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開催予定のカンファレンス(2003年)
Saturday, 26 January
10:00-10:10 Opening Remarks
Professor Yasunori Fukagai (Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan)
10:10-11:10 Session 1
Paper: Professor Philip Schofield (University College London, UK)
"Werner Stark and the economic writings of Jeremy Bentham"
discussant: Professor Yoshio Nagai (Kanto Gakuin University, Japan)
11:30-12:40 Lunch
13:00-14:45 Session 2
Paper 1: Professor Marco Guidi (Brescia, Italy)
"Inventive industry in Bentham's early reflections on political economy
(1778-1787)"
Paper 2: Professor Nathalie Sigot (Besanson, France)
"Art and science according to Bentham"
discussant: Professor Daisuke Arie (Yokohama National University, Japan)
14:45-15:10 break
15:15-16:15 Session 3
paper: Professor Annie Cot (Paris-I, France)
"Let there be no distinction between the sexes" : Jeremy Bentham on
the status of women"
discussant: Professor Philip Schofield (University College London,
UK)
16:15-16:40 break
16:45-18:30 Session 4
Paper 1: Dr. Michael Quinn (University College London, UK)
"The fallacy of non-interference: The Poor Panopticon and equality
of opportunity"
Paper 2: Professor Katsuyoshi Watarai (Waseda University, Japan)
"Bentham, Malthus and Ricardo on Poor Laws"
discussant: Professor Nathalie Sigot (Besanson, France)
Sunday, 27 January
9:30-11:10 Session 5
Paper 1: Dr. Sandrine Leloup (Paris-I, France)
"Do passions calculate? Bentham's analysis"
Paper 2: Professor Evert Schoorl (Groningen, Netherlands)
"Jean-Baptiste Say as a Benthamite: positive and normative utilitarianism"
discussant: Professor Annie Cot (Paris-I, France)
11:30-12:40 Lunch
13:00-14:40 Session 6
Paper 1: Professor Ghislain Deleplace and Professor Nathalie Sigot
(Paris-VIII / Besanson, France)
"Bentham's French manuscript and Ricardo: a missed opportunity"
Paper 2: Professor Yasunori Fukagai (Tokyo Metropolitan University,
Japan)
"Jeremy Bentham on production of wealth and population mechanism"
discussant: Professor Marco Guidi (Brescia, Italy)
14:40-15:10 break
15:15-16:10 Session 7
Professor Takuo Dome (Osaka University, Japan)
"Bentham's principles of legislation in matters of finance"
discussant: Professor Ghislain Deleplace (Paris-VIII, France)
16:25-18:00 Session 8
Paper 1: Dr. Chiara Baroni (University of Manchester, UK)
"A reconsideration of the nature and relevance of Bentham's notion
of utility"
Paper 2: Dr. Byron Kaldis (Athens University of Economics and Business,
Greece)
"Bentham's Socratic 'Metric': Could welfare economics be both science
and ethics?"
discussant to paper 1: Professor Evert Schoorl (Groningen, Netherlands)
discussant to paper 2: Professor Yasunori Fukagai (Tokyo Metropolitan
University, Japan)
18:00-18:10 Concluding remarks
Professor Yasunori Fukagai (Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan)
Organising Committee:
(head) Yasunori Fukagai (Tokyo Metropolitan University)
Daisuke Arie (Yokohama National University)
Katsuyoshi Watarai (Waseda University)
Contact:
Yasunori Fukagai
Tokyo Metropolitan University
Faculty of Economics
e-mail: fukagai-yasunori2@c.metro-u.ac.jp
All list members are invited to take part in the conversation as
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Read an interview with Steve Keen here: http://www.btinternet.com/~pae_news/Keen1.htm
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Greg Ransom
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Universite du Quebec a Montreal
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
June 20-21 2002
Without doubt, the activities and work of John Maynard Keynes dominate not only the economic thought but also the economic, social and political developments of the century that has just drawn to a close. Like Marx, Keynes was one of the few economists who lent his name to an intellectual current, and even a revolution. After his death, in 1946, Keynes' ideas, often heavily disguised, became prominent in textbooks and in economic policy, before being thrown into question by what is now termed neoliberalism. In the last few years, his ideas have attracted renewed interest.
It seems appropriate, therefore, to take stock of Keynes' enormous contribution, which touched upon not only economics but also philosophy and political thought, and to consider its relevance to the 21st century. We are thus inviting papers on all aspects of his thought, action and influence. They may deal with his work in historical context or with its current utility. It is time to ask: "What remains of Keynes?".
Proposals (of 2 pages maximum) should be sent, by post or, ideally, electronic mail, to Gilles Dostaler or Nathalie Sigot, no later than February 6, 2002. The scientific committee will reply during the week of February 18th. Conference papers (maximum 40,000 characters) should be sent to discussants and chairmen before May 31, 2002. Further suggestions concerning the presentation of papers will be given to participants in due course.
Information on registration fees, accomodation and other logistical aspects will be provided later. The Universite du Quebec a Montreal (UQAM), where the conference will take place, is located in the heart of Montreal, at the intersection of Saint Denis and Saint Catherine streets. June is typically a pleasant month, weatherwise, and is also a particularly lively time of the year, with many activities taking place, including Montreal's famous Jazz Festival.
Scientific committee: Richard Arena (Universite de Nice), Jean Cartelier (Universite de Paris 10), Michel DeVroey (Universite catholique de Louvain), Gilles Dostaler (Universite du Quebec a Montreal), Robert Nadeau (Universite du Quebec a Montreal), Jean-Pierre Potier (Universite de Lyon 2), Michel Rosier (Universite de Marne La Vallee), Nathalie Sigot (Universite du Littoral Cote d'Opale)
Organizing committee: Gilles Dostaler, Frederic Hanin, Robert Nadeau, Nathalie Sigot
Please send proposals to:
or
Speakers for the seminar will be:
Space is limited so please apply as soon as possible. Direct all information to Peter Boettke at the contact address below -- application material should include: transcript, letter of interest, and reference letter from senior advisor or colleague. Students accepted will receive a scholarship valued at $450, but will be responsible for their travel expenses to and from the seminar and incidental expenses incured while at the seminar.
Please share this information with your students and colleagues. We
are particularly interested in PhD students at the dissertation stage who
would
be willing to present their dissertation work in a workshop setting
provided the work is already in draft form and it deals with topics in
Austrian economics. We would like to have 4 or 5 such students within the
group so we could set up a workshop every evening --- we could go up to
8 or 10 such workshops if we divide them into a broader categories of micro
and macro topics.
In addition to colleagues and students, please send this announcement to other interested email groups.
Peter J. Boettke, Deputy Director
James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy
Department of Economics, MSN 3G4
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030
PHONE: 703-993-1149
FAX: 703-993-1133
EMAIL: pboettke@gmu.edu
HOMEPAGE: http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/pboettke
The annual conference of the History of Economics Society will be
held 5-8 July 2002 at the University of California, Davis. Proposals for
papers or sessions on all aspects of the history of economic thought are
welcome. Submit an abstract of no more than 200 words for a paper or no
more than 400 words for a session before 15 February 2002.
Proposals for sessions are especially encouraged. Selected papers from
the meeting will be published in a special issue of the Journal of
the History of Economic Thought. Proposals may be submitted on
the web at the society's website www.eh.net/HE/HisEcSoc,
or to President-elect Kevin D. Hoover by e-mail to hesconference@ucdavis.edu
or by post to Department of Economics, 1 Shields Avenue, University of
California, Davis, CA 95616-8578 or, by fax to (530) 752-9382. Further
information and registration information can be obtained from the society's
website www.eh.net/HE/HisEcSoc.
Session title: 'Collective and individual rationality in the history
of economic thought'
There will be a session on the History of Economic Thought at the fourth Annual Conference of the Association of Heterodox Economics, to be held in Dublin on Tuesday and Wednesday 9-10 July 2002. If you would like to give a paper on any aspect of the History of Economic Thought at the conference, please send me (details below) an abstract by the end of January 2002. The session will have the theme - 'Collective and individual rationality in the history of economic thought' - and papers which explicitly address this theme will be given preference.
Collective and individual rationality in the history of economic thought
'What, if any, is the legitimate role of the state in the economy?'
That is a fundamental question - perhaps THE fundamental question - for
economics. How do (micro level) agent interests and behaviours interact
to generate (macro level) social outcomes? Are those outcomes desirable,
or should society as a whole, in the form of the state, intervene to modify
them? How has the articulation between micro and macro levels in
economics, between individual actions and social outcomes, between individual
and collective rationality, been theorised in economics. Papers are
invited which investigate these questions, exploring the answers that have
been given by economic thinkers. Further information may be obtained
from me, Andy Denis
(andy.denis@city.ac.uk).
Please send your abstract to me, Andy Denis (andy.denis@city.ac.uk) and copy to Avis Lexton (A.Lexton@open.ac.uk) by end January 2002. Postal addresses: Andy Denis, Department of Economics, School of Social and Human Sciences, The City University, London, United Kingdom, EC1V 0HB (fax: +44 (0)20-7040 8580); Avis Lexton, Faculty of Social Sciences, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom, MK7 6AA.
CALL FOR PAPERS
4th ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR HETERODOX ECONOMICS
9-10 JULY 2002 Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Branching out from its usual base in the UK, this year's heterodox conference
will be held at Dublin City University. All economists are encouraged to
come together and hear a diversity of papers on topics not well represented
in mainstream economics. Papers from a plurality of perspectives and topic
areas are encouraged. Please send copies of a 250 word abstract for your
proposed paper (one per person) to:
Deadline for submission: 30th January 2002
Conference fee: £40 (and £15 for post-graduate students)
Format: The Conference will take place over two days, with four parallel tracks and two plenary sessions.
Papers are particularly encouraged in the following areas:
I would like to invite proposals for papers for a panel on Adam
Smith's Wealth of Nations and the idea and practice of modernity.
Possible topics include:
The connection between morality and economics in the works of Smith and in modern societies since the late eighteenth century
Smith and the physiocrats, or anglophone vs. francophone ideas of modernity
The eighteenth-century division of labor between aesthetic disinterestedness and economic interest and its consequences
Land and labor as primary sources of wealth (eighteenth-century views and their impact on later debates and practices)
To what extent did The Wealth of Nations reflect both traditional and radical preoccupations? Why 1776?
How central has eighteenth-century economics been to the Enlightenment project as it presumably continues to unfold?
How crucial are rationality and modernity to our understanding of Smith's economics and to contemporary definitions of economics and/or of the Enlightenment?
The Wealth of Nations and globalisation (understood as a political and cultural as well as an economic phenomenon)
The renewed interest in the works of Adam Smith on the part of scholars working in the fields of literary and cultural studies
150-300 words paper proposals should be sent via e-mail (no attachments,
please!) by Sunday, March 10, 2002 to catherine.labio@yale.edu
Please include your name, title, institutional affiliation, a paper title, mailing address, e-mail address, phone number and mention any audio-visual needs you may have.
Catherine Labio
Assistant Professor
Comparative Literature and French
Institutional History of Economics Research Area
CALL FOR PAPERS
EAEPE's Institutional History of Economics Research Area invites paper
proposals that contribute to one of its following seven theoretical perspectives:
(2) The analysis is open-ended and interdisciplinary in that it draws upon relevant material in psychology, anthropology, politics, and history - instead of a definition of history of economics in terms of a rigid method that is applied indiscriminately to a wide variety of economic approaches.
(3) The conception of economics is of a cumulative and evolutionary process unfolding in historical time in which economists are faced with chronic information problems and radical uncertainty about the future - instead of approaches to theorizing that focus exclusively on the product of this process.
(4) The concern is to address and encompass the interactive, social process through which economics is formed and changed - instead of a theoretical framework that takes economists and their interests as given.
(5) It is appropriate to regard economics itself as a social institution, necessarily supported by a network of other social institutions - instead of an orientation that takes economics itself as an ideal or natural order and as a mere aggregation of individual economists.
(6) It is evaluated how the socio-economic system is embedded in a complex ecological and environmental system - instead of a widespread tendency to ignore ecological and environmental considerations or consequences in the history of economics.
(7) The inquiry seeks to contribute not only to history of economics but also to economics - instead of an orthodox outlook that ignores the possibility of such cross-fertilization.
Preference will be given to original accounts, based on detailed
archival or other research, aimed at yielding rich, sophisticated, understandings.
Hence, papers that "do it" instead of those that "talk about doing it"
are favored.
To participate, please submit a proposal containing 600-1000 words and indicating clearly the sense in which the paper contributes to one of the theoretical perspectives of the research area.
The deadline for the submission of paper proposals is 30 MARCH 2002. Notice of acceptance or rejection will be sent on or before 30 APRIL 2002. Completed papers are due on 31 AUGUST 2002.
All proposals and requests for information should be sent to:
Esther-Mirjam Sent
Department of Economics
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
USA
Tel: +1-219-631-6979
Fax: +1-219-631-8809
E-mail: sent.2@nd.edu
Web-site: http://www.nd.edu/~esent
Further information on the EAEPE 2002 conference can be found at: http://eaepe.tuwien.ac.at/