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Showing posts with the label #bizhisglobal

Next Wednesday 6/9: 'Empresas en el siglo XIX: dos casos de Iberoamérica'

  Próximo miércoles 9 de junio les esperamos en el panel 'Empresas en el siglo XIX: dos casos de iberoamérica'. Pastor Deuer (Universidad Mayor de San Andrés) presentará ' Resabios coloniales en la minería argentífera latinoamericana. Caso: Bolivia entre 1825 y 1870 ' y Francisco Parejo (Universidad de Extremadura) hablará sobre ' Crecimiento, liderazgo y desaparición: La empresa familiar Reynolds en el negocio mundial corchero, 1820-1891 '. Modera: Adoración Álvaro @CUNEF. Más información e inscripciones: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/panel-empresas-en-el-siglo-xix-dos-casos-de-iberoamerica-tickets-138694092765 Coordinadores: Julio Cesar Zuluaga, Norma Silvana Lanciotti y Gabriela Recio

Virtual Roundtable: Slavery and Business History

Roundtable: Slavery and Business History Next October 14@ 16.00 hrs London Speakers: Sherryllynne Haggerty (University of Nottingham), Rafael Pardo (Emory University), Stephen Mullen (University of Glasgow) Discussant: Cheryl McWatters (University of Ottawa) Organiser/Hosts: Nicholas Wong and Andrew Perchard (both at Northumbria University) Register here . More information about the event here ,

The BHC website has a new look!

Check out the new look of the BHC website! Thank you to Shane Hamilton for upgrading the experience of looking for news in #bizhis, research projects, and expert profiles. Also, if you haven't done so, click here to check out all the dancing and conversations (photographs) that went on in Cartagena, Colombia (#BHCCartagena)

Call for Papers: 39th Meeting of the Portuguese Association of Economic and Social History

39th Meeting of the Portuguese Association of Economic and Social History at the University of Algarve (Campus de Gambelas, Faro, Portugal) Conference, Circulations: from local to global Deadline for submissions: 15 April; Conference: 15-16 November. Mobility is a key problem in Economic and Social History. Regardless of the period under analysis, people circulate, carrying with them commodities, capital, ideas, languages, traditions. They circulate to survive, to trade, to explore, to conquer, to migrate, and also for leisure. These constant circulations are at the origin of many interactions, impacts, conflicts, changes and resistances, as well as many social, economic, institutional and cultural transformations. In an increasingly interconnected world, these processes can be analyzed under several perspectives and in various scales, going from the local to the global. We invite scholars, from any nationality, who wish to contribute to this topic to submit their panel or paper ...