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The History of Work Conference, Centre for Labour Studies, University of Malta, Valletta, 13.10.2023

This University of Malta one-day international and interdisciplinary symposium on The History of Work is inspired by the work of E.P. Thompson, and organised to coincide with the 60th anniversary of his foundational book, The Making of the English Working Class (1963).
It will take place on the 13th October 2023 at the Valletta Campus of the University, with further details to follow.

Ημερίδα "Αρχεία επιχειρήσεων στην Ελλάδα: διαθεσιμότητες και προοπτικές", Εθνικό Ίδρυμα Ερευνών, Αθήνα, 20 Οκτωβρίου 2023

Η Ελληνική Αρχειακή Εταιρεία και η Ελληνική Εταιρεία Οικονομικής Ιστορίας διοργανώνουν, με τη συνεργασία του Ινστιτούτου Ιστορικών Ερευνών - ΕΙΕ, ημερίδα με τίτλο "Αρχεία επιχειρήσεων στην Ελλάδα: διαθεσιμότητες και προοπτικές", την Παρασκευή 20 Οκτωβρίου (ώρες 9:00-19:00) στο Αμφιθέατρο «Λεωνίδας Ζέρβας» του Εθνικού Ιδρύματος Ερευνών (Βασ. Κωνσταντίνου 48, Αθήνα).

Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in Modern Greek Studies, School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh

With generous support from the A. G. Leventis Foundation, the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh is pleased to invite applications for an open-ended Lectureship/Senior Lectureship in Modern Greek Studies. Applications are welcome from specialists in any area of Greek history, literature or culture from 1453 to the present. 

« L’objet précieux : un fait social total ? », Colloque international issu d’une coopération EHESS-Cartier, Paris, 25-26.4.2024

L’objet précieux, et plus particulièrement le bijou, suscitent, au fil des siècles et des espaces, des réactions qui se réitèrent et se répondent, malgré la variation des contextes, des époques et des lieux. En effet, si la réprobation pour les notions de dissipation et de luxe – souvent ostentatoires – est récurrente depuis l’Antiquité déjà (Pline l’Ancien), l’action bénéfique de l’objet précieux est également revendiquée, sur la base de plusieurs raisons : esthétiques, symboliques, religieuses et économiques. L’objet précieux est à la fois un agalma resplendissant et digne d’admiration ; une offrande pour les dieux ou pour les morts, dont la valeur doit être proportionnelle à la dignité des destinataires ; un symbole de statut, de pouvoir, d’alliance et de fidélité, dans lequel des valeurs culturelles sont condensées ; un héritage social ou familial, à la fois véhicule et gage de la transmission et de la tradition ; un inspirateur de la création artistique et du développement des techniques ; enfin l’un des éléments d’échange privilégiés dans l'économie du don, voire un moteur de l’économie, comme il est souligné par plusieurs auteurs tout au long de la réflexion occidentale sur le luxe, de Bernard de Mandeville à Jean-Baptiste Say, à Werner Sombart et bien d’autres.

Επίκουρος Καθηγητής στο γνωστικό αντικείμενο: Διεθνική Ελληνική και Ευρωπαϊκή Ιστορία του 19ου αιώνα, Τμήμα Πολιτικής Επιστήμης και Ιστορίας, Πάντειο Πανεπιστήμιο Κοινωνικών & Πολιτικών Επιστημών

We inform you that a new position has been entered in the Apella information system:

Title: Επίκουρος καθηγητής
Code: APP35875
Organization: Panteio University of Social and Political Sciences
School: Political Science and History
Department/Institute: Political Science and History
Discipline: Διεθνική Ελληνική και Ευρωπαϊκή Ιστορία του 19ου αιώνα

Call for Session Proposals: 20th World Economic History Congress "Equality and Sustainability Challenges", Lund (Sweden), 28.7-1.8.2025

The 20th World Economic History Congress will convene from 28 July to 1 August 2025 in Lund, Sweden. The theme for the Congress is Equality and Sustainability Challenges, which highlights some of the central issues facing humanity today and also connects to a broad and diverse range of historical problems. To address both the challenges and to find insights from the historical record for that endeavor, a range of perspectives will be necessary.

Doctoral student in Economic History "Sustainable rural communities", Department of Economic History, LUSUM, Lund University

The Department of Economic History, Lund University, is advertising a fully funded four-year position as a PhD student, starting 15 January 2024. The project conserns sustainable rural communities with a specific focus on water resources in arid parts of Colombia.

The project aims to enhance the sustainable, resilient, and fair development of rural and dispersed communities living in dry areas of Colombia, where the climate-water-biodiversity interactions have become a challenge for human well-being and nature. Climate change threatens natural processes for water systems and accelerates biodiversity loss. Similarly, biodiversity loss and water scarcity has exacerbated the negative impacts of climate change on nature. Should future consequences of climate change mirror these effects, the negative impact on human and natural life may be irreversible (IPCC, 2023).

Datini-ESTER Advanced Seminar 2024: ‘Social and Geographical Mobility’

Fondazione Istituto Internazionale di Storia Economica “F. Datini” and the European School for Training in Economic and Social Historical Research (ESTER) will organise their seventh jointly-organized Datini-ESTER Advanced Seminar for economic and social historians on 12-18 May 2024, in Prato (Italy) on the theme of ‘Social and Geographical Mobility’.

Call for Research Papers 2023-2025: "Risk Management, Insolvency, and Bankruptcy in the Pre-Modern World (13th-18th Centuries)", Fondazione Istituto Internazionale di Storia Economica Francesco Datini

The economic history of pre-modern risk and its management is undergoing a scholarly resurgence stimulated by active interdisciplinary engagement with legal, social, and cultural histories. The three concepts of 'risk', 'insolvency', and 'bankruptcy' are central to this topic, providing ample scope for contributions across medieval and early modern Europe and multiple opportunities for comparative links that encompass the Islamic world and the European colonial experiences.

The focus of this Datini Study Week is the interface between the normative aspect of risk, insolvency, and bankruptcy, and their practical implementation as investigated through analyses of daily practices and the tools and strategies of risk management. Particular attention will be paid to the regulation of financial transactions within states, across political borders, and at the intersection of different legal systems. The conceptual framework we propose is one that acknowledges the connection of insolvency and bankruptcy to both 'financial' and 'economic' risks, taking into consideration the analytical separation that exists between the two and how practical solutions for their management overlap.

Third International Conference of the Center of Maritime History "Insular and Maritime Societies in the Mediterranean, Black and Red Seas (15th–20th c.)", IMS/FORTH, Rethymno, 3-5 November 2023

Insular and Maritime Societies in the Mediterranean, Black and Red Seas is the Third International Conference in Maritime History organised by the Center of Maritime History, in the Institute for Mediterranean Studies (IMS/FORTH), in Rethymnon.

To be be held in person at the Institute for Mediterranean Studies (IMS/FORTH) in Rethymnon, Crete, from November 3-5 2023.

The Geneva Graduate Institute PhD scholarships

The Geneva Graduate Institute offers fully-funded PhD scholarships to students who wish to write their dissertations in economic history, with particular emphasis in financial history. Depending on interest and background, students can apply through the International Economics or the International History PhDs.

Alfred D. Chandler Jr. Travel Fellowships

The purpose of this fellowship is to facilitate library and archival research in business or economic history. Individual grants range from $1,000 to $3,000. Three categories of applicants will be eligible for grants: 1) Harvard University graduate students in history, economics, or business administration, whose research requires travel to distant archives or repositories; 2) graduate students or nontenured faculty in those fields from other universities, in the U.S. and abroad, whose research requires travel to Baker Library and other local archives; and 3) Harvard College undergraduates writing senior theses in these fields whose research requires travel away from Cambridge.


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Action and update of the Greek Economic History Association website, is funded by the Ioannis S.Latsis Public Benefit Foundation, under the 2016 Support Program for Scientific Companies