Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from February, 2014

CFP: Canadian Network for Economic History Conference

The Canadian Network for Economic History (CNEH) invites proposals for its October 24-26, 2014, conference, to be held at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario. Papers will be considered on all topics, with some preference given to those relating to the theme, "Markets and Crises." Michael Bordo (Rutgers University) will give the keynote address at the conference, and Leah Platt Boustan (UCLA) will present the Mary MacKinnon Memorial Lecture.      Paper proposals (1- or 2-page abstract) should be sent via email to Shari Eli ( shari.eli@utoronto.ca ) and Chris Minns ( c.minns@lse.ac.uk ). The deadline for proposals is June 1, 2014 . Proposals from graduate students and junior scholars are strongly encouraged. Information on the venue, registration, and program will be posted at www.economichistory.ca as it becomes available.

CFP: “Trade in Animals and Animal Products in the Indian Ocean World”

The Indian Ocean World Centre (IOWC) at McGill University, Montreal, Canada, will sponsor a conference on October 23-24, 2014, on "Trade in Animals and Animal Products in the Indian Ocean World from Early Times to c.1900." According to the call for papers : Recently, much public attention has focussed on the lucrative yet often illegal trade in the Indian Ocean world (IOW) of animal parts, including elephant tusks, rhinoceros horns, and tiger skins. However, the trade in exotic animals and animal parts in the IOW, from Africa to China, is not a modern phenomenon. Its roots can be traced back centuries and is reflected in the traditions, folklore, medicinal practices and religious beliefs of many different societies across the IOW. It has also impacted on the environment. By exploring the long-distance trade in animals and animal products as economic, cultural, and ecological phenomenon, this conference will seek to interrogate the concept of the Indian Ocean as a "

CFP Reminder: Asian Historical Economics Conference

The Fourth Asian Historical Economics Conference will be held at Bogaziçi (Bosphorus) University, Istanbul, on September 19-20, 2014. The meeting follows earlier conferences of the Asian Historical Economics Society at Venice (2008), Beijing (2010), and Tokyo (2012). The conference aims to bring together researchers working on the economic history of all regions of Asia, as well as those comparing Asia with other regions. The Program Committee invites proposals for individual papers on a number of themes, which can be found at the full call for papers . The keynote speaker for the conference will be Kenneth Pomeranz of the University of Chicago. There will also be a special session on “Science and Technology in Europe and East Asia during the Early Modern Era” with presentations from Joel Mokyr of Northwestern University and Jin Dengjian of Dickinson University.      For each proposed paper, an abstract not exceeding 500 words, together with institutional affiliation and e-mail

Preview: Enterprise & Society March 2014 Issue

The advance digital version of the March 2014 Enterprise & Society is now available of the Oxford University Press website. In addition to many book reviews, the issue contains these articles: Paul Duguid , "Information in the Mark and the Marketplace: A Multivocal Account" Nate Holdren , "Incentivizing Safety and Discrimination: Employment Risks under Workmen’s Compensation in the Early Twentieth Century United States" James W. Cortada , "When Knowledge Transfer Goes Global: How People and Organizations Learned About Information Technology, 1945–1970" Bernardo Bátiz-Lazo, Thomas Haigh, and David L. Stearns , "How the Future Shaped the Past: The Case of the Cashless Society" Helen Mercer , "Retailer–Supplier Relationships before and after the Resale Prices Act, 1964: A Turning Point in British Economic History?"  Full-text access requires a subscription, but abstracts are freely available to all.

NEH Summer Institute: “The Meanings of Property”

"The Meanings of Property ," a "four-week interdisciplinary NEH Summer Institute for twenty-five college and university faculty to explore the changing definitions of property," will be held June 1-27, 2014, in Poughkeepsie, New York.  The project director is Ann E. Davis, associate professor of economics, Marist College. The organizers write: Is property a God-given natural right for human self-preservation? Is property a method of controlling other humans, such as women and slaves? Is property a means of exploitation and accumulation, or is it an essential mediator between the individual and social dimensions of life? Such questions can be found in many different disciplines, often without dialogue or interrogation. This summer institute provides the opportunity to explore these different narratives in the company of leading scholars and teachers from a range of disciplines, in a beautiful setting by the Hudson River. Successful applicants will receive stipen

Conference: Port Cities in World History

On March 26-28, 2014, the World History Association will offer a symposium in Barcelona, Spain, on "Port Cities in World History." The meeting will be hosted by the Universitat Pompeu Fabra. The preliminary program , which also contains abstracts of the papers, is now available. The call for papers indicated that proposals pursuing "interdisciplinary, local-to-global, comparative, or international approaches" would be welcome; the wide-ranging program reflects those criteria.     Please visit the symposium website for additional information about registration and accommodations. Note that registration at the regular rate ends on February 28, 2014.

Business History at the OAH Meeting

The Organization of American Historians (OAH) will hold its next annual meeting on April 10-13, 2014, in Atlanta, Georgia; the meeting's theme is "Crossing Borders." The full program is now available on-line. A scan through the listings finds several sessions and papers of interest (sessions are not linked on the website, so I've identified them by day and time): Full sessions: "Winged Gospel or Concrete Foundation: The Transformative Power of American Aviation" (Thursday, 9-10:30 a.m.) "Rethinking 'Free Enterprise' in the Postwar United States" (Thursday, 9-10:30 a.m.) "Cloaked Histories, Contested Objects: Clothing, Commerce, and Encounter in the Nineteenth Century" (Thursday, 10:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m.) "Integrating the American Workplace" (Thursday, 1:45-3:15 p.m.) "Crossing Borders and Economic Mobility: New Answers to Old Questions" (Friday, 9:00-10:30 a.m.) "Crossing Professional Borders in A

HBS Conference on “Business History in Africa, Asia, and Latin America” Registration Now Open

The Business History Initiative at Harvard Business School is hosting a conference on June 13-14, 2014, "Business History in Africa, Asia, and Latin America: Integrating Course Development and New Research." The conference will focus on course development in business history and the history of capitalism beyond the developed economies of Europe, the United States, and East Asia. Topics to be discussed include how to integrate the latest research into teaching materials; new and innovative pedagogical methods, including web-based learning and the use of oral history; the availability of primary sources; and the different interests and requirements of students in business schools, history departments, and in graduate programs.      This conference is open to educators, graduate students, and other academics with an interest in the subject. It will be held on the campus of Harvard Business School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Please visit the conference website for mor

CFP: “The Business of War Photography”

Proposals are invited for the forthcoming conference "The Business of War Photography: Producing and Consuming Images of Conflict," to be held at Durham University, UK, on July 31-August 1, 2014. The meeting is cosponsored by the Centre for Arts and Visual Culture at Durham University, in partnership with DLI Museum and Durham Art Gallery and Impressions Gallery . The two-day conference will examine the ways in which issues of supply and demand have shaped the field of war photography. The event is timed to coincide with the Impressions Gallery's touring exhibition "The Home Front" by Melanie Friend at DLI Museum and Art Gallery.      Papers should address war photography as a result of pragmatic transactions concerning business, militarism, and consumption. Proposals of 300 words, along with a brief biographical note or one-page CV, should be submitted via email to bwp.2014@durham.ac.uk by March 1, 2014 .      The full call for papers with further details