Deadline Extended: Call for Joint Sessions IASS/HES for Santiago 2024

The History of Economics Society will hold its 51st meeting (and 50th anniversary of the founding of the Society) from July 14 to 18, 2024 at the Universidad del Desarrollo, in Santiago, Chile.

We invite joint sessions IASS/HES.

Individual paper and session submissions should be emailed to Maria Pia Paganelli at mpaganel@trinity.eduThe deadline for submissions has been extended to March 15, 2024

For more information about the conference, please go to

https://historyofeconomics.org/2024-santiago

This will be the first time the History of Economics Society hosts its annual meeting in Latin America! We are excited about it. Santiago is easily connected to most European and American cities. Please remember it will be winter in the Southern Hemisphere, but temperatures usually range between 5-10C (40-50F). Chile is home to the Atacama Desert, Torre del Paine in Patagonia, and Easter Island, as well as many other natural and cultural attractions. See https://www.chile.travel/en/ or https://serviciosturisticos.sernatur.cl/ for detailed tourist information.

We are also happy to announce our 2024 plenary speakers: Geoffrey Sayre-McCord (Morehead-Cain Alumni Distinguished Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill and director of the PPE Society) and a celebration of Adam Smith at 301 with Sandra Peart (University of Richmond), Maria Alejandra Carrasco (Universidad de los Andes-Chile), and Leonidas Montes (director of Centro de Estudios Públicos and Professor at Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez).

An early bird registration fee of $150 will be available until May 31, 2024 midnight US Central time. The fee for regular attendants registering after this date will be $200. We are glad to offer discounted registration fees for students (early bird: $50/regular: $100) and scholars with insufficient institutional support (early bird: $100/regular: $150).

The Society has secured a preferential rate with the InterContinental Santiago hotel. Rooms will be available for conference participants from $120/night, breakfast included. A free shuttle service will be provided to transport participants between the hotel and the main conference site. The reception and banquet will be held at the InterContinental Santiago.

The opening reception will be on Sunday July 14th at a cost of $30. Scholars with insufficient institutional support can purchase tickets for $20, and students for $10.

The award banquet will be on Tuesday July 16th at a cost of $70. Scholars with insufficient institutional support can purchase tickets for $50, and students for $30.

On Thursday July 18th, we will offer a wine tour in a wonderful vineyard near Santiago. Prices will be announced soon.

There will be childcare facilities available upon request. For information, please contact Juan Pablo Couyoumdjian at jpc@udd.cl no later than May 31, 2024.

IASS 2024 Tokyo Conference Program Released

We are excited to release the conference program for our conference in Tokyo, Japan next month. You can find the conference program here or on the Conference web page. If you have not already, please register for the conference as soon as possible. The registration link is here.

Also, please see the conference web page for updated hotel information and transportation information. We look forward to seeing you all in Tokyo!

Call for Papers: ADAM SMITH AND THE DEBATES ON PRIMITIVE SOCIETIES AND THE ORIGIN OF LANGUAGES

Date and Time: 17 June 2024, Sorbonne University Paris

The 16th-century European encounter with a variety of societies and languages in the world led to a general debate about their origins, especially during the 18th century. Controversies broke out in many European countries about speech and the human mind, ‘wild’ languages, sociability and the difference between human beings and animals. Were the newly encountered peoples of Americas proof of the primitive and rude state of human beings? Were they the evidence of human nature uncorrupted by the evils of civilization? Were individuals living in these societies without government and private property unsociable and in a perpetual state of war, or were they able to exchange? Was the evidence of diversity in morals and social practices a challenge to the idea of a universal human nature? Was language a fruit of society or its origin? The Scottish thinkers placed particular emphasis on the relationship between living conditions, morality, and sociability, as well as on the idea that language grew alongside the historical development of mankind, instead of being a divine gift or a product of human design. For this reason, they were particularly interested in the ‘primitive’ forms of society and speech.

In 1767, Adam Smith published the essay Considerations concerning the First Formation of Languages. Precisely in the same period, he was turning his attention more deeply to political economy and beginning to write the Wealth of Nations, where speech was proposed as the possible origin of his famous ‘propensity to exchange’. In his Lectures on Jurisprudence, Smith was even clearer and linked propensity to exchange to the capacity of persuading others, whose moral foundation can be found in his Theory of Moral Sentiments

Even if it is recognised as a key issue for political economy in its early days, there are many open questions concerning the connection between sociability, language, and exchange in Smith’s thought. What precisely is the role of feelings, speech, and persuasion in economic exchange? Under what conditions can exchange be regarded as a communicative and non-violent interaction? Does Smith’s conjectural history of exchange in the “rude state of society” allow a new understanding of his theory of value?

The workshop is open to contributions by scholars and PhD students that intend to consider Smith’s thought in the historical and theoretical depth of the multidisciplinary debates in which he participated, as well as to contributions that discuss other thinkers and works related to the eighteenth-century debate on the origins and history of societies and languages. 

The workshop will feature the presence of Maria Pia Paganelli (Trinity University), Jennifer Pitts (University of Chicago), Michelle Schwarze (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Silvia Sebastiani (EHESS, Paris) and Marco E. L. Guidi (Università di Pisa) as discussants.

Papers may focus on, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Smith on speech, persuasion, and exchange
  • Scottish conjectural history and the inquiry into ‘primitive’ societies
  • The debate on primitive societies and the constitution of political economy as a science
  • The role of language in human sociability in the French and Scottish Enlightenment
  • Hobbes, Locke, Mandeville, Hume, Condillac, Rousseau, Ferguson, Turgot and Smith on the origins of languages and societies
  • Maupertuis, Formey, Herder and the debate around the Berlin Academy of Sciences
  • Travel narratives (Charlevoix, Lafitau, etc.) and the representations of ‘primitive’ societies and languages – Smith on colonialism

Please reply with an abstract of up to 200 words to Michele Bee (michele.bee@unisalento.it) by 31 March 2024.

The workshop is organised in the framework of the Marie Curie project ‘Rethinking Exchange’ (Department of Economics, University of Salento) in collaboration with PHARE (Sorbonne University), LexEcon project (Department of Economics and Management, University of Pisa) and the International Adam Smith Society (IASS).

For more information: michele.bee@unisalento.it / laurie.breban@univ-paris1.fr / francesca.daldegan@unipi.it jean.dellemotte@univ-paris1.fr / ivanprates@cedeplar.ufmg.br 

2nd Call for Joint Sessions: IASS at HES

The History of Economics Society will hold its 51st meeting (and 50th anniversary of the founding of the Society) from July 14 to 18, 2024 at the Universidad del Desarrollo in Santiago, Chile.

We invite joint sessions IASS/HES.

Individual paper and session submissions should be emailed to Maria Pia Paganelli at mpaganel@trinity.eduThe deadline for submissions is March 1, 2024

For more information about the conference, please go to

https://historyofeconomics.org/2024-santiago

This will be the first time the History of Economics Society hosts its annual meeting in Latin America! We are excited about it. Santiago is easily connected to most European and American cities. Please remember it will be winter in the Southern Hemisphere, but temperatures usually range between 5-10C (40-50F). Chile is home to the Atacama Desert, Torre del Paine in Patagonia, and Easter Island, as well as many other natural and cultural attractions. See https://www.chile.travel/en/ or https://serviciosturisticos.sernatur.cl/ for detailed tourist information.

We are also happy to announce our 2024 plenary speakers: Geoffrey Sayre-McCord (Morehead-Cain Alumni Distinguished Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill and director of the PPE Society) and a celebration of Adam Smith at 301 with Sandra Peart (University of Richmond), Maria Alejandra Carrasco (Universidad de los Andes-Chile), and Leonidas Montes (director of Centro de Estudios Públicos and Professor at Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez).

An early bird registration fee of $150 will be available until May 31, 2024 midnight US Central time. The fee for regular attendants registering after this date will be $200. We are glad to offer discounted registration fees for students (early bird: $50/regular: $100) and scholars with insufficient institutional support (early bird: $100/regular: $150).

The Society has secured a preferential rate with the InterContinental Santiago hotel. Rooms will be available for conference participants from $120/night, breakfast included. A free shuttle service will be provided to transport participants between the hotel and the main conference site. The reception and banquet will be held at the InterContinental Santiago.

The opening reception will be on Sunday July 14th at a cost of $30. Scholars with insufficient institutional support can purchase tickets for $20, and students for $10.

The award banquet will be on Tuesday July 16th at a cost of $70. Scholars with insufficient institutional support can purchase tickets for $50, and students for $30.

On Thursday July 18th, we will offer a wine tour in a wonderful vineyard near Santiago. Prices will be announced soon.

There will be childcare facilities available upon request. For information, please contact Juan Pablo Couyoumdjian at jpc@udd.cl no later than May 31, 2024.