Social Policy across Borders: Commonalities, Convergence and Paradoxes in Connectivity, 1850-1975

Social Policy across Borders: Commonalities, Convergence and Paradoxes in Connectivity, 1850-1975

Veranstalter
Martin Daunton, Trinity Hall, Cambridge Julia Moses, St John's College, Cambridge
Veranstaltungsort
Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Cambridge, 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge CB2 1RX, UK
Ort
Cambridge, UK
Land
United Kingdom
Vom - Bis
12.09.2008 - 13.09.2008
Deadline
05.09.2008
Von
Julia Moses

Foreign models play a critical role in contemporary debates about social policy. Politicians, journalists and experts frequently cite foreign models when seeking viable alternatives or when merely framing political arguments. The origins and functions of these policy models, however, remain little understood. This conference will investigate the widespread domestic, transnational and international communication about social policy since 1850. An international group of established scholars and advanced post-graduate students from a variety of disciplines have committed to explore global connections about social policy at this conference. More information, including the programme and link to registration, is available on the conference website.

Programm

Friday 12 September

9.00-9.25 Registration

9.25-9.30 Welcome and Introduction

9.30-10.30 Keynote Lecture (TBC)

10.30-11.00 Tea/coffee break

11.00-13.00 Transfers of Ideas about Society and Social Issues
Commentator: TBC

Timothy Smith (Queen's University, Canada)
Best Practices and Worst Stereotypes: How Nationals Learn from Other Nations

James Thompson (University of Bristol)

Lawrence Goldman (University of Oxford)

Daniel Rodgers (Princeton University)
Thick and Thin: Social Policy Clustering and Models of Society in Two Phases of US Transnational Politics, 1890 to 1914 and 1974 to the Present

13.00- 14.00 Lunch

14.00- 16.00 International Organisations and Universal Social Issues
Commentator: Pierre-Yves Saunier (CNRS, Lyon)

Sanjoy Bhattacharya (Wellcome Centre, UCL)
Troubled Transmissions, Unexpected Outcomes: World Health Organization networks, disease cotrol and eradication policies, and their impact on South Asia

Madeleine Herren (Heidelberg University)
Transcultural Bargaining with Trojan Horses: alternatives to the institutional history of international labour organisations?

Inderjeet Parmar (University of Manchester)
American philanthropic foundations and the Politics of International Knowledge Network-Construction in the Cold War

15.30 - 16.00 Tea/coffee break

16.00 - 18.00 Exchanges on the Economics of Social Welfare
Commentator: Frank Trentmann (Birkbeck College, University of London)

Martin Daunton (University of Cambridge)
Distributive Justice, Trade and Employment: Recreating the Global Economy after the Second World War

David Todd (University of Cambridge)
A Tool for Promoting Social Welfare or National Power: the Ambivalent Reception of British Free Trade in France and Germany , 1840-1870

Tamotsu Nishizawa (Institute of Economic Research, Hitotsubashi University)
Economics of Social Reform across the Borders: Germany, UK and Japan around 1900

19.00 for 19.30 Conference Dinner at Trinity Hall

Saturday 13 September

9.00-10.30 Exchanges within Federal States and across Empires
Commentator: Christopher Clark (University of Cambridge)

Eddy Rogers (University of Cambridge)
A ‘Most Imperial Contribution’: New Zealand and old-age pensions in Britain, 1898-1908

Erik Grimmer-Solem (Wesleyan University)
Reform Redux: the Second Life of the German Social Question in the Colonies, 1900-1918

10.30-11.00 Tea/coffee break

11.00-13.00 Transfers of Social Policy Ideas
Commentator: TBC

Maria-Sophia Quine (University of East Anglia)
Social Modernity Italian-Style: Welfare Policy from Liberalism to Fascism in Trans-national Perspective

Julia Moses (University of Cambridge)
Workplace Accidents, Transfers of Ideas and Convergence in European Welfare Policy, 1870-1930

Stein Kuhnle (Hertie School of Governance, Berlin)
The early formative years of Scandinavian welfare states and the impact of ideas from outside

13.00-14.00 Lunch

14.00-14.30 Concluding Panel Discussion

Kontakt

Julia Moses
St John's College, Cambridge CB2 1TP, UK
jmm75@cam.ac.uk

http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/184/