CfP: Global Inequalities: Historical, Economic and Interdisciplinary Perspectives (Event, 01/2020, Berlin); bis: 15.12.2019

John F. Kennedy Institute (Web)

Time: 20.01.2020
Veneu: John F. Kennedy Institute Berlin
Proposals by: 15.12.2019

Canvassing past, present, and future manifestations of global inequalities, this conference seeks to examine global inequalities from an interdisciplinary perspective. Inequality is an important theme of the 21st century extending from the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals to social protest movements, transnational activism relating to human rights, calls for climate justice, or global policies addressing poverty and processes of social marginalization and exclusion.

Newer research has increasingly addressed such issues over the last years, but, the conference’s organizers argue, may benefit from an interdisciplinary dialogue that connects current approaches in the social sciences with a longer historical perspective: How can we conceptualize global inequality today and in historical hindsight? What can be done about global inequalities today – and what did historical actors do about them in the past? How, when, why, and in what shape did global inequalities emerge in the course of history and what do historical studies add to understanding inequalities today? What, in turn, do newer approaches in the social sciences offer for the historical study of global inequalities?

Inviting for interdisciplinary conversations, the organizers are looking for contributions from scholars as well as MA and PhD students of Social Science, History, Economics, Political Science, Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, Anthropology, Area Studies, and related fields. Conference participants are asked to submit papers that study inequality on a local, regional, global, or comparative scale. Read more … (PDF)