Consortium on the Revolutionary Era

Call for Papers
Consortium on the Revolutionary Era, 1750-1850
Charleston, SC February 25-27, 2010

The Consortium on the Revolutionary Era, 1750-1850 (CRE) is a venue for the presentation of original reserach on not only the revolutionary history of Europe, but also the Atlantic World and beyond. We welcome proposals from allied disciplines and comparative studies; in short, the conference offers a platform for research into the revolutionary era broadly defined.

AAHANZBS

Call for Papers

Academic Association of Historians in Australian and New Zealand Business Schools (AAHANZBS)

Inaugural Conference

The Women's College, The University of Sydney

14-15 December 2009

Conference Organiser - Greg Patmore

The inaugural conference of AAHANZBS will provide an opportunity for researchers to present papers across the wide range of interests covered by the Association. We are interested in focussing on three themes:

(a) The role of historical research in developing theoretical perspectives in business and management;

20 Years After

20 Years After: Central and Eastern European Communist Regimes as a Shared Legacy - Prague 10/09
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Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, Prague, Czech Republic, Prague 06.10.2009-07.10.2009, Nostitz Palace, Prague, Czech Republic
Deadline: 10.07.2009

Worlds of Labor

Call for articles

Perseu: história, memória e política
Number 4, 2009 (Portuguese)

The Centro Sergio Buarque de Holanda (CSBH) was established by Fundação Perseu Abramo as a centre for Brazilian Worker's Party history and memory. It produces the review Perseu: história, memória e política a history peer-reviewed journal that diffuses researches and reflexions about the left political wing in Brazil and abroad.

Labour as resource

Call for papers

Labour as resource. Individuals, mobility and economic strategies in pre-industrial urban societies

Centre Maurice Halbwachs, CNRS/EHESS/ENS, Paris
February 11-13, 2010

Since 1980s, thanks to studies like Steven Kaplan's and Michael Sonenscher's ones, our comprehension of the pre-industrial work's organization has deeply changed. The role of guilds has been put into perspective, and many different kinds of "others" labours, beyond the guilds, have been detected and depicted.