Markets and Democracy: 2nd Lucerne Master Class for PhD Students, 2015

Markets and Democracy: 2nd Lucerne Master Class for PhD Students, 2015

Veranstalter
Universität Luzern
Veranstaltungsort
Ort
Luzern
Land
Switzerland
Vom - Bis
28.09.2015 - 02.10.2015
Deadline
30.04.2015
Website
Von
Lisa Schmalzried

The Scholar
WOLFGANG STREECK is Director emeritus and Professor at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, Germany. From 1988 to 1995 he was Professor of Sociology and Industrial Relations at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His latest publications include: Buying Time: The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism, London and New York: Verso Books, 2014; Politics in the Age of Austerity (ed., with Armin Schäfer), Cambridge: Polity Press 2013; Re-Forming Capitalism: Institutional Change in the German Political Economy, Oxford University
Press, 2009; and Beyond Continuity: Institutional Change in Advanced Political Economies (ed., with Kathleen Thelen), Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. His current research interests are crises and institutional change in the political economy of contemporary capitalism.

The Topic
Markets and democracy function differently: one dollar, one vote the former, one man/woman, one vote the latter. Democratic politics with its egalitarian bent adjusts market outcomes to collective ideas of social justice; whereas markets reward winners and punish losers. Historically capitalists favored markets, and workers suspected them of plotting to abolish democracy. Conversely, workers often opposed the market economy, and capitalists were afraid of electoral majorities replacing it, and private property rights as well, with state planning. It was only in the «mixed economy» of the two or three decades after the Second World War that markets and democracy seemed to be birds of a feather. Since the 1970s, however, their relationship has again become unsettled as the neoliberal revolution has begun to set markets free from democratic-redistributive intervention. Deregulation, privatization, globalization are the key words now, announcing the construction of a new economic order free from democratic politics and governed by non-political «expert» institutions like independent central banks and international organizations – a development that was accompanied by a long-term «post-democratic» decline in political participation and a parallel increase in economic inequality. The Master Class is open to discussing these and other aspects of the relationship between markets and democracy, in the past as well as at present.

Please provide a short statement of motivation (no more than one page), a CV and a short description (no more than one page) of your current dissertation project. Postdocs may be admitted on the basis of individual decision.

Cost
Tuition: 350 CHF

The organizing body of the Master Class, the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Lucerne, will cover all catering and accommodation expenses. We will try to cover travel expenses as well, however, this depends on the country of origin (for details please send an email to Nadja Miczek). If applicants can muster support from their respective home institution, this is welcome.

Programm

The Class
The class will begin on the 28th of September at 1.00 pm. The daily schedule will be from 9.00 am -12.30 pm and from 2.00-6.00 pm and on one evening (lecture&dinner) from 6.00-9.00 pm. There will be an afternoon for recreation in the Lucerne area. Participants will discuss Wolfgang Streeck’s recent work but also present and discuss their own projects.

Participants
The Master Class addresses doctoral students from disciplines such as Sociology, Cultural Studies, Political Science, Philosophy, Social Anthropology, Economics and Global Studies. Applications from international and EU doctoral students and doctoral students from Switzerland are welcomed.

Kontakt

Nadja Miczek

Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences; University of Lucerne, Frohburgstr.3, 6002 Luzern

nadja.miczek@unilu.ch


Redaktion
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Klassifikation
Weitere Informationen
Land Veranstaltung
Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Sprache der Ankündigung