Godtfredsen@Babson.edu),
Dr. Marjana Merkac (Marjana.Merkac@guest.arnes.si).
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NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR
THE HUMANITIES 1998 SUMMER SEMINARS AND INSTITUTES FOR COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY
TEACHERS.
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23 : The 4th Meeting of the Japanese
Society for the History of American Economic Thought, The Dapartment
of Economics at Nihon University, Tokyo. We welcome non-members of our
society who have interest in tha papers to be reported. If you want to
join the meeting, please send a fax or e-mail to Prof. Takao Tsukamoto,
Dapartment of Economics, Nihon Univ., 1-3-2, Misakicho, Chiyodaku, Tokyo,
Japan. Fax: +81-3-3291-3328 E-mail: tsukamot@eco.nihon-u.ac.jp
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26-28 : 11th Heilbronn Symposion in Economics and the Social Sciences,
The Economic Consequences of the Peace: 1648 Reconsidered. E-mail to Prof.
Dr. Jurgen G. Backhaus (f.schijlen@algec.unimaas.nl).
July
-
3-5 : DARWIN'S MILLENNIUM -- University of Southampton, The First Science
and Culture Conference. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: John Dupre (Birkbeck/Exeter)
George Levine (Rutgers University) James Moore (Open University) Adam Phillips
Harriet Ritvo (MIT). This conference will enquire into the processes and
effects of Charles Darwin's 'dangerous' ideas from the mid-eighteenth century
onwards. Biologists, historians, literary critics, philosophers and psychologists
will discuss a wide-range of topics including: breeding, the nature of
the 'human', literary interpretation and scientific method, the progress
of science, reductionism, relativism and culture theory. The Conference
will launch a new faculty MA in Culture and History of Science to start
on September 1998. Conference Organisers: Lucy Hartley and Cora Kaplan
For details of the programme please contact: Darwin's Millennium, Department
of English, University of Southampton, SO17 1BJ. Tel: 01703 593409 - Fax:
01703 592859, Email: jej1@soton.ac.uk,
Website: www.soton.ac.uk/~darwin.
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5-10 : Annual Summer Seminar
in Austrian Economics, the Austrian Economics Program at NYU. E-mail
to Peter J. Boettke (boettke@fasecon.econ.nyu.edu),
Austrian Economics Summer Seminar, 151 Clubhouse Drive, Middletown, NJ
07748.
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10-12 : The First Conference of
Japanese Society for Utilitarian Studies in Memory of the Late Professor
Joseph Hamburgher
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15-17 : 1998
annual conference, The History of Economic Thought Society of Australia
(HETSA), The University of Western Sydney Macarthur. E-mail to Steve
Keen (s.keen@uws.edu.au), Convenor,1998
HETSA Conference, Department of Economics and Finance University of Western
Sydney Macarthur.
August
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12 : IEPS has organized to have a mini-conference in conjunction with the
World Congress of Philosophy in Boston. All the details about the World
Congress, accommodation, on-line registration etc are found at the home
page: http://web.bu.edu/WCP.
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16-21 : TWENTIETH CENTURY EUROPEAN NARRATIVES: TRADITION & INNOVATION.
Sixth
Conference of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas
(ISSEI), Haifa, Israel. To receive a full program listing all workshops
and registration forms, contact: Mr. Tsippi Lakser (100264.2432@compuserve.com).
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24-28 : Twelfth International Economic
History Congress, Seville, Spain.
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28-September 1 : The European Society for the History of the Human Sciences,
17th Annual Meeting, Durham Castle, University of Durham, Durham, UK. Papers
are invited on any aspect of the history, historiography, theory or methodology
of the human sciences. The Programme Committee hope to include a number
of symposia/colloquia and contributions on any of the following themes
would be particularly welcome: The Implications of _Open the Social Sciences_
(The Report of the Gulbenkian Commission on the Restructuring of the Social
Sciences); The Centenary of the Publication of Durkheim's 'Representations
individuelles et collectives' Postmodern Challenges to Psychology; Historical
Sources of a Critical Human Science/Psychology; Social-historical Change
and the Human Sciences; Changing Paradigms in the Human Sciences; Evolutionary
Thinking in the Human Sciences; The Scottish Common Sense School and the
History of the Human Sciences. Papers should be submitted by 30 April 1998.
If you are thinking of attending it would be helpful to the local organiser
if you could complete the Preliminary Registration Form and return it as
soon as possible. E-mail; James Good (Local Organiser) (j.m.m.good@durham.ac.uk)
or Zsuszanna Vajda (vajdazs@edpsy.u-szeged.hu)
or Gordana Jovanovich (EJOVANGO@etf.bg.ac.yu).
September
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1-5 : Les Controverses sur les formes de coordination par le marche, Universite
d'ete en histoire de la pensee et methodologie economiques. For more information:
CEPSE-UFR Science economiques Universite Pierre Mendes France (e-mail:
Ramon.Tortajada@upmf-grenoble.fr
/ fax. +38-4-76-82-59-95)
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7-9 : Annual History of Economic Thought Conference, University of Bath.
Call for Papers. Bath is a particularly suitable venue for this year's
conference since 1998 is the bicentenary of Malthus's Essay on Population
and he had strong connections with the Bath area and with the parish of
Claverton (in which the University of Bath is located). Though this is
not a bicentenary conference it will include a symposium on recent research
on Malthus in the history of economic thought. We therefore invite papers
in this area. We also invite papers in all other areas of the history of
economic thought. Could prospective contributors please submit a title
and 500 word abstract to the conference organiser by 15 March 1998. Conference
accommodation is on the university campus and is all en-suite. Anticipated
cost in real terms is about the same as for the 1997 conference. Conference
organiser: Dr Adrian Winnett, Department of Economics and International
Development University of Bath. Bath BA2 7AY. e-mail (preferred method
of communication): A.B.Winnett@bath.ac.uk
Tel: +44/0 1225 826826 x 5745 Fax: +44/0 1225 323423.
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7-13 : EUROPEAN SUMMER SCHOOL IN LABOR ECONOMICS: CALL FOR PROPOSALS. The
IZA has created a European Summer School in Labor Economics, which will
take place once a year in the conference center of Deutsche Post at the
lake of Ammersee (nearby Munich) in Bavaria/Germany. The objective is to
bring together a larger number of Ph.D. students and senior lecturers to
study new areas in labor economics and to discuss their own research ideas
with established researchers in a relaxed and open atmosphere. The lecturers
are: Francis Kramarz (CREST/INSEE, Paris): Analysis of Labor Markets Using
Matched Employer-Employee Data Frank Windmeijer (Institute of Fiscal Studies,
IFS, London): Evaluation of Job Training Programmes. To participate, submissions
should be sent as soon as possible, but should reach IZA not later than
August 3. Requested is a CV, one letter of support from your Ph. D. supervisor
and an abstract for a potential presentation from your research work. If
available, please also send a copy of the paper separately. We also consider
students participating in an earlier stage of their study, where no own
paper presentation is expected. The IZA is covering all local expenses
and pays a travel subsidy of up to DM 500 to participants from Germany,
Switzerland and Austria, and of up to DM 1000 to participants from all
other countries. Acceptance decisions will be sent immediately after the
deadline. Applications should be sent to * Prof. Dr. Klaus F. Zimmermann,
* IZA, P. O. Box 7240, D-53072 Bonn, Germany * Phone: +49-228-3894-201
* Fax: +49-228-3894-210 * Email: iza@iza.org
* WWW: http://www.iza.org. Submissions
by fax or email are strongly recommended.
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15 : Modeles Biologiques et Theorie economique: une approche historique,
1880-1920 [Biology and Economics: A Historical Approach, 1880-1920], Universite
de Lille I. Programme: Session 1; Nicolas Chaigneau (Universite de Paris
I): Entre psychophysique et selection: la construction de l'agent economique
chez F.Y. Edgeworth; Marc Barbut (EHESS-CAMS): Pareto et la statistique
des grandes valeurs; Stephane Callens (Universite de Lille I): La biologie
de Pareto. Session 2; Daniel Becquemont (CNRS, Universite de Lille III):
Darwinisme social et theorie economique: de Sumner a Carver. Jean-Jacques
Gislain (Universite de Nantes): Veblen et la darwinisme methodologique.
Michel Renault (Universite de Rennes I): Economie et evolutionisme energetique
de Spencer a Lotka. Annie L. Cot (Universite de Lille I): Analogie biologique
et theorie economique: les engagements eugenistes de Irving Fisher. Session
3; Philippe Le Gall (Universite de Paris I): Ces "tristes tropiques": le
modele biologique et l'emergence de l'econometrie en France. Michel Armatte
(Universite de Paris IX): Les fondements biologiques de l'ordre economique:
le Travail selon Andre Liesse. Francois Vatin (Universite de Paris X):
Force de vie et biologie sociale. La thematique vitaliste dans la pensee
epistemologique et economique de Cournot. Session Chairs: Annie L. Cot
(Universite de Lille I), Richard Arena (Universite de Nice), Herve Le Bras
(EHESS). Discussants: Eric Brian (EHESS), Peirre Crepel (Universite de
Lyon II), Alain Desrosieres (INSEE), Ragip Ege (Universite de Strasbourg),
Johan Heilbron (CNRS), Marie-Angele Hermitte (CNRS), Gerard Jorland (CNRS),
Laurent Loty) (SFHSH), Bernard Paulre (Universite de Paris I). Symposium
organized by: le Clerse (URA 345 du CNRS) l'Institut Federatif de Recherche
sur les Economies et les Societes Industrielles (CNRS) la Faculte des Sciences
Economiques et Sociales de l'Universite de Lille I. Under the auspices
of the Association Charles Gide pour l'Etude de la Pensee Economique. For
registration and more information, contact: Sophie Lompret Faculte des
Sciences Economiques et Sociales Universite de Lille I F-59655 Villeneuve
D'Asco Cedex tel: 33 (0)3 20 43 66 27 Fax: 33 (0)3 20 43 66 55 email: callens@univ-lille1.fr
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17-20 : ECONOMIC TRANSITION IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: WHAT CAN BE LEARNED
FROM THE HISTORY OF ECONOMICS?, Cracow (Krakcw), Poland. E-mail: Janina
Rosicka (MIKULOJ@ae.krakow.pl).
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Duke HOPE Seminars, Fall 98. September 18; Neil DeMarch, Duke University
Putting Evidence in its Place: John Mill's Early Struggles in History .
October 2; Michel DeVroey, Catholic Univ of Louvain; Duke Visiting Prof.
The Marshallian Market and the Walrasian Economy: Incompatible Bedfellows?
October 23; William Darity, UNC -CH Economic Thought and Population Growth.
November 13; Christian Weber, Seattle Univ. Pareto and the 53 Percent Ordinal
Theory of Utility. Information is available at http://www.econ.duke.edu/cgi-bin/Workshops/Scripts/wsKind.pl?Fall+98+2
or through the Duke University Economics web site (go to History of Political
Economy Workshop): http://www.econ.duke.edu.
The Coordinator of the Duke History of Political Economy Workshop is E.
Roy Weintraub (erw@econ.duke.edu).
December 4; E. Roy Weintraub (Duke) and Ted Gayer (Georgetown) Equilibrium
Proofmaking.
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Erasmus Seminar, Autumn 1998 Programme. 16 September; Aldo Geuna (SPRU,
University of Sussex) "Changes in the rationale of university funding:
are there negative unintended consequences?" Comments by H.J. van der Molen
(Erasmus University). 30 September; Terence Hutchison "The Wealth of Nations
and modern general equilibrium 'theory': Should Adam Smith be regarded
as a primitive forerunner of Arrow and Debreu?" Comments by Uskali Maeki
(Erasmus University). 14 October; Arjo Klamer (Erasmus) "The value of value"
Comments by Theo van Willigenburg (Erasmus University). 28 October; Barry
Smith (State University of New York at Buffalo) "Social ontology" Comments
by Anthonie Meijers (Tilburg University). 11 November; Albert Jolink (Erasmus
University) "Moving the circles: T.W. Hutchison's role in the dissemination
of Otto Neurath's physicalism in the UK" Comments by Esther-Mirjam Sent
(University of Notre Dame and Erasmus University). 25 November; Esther-Mirjam
Sent (University of Notre Dame and Erasmus University) "Bounded rationality
on the rebound" Comments by Maarten Janssen (Erasmus University). 9 December
Sanjeev Goyal (Erasmus University) "Economic Theory: A Practitioner's Viewpoint"
Comments by Jack Vromen (Erasmus University). Further information: Loes
van Dijk, <m.l.vandijk@fwb.eur.nl>,
tel. (31) (0)10-408 8967
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21-22 : Thinking with Diagrams:
Is there a Science of Diagrams?, University of Wales, Aberystwyth,
UK.
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25-27 : Fifty-Seventh
Annual E.H.A. Meeting (The 1998 Annual Meeting of the Economic History
Association), the Washington Duke Inn and Golf Club, Durham, North
Carolina. The theme of the program is "Revolutions in Economic History.
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27-28 : "Reflecting on the Canon": Conference and Dinner in Honour of
retiring Professor Samuel Hollander. On the occasion of Samuel Hollander's
retirement from the University of Toronto, a conference has been organized,
to be held in Toronto. The conference theme is "Reflecting on the Canon".
Confirmed speakers include: Richard Arena, William Baumol, Tim Davis, Ghislain
Delaplace, Bob Dimand, Walter Eltis, Tony Endres, Ingrid Peters-Fransen,
Richard Kleer, Andre Lapidus, David Levy, Larry Moss, Pier Luigi Porta,
Alesandro Roncaglia, Thomas Rymes, Warren Samuels, Paul Samuelson, Margaret
Schabas, Nathalie Sigot, Jeffrey Young, Masazumi Wakatabe, and John Whitaker.
We have received an offer to publish the proceedings of the conference,
and Dian Cohen has expressed interest in making a documentary about the
event. The conference will be held at the Toronto Colony Hotel,
Downtown City Hall, 89 Chestnut St., Toronto, Ontario M5G 1R1, and the
UofT (we have reserved the Crofts Chapter House for a reception/ final
session on Monday). We will be delighted if you decide to attend the conference
on the 27-28, or, should you choose to, Sam's retirement dinner on Sept.
27th. Please indicate your interest in attending the conference or the
dinner, to: Sandra Peart Dept. of Economics Baldwin-Wallace College Berea
Ohio 44017 Fax: (440) 826-3835 phone: (440) 826-2120 e-mail speart@bw.edu
An e-mail response is sufficient. Thank you in advance for your interest
in this event. We hope to have a wonderful celebration of Sam's work at
the UofT.
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30 - October 3 : The MARX INTERNATIONAL II Congress, University de Paris-X
Nanterre. Proposals (a one page summary and a short bio-bibliography) must
be sent before April 15, 1998 to : G. Dumenil et D. Levy CEPREMAP 142,
rue du Chevaleret 75013 Paris or by e-email to : dominique.levy@cepremap.cnrs.fr
or gerard.dumenil@u-paris10.fr.
We hope that this Congress will have a large and lasting impact. The organization
of the Congress is not finalized and suggestions are welcome. Please provide
the names and addresses of persons who may be interested in receiving information
about the Congress, in particular those individuals who could present their
work. The main language will be French and simultaneous translation will
not be provided. However, papers and presentations in English are also
possible. Depending on interest level and the number of English contributions
that we receive, some workshops in English could be organized. Capitalism
in Process. The economic section of the Congress will be open to a large
number of contributions in a variety of fields, but will attempt to focus
on a unifying topic. The theme of the economic section will be capitalism
in process. Traditional analysis concerning fundamental concepts and mechanisms
will not be excluded, but the primary emphasis will be on the investigation
of contemporary capitalism from a Marxist or heterodox perspective. The
analysis of the transformations of capitalism and its contemporary problems
obviously stretches beyond the limits of economics. But the work of Marxist
and other heterodox economists have made important inroads, as is obvious
from an examination of their work. These efforts must be pursued if Marxist
economics is to recover its theoretical foundations and maintain its uniqueness
among other heterodox approaches. One plenary session and approximately
ten workshops will be devoted to the economic section of the Congress.
The topic of the plenary session will be the criticism of neoliberalism.
(Neoliberalism is used here in the European sense of the term ; it can
be roughly translated as conservatism.) This topic fits squarely with the
focus of the transformations of contemporary capitalism, including economic
crisis, unemployment and economic policy. The class content of neoliberal
policy, its effects and possible Left alternatives will all be discussed.
Approximately three to four presentations will compose a workshop. The
structure of each workshop will be determined after an examination of the
proposed contributions taking account of their relation to particular themes.
It is clear that the organizing committee will have to be selective. For
a few workshops, leaders will be chosen among persons who have made particular
contributions in the form of published articles or collections of works
on the subject. The issue of capitalism in process can be addressed in
a broad variety of ways : (1) The transformations of capitalism : The gradual
evolution of the relations of production and corresponding class patterns
define a first theme. Are productive workers disappearing? How can we interpret
the rise of the middle class composed of such groups as managerial and
clerical personnel? How is the influence of capitalist property relations
exerted ? By which groups ? Within which institutions ? By which specific
policies ? Is neoliberalism the policy of finance ? These issues are connected
to a possible new stage in the development of society called socialism.
Are we still able to formulate an alternative to capitalism ? What can
we learn from the history of the socialist countries ? A third category
of problems relates to the internationalization of capital. What are the
consequences of this process within both the countries of the center and
the periphery ? What is the relation of internationalization to crisis
and unemployment ? Is imperialism still relevant ? (2) The contemporary
crisis : The evolution of capitalism is clearly conditioned by its ability
to recover from the present crisis and the features of this recovery :
*A first theme is the analysis of crisis, of its origins and its developments.
What are the mechanisms governing the origin of the crisis in the 1970s
and their relation to Marxist analysis ? How should the international and
national factors be balanced ? What was the impact of real and monetary
mechanisms ? How can we explain the persistence of unemployment in Europe
? What can be said about the debt crisis of the early 1980s ? What are
the origin and consequences of the crisis in the Asian countries ? * A
second theme is that of the possible outcomes for the future. Are the first
signs of a recovery detectable ? Is the U.S. somehow unique ? Would such
recovery be related to the reassertion of the basic capitalist character
of the world economy or instead to the transition toward a new stage of
capitalism ? Is the new course of capitalism plagued by any specific weaknesses
? Is a collapse similar to the Great Depression on the agenda ? (3) The
endurance of the explanatory power of Marxist analysis : The soundness
of the basic tools of Marxist analysis and the transformations of capitalism
are clearly connected. Do notions such as commodity or productive labor,
or the law of the tendency of the profit rate to fall, still have explanatory
value ? To what extent do traditional Marxist tools need to be modified
? Do other heterodox approaches provide the key for a renewal of the Marxist
framework ? (4) The theories of the firm and wage labor : The Congress
will provide an opportunity to explore the relationship between Marxist
analysis and the contemporary theories of the firm and wage labor as well
as the issue of property relations which links economics and the law. (5)
The preservation of the planet : Recent developments concerning global
warming raise the issue of the link between the transformations of capitalism
and ecology. Can capitalism preserve the environment ? Can solutions to
environmental problems be found in a social system in which problems are
basically addressed in an ex-post fashion ? Are environmental problems
related to crisis and recovery ?
October
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8-10 : 20TH ANNIVERSARY MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR DOCUMENTARY EDITING,
St. Louis, Missouri. Proposals should be received no later than February
1, 1998, but earlier communication will be appreciated. E-mail to Leslie
Rowland (LR20@umail.umd.edu).
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15-18 : Oral History Association Annual Meeting, Hyatt Regency, Buffalo,
New York. PROPOSAL DEADLINE: DECEMBER 15, 1997. For further information
or to submit proposals, contact: Debra Bernhardt (bernhrdt@elmer1.bobst.nyu.edu)
and Cliff Kuhn (hiscmk@panther.gsu.edu).
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21-25 : Philosophy of Science Association, Sixteenth-Biennial Meeting,
University of Notre Dame. Symposium proposals should reach the chair of
the Program Committee no later than July 31, 1997. For more information
Don Howard (Don.A.Howard.43@nd.edu).
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29-31 : "Science, Institutions and Economic Development: the Contribution
of 'German' Economists and the Reception in Italy (1860 - 1930)", Faculty
of Political Sciences; University of Macerata. For more information: Dr.
Stefano Spalletti (spalletti@unimc.it).
November
-
6-7 : Bureau
d'Economie Theorique et Appliquee, UMR 7522 du CNRS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE,
STRASBOURG, FRANCE NICHOLAS GEORGESCU-ROEGEN's Scientific WORK. Deadline
for submission : March 1st, 1998 Notification of acceptance : end of May
1998. E-mail to Eric FRIES GUGGENHEIM (GR.meeting@cournot.u-strasbg.fr).
Web page is http://cournot.u-strasbg.fr/beta/ldb/appel_en.htm.
Deadline for submission : March 1st, 1998 Notification of acceptance :
end of May 1998. Deadline for registration : October 5th, 1998.
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11 : William II - German Emperor, arrived in Eijsden, The Netherlands,
in order to ask for political asylum. Thus ended a reign of thirty years
during which Germany had undergone deep economic, social, political and
cultural change; the repercussions of this change lasted well beyond the
military defeat of 1918 and can partly still be appreciated today. In a
leading American encyclopedea we read: "Whatever may be the verdict of
history in regard to the influence of this remarkable personality upon
the destinies of his country and Europe, there is little question that
he will be considered the ablest, most energetic, and most interesting
sovereign of his time." [The New International Encyclopedea, vol. 23, New
York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1923 (second edition), p. 578.] The verdict
of history, however, has not been kind. William II has been faulted with
many causes that led to Germany's defeat and decline, and credited with
little that constituted its progress. Sixty years after the end of his
reign, the time should be ripe to re-assess this historical figure in its
proper context. A conference will be held on November 11, 1998 in [either
Baltimore, Maryland or Washington D.C. ] focussing, in particular, on William's
II role in the areas of economic and social policy, policies affecting
the university and research landscape and policies with respect to technological
development. Papers in any of these fields are welcome. Conference languages
are English, Dutch and German. For further information please contact Professor
Dr. Juergen G. Backhaus Maastricht University, AE P.O. Box 616 6200 MD
Maastricht The Netherlands, tel. +31-43-3883636 fax. +31-43-3258440 email:
f.schijlen@algec.unimaas.nl.
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13-14 : WELLCOME SYMPOSIUM FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE with THE SCIENCE
MUSEUM, MODELS IN THE SCIENCES, TECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE: DISPLAYING THE
THIRD DIMENSION. Forms from Frieda Houser at the Wellcome Institute: 0171-611
8619/Fax: 8862 PLEASE NOTE: The closing date is 6 NOVEMBER 1998.
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14-15 : International Joint Conference of the Division of History of Science
and the Division of Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science of the
International Union of History and Philosophy of Science, PHILOSOPHICAL
PROBLEMS IN THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF SCIENCE, Center for Philosophy of Science,
University of Pittsburgh. Sponsored jointly by: The Division of Logic,
Methodology, and Philosophy of Science and the University of Pittsburgh
Center for the Philosophy of Science. Among the principal speakers will
be Aristides Baltas, National Technical University; Athens John Beatty,
University of Minnesota; Philip Ehrlich, Ohio University; Daniel Garber,
University of Chicago; Jean Gayon, University of Paris; Don Howard, University
of Notre Dame; Jane Maienschein, Arizona State University. One primary
goal of the conference will be to address problems of interest to both
historians of science and philosophers of science. For further information,
please contact Wesley C. Salmon, Center for Philosophy of Science, 817
Cathedral of Learning, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260,
USA. Fax: (412)-624-4489 E-mail: wsalmon+@pitt.edu
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19-22 : The Social Science History Association Annual Conference, the Palmer
House Hilton in Chicago. For more information; Thomas J. Sugrue (ssha@history.upenn.edu).
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19-22 : Laboring
For a New Empire: Alternative Formations of Work and Workers in the Nineteenth
Century, American Studies Association, Seattle. E-mail: Todd Vogel
(Tvogel@mail.utexas.edu).
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20-22 : POSTMODERNE DISKURSE ZWISCHEN SPRACHE UND MACHT/ LANGUAGE AND POWER,
Erste Erlanger Graduiertenkonferenz/ 1st international postgraduate conference
at Erlangen University (Bavaria, Germany). The two conference languages
will be German and English. Keynote address by critical theorist Kurt Lenk.
Please send abstracts and short CV (German or English, no more than one
page) by Sept 1st 1998 and, if possible, the manuscript by Oct 1st (a selection
will be under consideration for publication) to Johannes Angermueller:
johannes.angermueller@fen.baynet.de.
For more information go to: http://www.fen.baynet.de/johannes.angermueller/indexeng.htm.
December
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10-11 : INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE "THE LEGACY OF HYMAN MINSKY", UNIVERSITY
OF BERGAMO. Further information and abstracts to http://www.unibg.it.
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