Ενημέρωση
The diffusion of education has been unevenly distributed in space and time, across as well as within countries. Economic historians have increasingly taken advantage of such variation across places to examine (i) the relationship between education and economic development and (ii) the determinants of schooling and human capital. Similar issues have been investigated by historians and historians of education, who have explored regional variations in schooling through analyses of national politics bringing about standardization and homogenization, and in studies of the local and regional contexts of education, shedding further lights on the complex settings that enabled the rise of mass schooling.
This workshop aims at promoting interdisciplinary perspectives on the individual, regional and cross-country differences in schooling and their change in the past and in the long run. This workshop will provide a platform where quantitative and qualitative contributions inform each other.
The Simon and Hallsworth fellowships are now open for application:
· Hallsworth Research Fellowship
· Hallsworth Research Fellowship in Chinese Political Economy
· Hallsworth Research Fellowship with focus on External Engagement and Impact
· Simon Research Fellowship
All of these are suitable for economic historians. Join our growing group at the Arthur Lewis Lab for Comparative Development!
Είναι με ιδιαίτερη οδύνη που τα μέλη της Ελληνικής Εταιρείας Οικονομικής Ιστορίας πληροφορηθήκαμε την απώλεια του Γιώργου Δερτιλή, Ακαδημαϊκού, ομότιμου Διευθυντή Σπουδών στην École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, ιδρυτικού μέλους και πρώτου Προέδρου του Διοικητικού Συμβουλίου της Εταιρείας μας.
Ο Γιώργος Δερτιλής με το ευρύ και σημαντικό έργο του και τη δράση του έπαιξε αποφασιστικό ρόλο στην ανανέωση της Ελληνικής ιστοριογραφίας μετά τη Μεταπολίτευση, τη θεσμική συγκρότηση, τον συγχρονισμό και την εξωστρέφεια της Οικονομικής και Κοινωνικής Ιστορίας στο Πανεπιστήμιο και τα Ερευνητικά ιδρύματα. Έχει δίκαια αναδειχτεί σε έναν από τους μείζονες ιστορικούς της γενιάς του και, πέρα από την ακαδημαϊκή κοινότητα, το έργο του έχει επιδραστικά επηρεάσει την πρόσληψη της σύγχρονης ιστορίας στον δημόσιο χώρο.
Ο Δερτιλής στάθηκε ένα υποδειγματικός δάσκαλος για τους φοιτητές του στο Πανεπιστήμιο Αθηνών και την École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, όπου υπηρέτησε, και ένας γενναιόδωρος μέντορας για τους νεαρούς συναδέλφους του από όλες τις θέσεις ευθύνης από τις οποίες κλήθηκε να συνεισφέρει στην επιστημονική έρευνα και ανάπτυξη. Στάθηκε μακρυά από θορυβώδεις δηλώσεις και μεγαλόστομες διακηρύξεις, αλλά ήταν πάντοτε παρών σε κάθε κομβική στιγμή της ακαδημαϊκής μας ιστορίας. Ο ρεαλισμός του δεν τον εμπόδισε να αναπτύξει και να υποστηρίξει ένα συλλογικό επιστημονικό όραμα, να θέσει και να επιδιώξει μακροπρόθεσμους στόχους που χάρη στην επίμονη δράση του έδωσαν συχνότατα ώριμα αποτελέσματα. Οι μαθητές, οι συνάδελφοι και οι ομότεχνοί του θα θυμόμαστε πάντοτε την ανιδιοτελή του προσφορά.
Η Ελληνική Εταιρεία Οικονομικής Ιστορίας εκφράζει τα βαθύτατα συλλυπητήριά της στους αγαπημένους του ανθρώπους.
Αθήνα 22 Φεβρουαρίου 2023
Το Δ.Σ. της Ελληνικής Εταιρείας Οικονομικής Ιστορίας
The scope of the topics we are interested in discussing at the conference is deliberately broad and seeks to address all aspects of interest to our institutions: the development and conservation of archives and collections, library management, initiatives in the digital humanities, issues related to research and links with researchers, projects related to the publication of books and journals. In addition to convening institutions (affiliated to IALHI or not) and specialists from the Global South, we also invite European and North American members of IALHI to contribute their reflections on these issues, based on their own experiences working with archival materials and colleagues from other regions.
The Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG) awards 8–10 fellowships for doctoral students in European history, the history of religion and other historical disciplines.
The IEG funds PhD projects on European history from the early modern period to contemporary history. We are particularly interested in projects with a comparative or cross-border approach, on European history in its relation to the wider world, or on topics of intellectual and religious history.
This special issue´s scope is to explore the methodological, ontological, and empirical strengths of microhistory to advance management history and organization studies. Therefore, we invite both theoretical, and theoretically informed empirical submissions that will further the contribution of microhistory in business history, management, and organizational history, as well as management and organization theory.
Special Issue in Management and Organizational History announcement: "Microhistory in Management History and Organization Theory", edited by Liv Egholm, Michael Heller, and Mick Rowlinson.
The aim of this conference is to bring together recent, evidence-based historical research on the role business and labor actors played in climate and environmental policies during the period that runs from the United Nation’s Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, in 1972, until the Conference of the Parties to be held in the United Arab Emirates in November this year. We invite submissions that focus attention on the political actions or social practices of individual corporations, CEOs, business organizations or federations, consultants, scientific experts, labor unions, workers’ coalitions, whistleblowers, etc. How did these corporate and labor actors react to the growing public attention given to human-made environmental degradation since the 1960s? How did they position themselves towards scientific evidence on climate change? What kind of transnational networks were established between actors in Europe or North America and groups in the Global South? In what circumstances did organized labor oppose the regulation of various types of pollution to the preservation of economic growth and jobs? What impact did neoliberal paradigms have on the integration of business actors into global climate governance? What strategies were put into place to influence regulations of air and water pollution on a national level? Were there conflicts between different business and labor actors on these strategies? How did lobbying influence the work of international organizations or domestic political processes? It is therefore not the history of technological innovation or management practices that is at the center of this conference, but that of power relations involving business and labor.
The Economic History Society, in conjunction with the Institute of Historical Research, offers up to three one-year postdoctoral Fellowships in economic and/or social history, tenable at the Institute from 1 October 2023. Fellows will not be required to be resident in London but should participate in the activities of the Institute by regular attendance at, and presentation of papers to, appropriate seminars – including the Fellows’ Seminar – and by giving information and help to fellow scholars working in the same field.
The French Institute of Demography is recruiting a post-doctoral researcher for the SocFace project to explore the database obtained from French censuses from 1836 to 1936.
Utrecht University's Economic and Social History group is seeking to appoint an assistant professor (tenured) focusing on historical inequality and technological change. Technological change in the broadest sense -- from simple mechanization to advanced digital technologies -- holds promises of increased productivity and consumption, but also influences social and economic inequalities and the sustainable development of labor markets and the environment. Understanding these long-term processes and their interplay, within and between different parts of the world, requires new data and methods, and the section wants to extend its research and teaching expertise in these directions.
This workshop “History and Social Sciences: debates in Economic History” aims at debating and deepening some of the main approaches in economic history. Addressed mainly to Ph.D. students and young researchers, is interdisciplinary in nature, reflecting the profound renewal in the field and in the relationship between history and social sciences: it encourages a collective scientific and methodological discussion on how History and Social Sciences relate to each other, and on research practices in different geographical contexts. This intention stems from the observation that each discipline–or area of specialization–perceives the others according to stereotypes in which none of them ultimately recognizes itself. The gap between “historical economics” and “narrative history” does not explain these differences in perception. The workshop will therefore integrate into the dialogue quantitative methods, as well as narrative analyses concerned with the social and cultural constructions around economic dynamics.
The selected candidates will have the opportunity to present and discuss their current research and to attend historiographical seminars held by specialists in the field.