CFP: International Seminar on Asia and Pacific Economies

21 01 2015
AS: Will there ever be something resembling the European Union in East Asia? If so, what would be the implications for business strategy? What is the current state of regional economic integration? If you do research related to these questions, or on the issue of financial inclusion, you may be interested in this CFP for a workshop that will take place at the University of Liverpool’s campus in China  Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University (XJTLU).
 
Call for Papers
XJTLU and ADBI announces
3rd seminar on Asia and Pacific Economies
May 8-9, 2015
Suzhou, China

We invite submission of papers for a 2 day seminar on topics related to Asia and Pacific economies. We are looking for original research papers in the field of economic integration issues that are theoretical, empirical and experimental in nature. This year, Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI) joins Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University (XJTLU) with a special session on financial inclusion that emphasizes the scope of the research agenda on economic integration.

International Business School Suzhou (IBSS) at XJTLU welcomes this collaboration with ADBI.



Theme of the seminar: Economic integration
The central theme of the seminar is economic integration related to Asia & Pacific studies and the Chinese economy. The Asia Pacific region has experienced market-oriented reforms, openness and globalization, economic regionalization, cross-border interactions, integration, etc., which underpin the first facet of the seminar theme. Topics include trade, foreign investment, finance, macroeconomics and exchange rates as well as international economic relations.

The central role of China in this process as the world’s biggest exporter and the world’s second largest economy underpins the second facet. The Chinese economy may be explored, including trade related aspects, economic agglomeration, public policy and domestic integration. 
 
 
ADBI Special Session: New Frontiers in Financial Inclusion, Regulation and Education
Financial inclusion is becoming a mainstream aspect of policies for inclusive and sustainable growth in emerging economies.  Expansion of financial access, either through development of innovative institutions or technologies, requires concomitant development and extensions of financial regulation to ensure financial stability and protection of financial service users, while financial education can improve the ability of lower-income households and small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) to take advantage of improved access to financial products and services. The objective of this session is to disseminate recent works and to organize a discussion platform on relevant financial inclusion, regulation and education issues in Asia & Pacific and across other regions.  It will provide background studies, both from academic and policy viewpoints. 
 
 
Objectives:
The objectives of the seminar are: 

• to build a network of researchers in the area of Asia and Pacific economic studies.

• to provide a forum for presenting research papers and developing joint research.

• to lay the foundations for the formation of the proposed research centre at XJTLU.



Organizing Committee:
Yang Chen, Lecturer, IBSS, XJTLU

Peter Morgan, Senior Consultant for Research, ADBI

Paulo Regis, Associate Professor, IBSS, XJTLU

Nimesh Salike, Lecturer, IBSS, XJTLU



Submissions:
Abstracts (250 words or less) must be submitted to econseminar@xjtlu.edu.cn no later than March 10, 2015 as Word document containing a title, name and affiliation of the author(s), contact information and the appropriate field (JEL classification). However, early applications with a full paper are preferred. The working language of the seminar will be English. Only papers written in English will be considered. If two authors or more, please identify who will be attending. The author(s) of the selected papers will be notified by the end of March or earlier. A full draft paper will be required for the workshop, and should be submitted by April 10, 2015.

Authors would be required to make a 30 minutes presentation. One discussant per paper would comment on the paper and lead the discussion. 



Funding:
We provide economy-class transport (international or domestic) to Suzhou and three nights accommodation for participants from East Asia. Participants from other locations may apply for partial funding. 



Dates: 
May 8 (Friday) and May 9 (Saturday) 2015

Venue: Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou, China

Submission Deadline: Abstract (March 10, 2015); Full paper (April 10, 2015)

Language: English 
 




ESRC SWDTC Studentship: British Corporate Finance, 1945-65

15 01 2015

AS: the University of Exeter has funding to allow someone to do a PhD on British corporate finance. Looks like a pretty sweet package. Details below.

The University of Exeter is pleased to be offering a total of up to 20 ESRC funded 1+3 or +3 studentships as part of theSouth West Doctoral Training Centre for entry in 2015-16. Within the DTC, the Business School  is currently inviting applications for ‘British Corporate Finance, 1945-65’. This project is one of a number that are in competition for funding. Studentships will be awarded on the basis of merit and strategic fit with the aims of the DTC.

For eligible UK/EU students the full time studentship will cover fees and an annual Research Council stipend of approximately £13,863 (2014/2015 rate) for up to three years (+3 PhD award) or four years (1+3 Masters + PhD award).

Supervisors:

Mark Billings

Professor Lynne Oats

The supervisors can be contacted on M.Billings@exeter.ac.uk for further details of the project and for support in completing the research proposal.

Project Description:

This project aims to explore the development of British corporate finance during the intense period of activity which followed World War Two.  The collaborative partner in the project will be Schroders plc, the FTSE 100 global investment and wealth management business, which can trace its origins to the early nineteenth century and in the postwar period was one of the leading merchant banks which were instrumental in the reshaping of British business and financial innovation.  Access to Schroders’ records covering a wide range of industrial and commercial clients from the period 1945-65 will provide a primary research source hitherto unavailable. It is anticipated that using appropriate quantitative and qualitative methods these records will yield new insights into financial innovation, market mechanisms such as underwriting arrangements and the pricing of new and seasoned equity and bond issues, the market for corporate control in the postwar merger boom, the advisory and deal-making role of merchant banks, financial and business networks, and the influence of taxation on corporate decision-making. Access to the primary research records will be at the partner’s City of London headquarters, under the supervision of the partner’s corporate archivist, so a successful applicant must be willing to reside within reasonable travelling distance of this location for a significant part of the studentship.

The SWDTC Admissions Statement gives full details of the selection criteria and entry requirements.

Academic entry requirements: For the 1+3 programme students must have a strong first degree (at least an Upper Second Class Honours or equivalent) in a relevant discipline. Candidates for the +3 programme must, in addition, have (or be about to complete) a research Masters degree in a relevant discipline or have equivalent research training. Personal qualities should include the ability to work independently and the motivation necessary to complete a PhD in three years. . A successful applicant is likely to have significant prior study in at least one of the following areas: business, economic or financial history; economics; finance.

Residency entry requirements: These studentships will be funded by the ESRC and are available to UK nationals and other EU nationals who have resided in the UK for three years prior to commencing the studentship. If you meet the criteria, funding will be provided for tuition fees and stipend. If you are a citizen of an EU member state and don’t meet the residency requirement you will be eligible for a fees-only award. For further guidance about eligibility please refer to Annex 1 of the ESRC Postgraduate Funding Guide.





CFP: Taylor’s World

14 01 2015

On September 24th and 25th, 2015, Stevens Institute of Technology will be hosting a conference on the life and legacy of F.W. Taylor, a graduate of Stevens who is widely recognized as the father of scientific management. The event marks the centennial of Taylor’s death in 1915, and will explore both Taylor’s place in history and his legacy in the 21st century. We welcome proposals for either individual papers or full panels.

Potential topics include but are in no way limited to:

  • Taylor’s influence on contemporary management practice
  • The movement of Taylor’s ideas around the globe
  • Vestiges of Taylorism in digital media and labor, including Digital Turking and other forms of crowd sourcing
  • The place of organized labor, race, gender, and sexuality in Taylor’s thought and work
  • Taylor’s place in intellectual and cultural history
  • Taylor’s influence on sports technologies, especially golf and tennis
  • The effect of Taylorism on business strategy and technological change

Stevens Institute of Technology is located in Hoboken, NJ, directly across the Hudson River from New York City. Founded in 1870, Stevens students, faculty, and partners leverage their collective real-world experience and culture of innovation, research and entrepreneurship to confront global challenges in engineering, science, systems and technology management.

In 1933, Stevens Institute of Technology held a Fiftieth Anniversary celebration of the graduation of Frederick Winslow Taylor. At that time his family, friends and associates presented personal mementos, books, documents and graphic material to Stevens in his memory. It was an important occasion to which many close friends and associates came to honor him. Upon the death of Dr. Taylor’s widow, his sons, Dr. Kempton P.A. Taylor and Mr. Robert P.A. Taylor, presented the Taylor archive to Stevens in 1949.

Please submit proposals for papers or panels by 1 March 2015, by filling out submission proposal form. Paper proposals should be 250–500 words; panel proposals should collect individual paper abstracts of that same length and also include a brief description of the panel’s overarching theme. Panel proposals may also suggest possible commentators.

All other inquiries about the conference can be sent to Leah Loscutoff, lloscuto@stevens.edu.





Rick Salutin on Macdonald 200

10 01 2015

Canadians are today marking the 200th anniversary of the birth of Sir John A. Macdonald. Journalist Rick Salutin has some wise words about how to remember him.





CFP: Managing the Past: The Role of Organizational Archives

9 01 2015

ESRC Seminar Series
Organizations and Society:
Historicising the theory and practice of organization analysis (Seminar 1)

Wednesday 18 March 2015
Aston Business School, Birmingham

Keynote: Professor Roy Suddaby, (University of Victoria & Newcastle Business School)
“The professionalization of the corporate archivist”
Guest Speakers
· Alistair McKinlay (Nottingham Business School)
· Maria Sienkiwicz (Barclays Bank, Group Archivist)
· Roundtable “The Theory & Practice of Archiving”, organized by Michael Anson (Business Archives Council and Bank of England) & Margaret Procter (Liverpool University Centre for Archive Studies)

Call for Papers

We invite contributions that reflect the general theme of the seminar, how the past is managed in organizations, and how the theory and practice of archiving reflects the organizational engagement with the past. Potential themes include, but are not limited to:
· Archives as organizational memory?
· Managing organizational pasts – assets and dark secrets
· Safeguarding organizational heritage – the Wedgwood Collection & beyond
· Heritage, brands & national identities
· The professionalization of archivists and history managers
· Digital humanities and the organization

If you would like to present a paper at the seminar, please submit a 500-word abstract to s.decker@aston.ac.uk by 31 January 2015. Decisions will be communicated by 16 February 2015.
Registration is free. Lunch & refreshments will be provided. You can register without presenting a paper. Please contact m.podsiadly@aston.ac.uk to register.

Travel & accommodation should be covered by the participants. On campus accommodation is available; please see http://www.conferenceaston.co.uk/ for further information. Aston University is located in the city centre of Birmingham, within ten minutes’ walk from Birmingham New Street Train Station, Birmingham Snow Hill Station, and Birmingham Moor Street Station.

About the ESRC seminar series

The seminar series aims create a platform for European research on organizational analysis, heritage and reflective societies. All events revolve around three interlinked themes: archiving and archival research as resources for organizational analysis, organizational remembering as an alternative theoretical approach, and emerging methodologies that challenge organizational histories. For this series we have invited leading international scholars and invite new research through regular calls for papers. During these one day events there will be sufficient time to discuss ongoing research with leading scholars and journal editors from different disciplines. Several special issues are planned in relation to the themes of the seminar series.

For further enquiries please contact the organising team: Professor Stephanie Decker (Aston Business School), Professor Michael Rowlinson (Queen Mary University London), Professor John Hassard (Manchester Business School).





Conference Programme: Sir John A. Macdonald: Son of Glasgow, Father of Canada

6 01 2015

Sir John A. Macdonald:

Son of Glasgow, Father of Canada

City Chambers, George Square, Glasgow,

Saturday 10 January 2015

1.00pm-6.00pm, followed by Civic Dinner

Keynote speaker: Professor Sir Tom Devine

 

The historical connections between Scotland and Canada have long been celebrated. This conference brings together a diversity of perspectives for an evaluation of the life and legacy of Sir John A. Macdonald who was born in January 1815 in Glasgow.

12.00-1.00pm – Lunch

1.00pm – Welcome

1.15pm-2.30pm – Professor Ged Martin on Macdonald, Glasgow and Canada (to be read by Professor Alan Hallsworth)

2.30-4.00pm – Panel 1 – Macdonald as Politician, Businessman and Statesman

Session chaired by Professor Faye Hammill, University of Strathclyde

Randy Boswell (Carleton University) – ‘Macdonald’s Mouthpiece’ – Glasgow-born David Creighton and The Empire newspaper

Andrew Smith (University of Liverpool Management School)* and Laurence B. Mussio (McMaster University) – Sir John A Macdonald, the Canadian Military-Commercial Complex and the Preservation of the Capitalist Peace in the Civil War era, 1861-1871

Ed Whitcomb (independent scholar) – Sir John A. Macdonald: Warts and All

 

4.00-4.30pm refreshments break

4.30-6.00pm – Panel 2 – Macdonald as Emigrant, Favourite Son and Contested Icon

Session chaired by Dr John Young, University of Strathclyde

Stephen Mullen (University of Glasgow) – Macdonald’s Glasgow

Rosie Spooner (University of Glasgow) – Great Grains and Monolithic Minerals: Building a Canadian Nation at Glasgow’s International Exhibitions

Dawn Westwater (Brock University, Ontario) – The Controversy of Commemoration: Sir John A. Macdonald and his Debated Legacy

6.30pm – Civic Reception and Dinner courtesy of The Lord Provost, Glasgow City Council – with after-dinner speech by Sir Tom Devine on ‘The Scottish factor in Canadian history’

This event is organised under the auspices of the British Association for Canadian Studies (BACS) and with the support of the Canadian High Commission and Glasgow City Council.

‘Macdonald, Glasgow and Canada’ – Ged Martin (to be read by Alan Hallsworth)

 

Abstract:

This talk examines Sir John A. Macdonald’s contribution to Canadian politics – particularly the Confederation, 1864-67 – as well as personal and professional controversies such as marriages, alcohol and the Pacific scandal of 1873. This paper will also examine the debates surrounding the birthplace of Macdonald in Glasgow and assess the case for the two areas assumed to be the spot. Further, Macdonald’s identity as a Scotsman, Canadian or Canadian-Scot will be scrutinised as well as his relationship with fellow Scots in Canada and his contested legacy.

Biographies:

Ged Martin studied at Cambridge, where he took First Class Honours in History in 1967, and completed his PhD in 1972. He was President of the Cambridge Union Society in 1968, and a Research Fellow of Magdalene College, 1970-72. He spent the next five years as a Research Fellow in History at the Australian National University in Canberra, and in 1977 was appointed to a lectureship at University College Cork. Director of the Centre of Canadian Studies at the University of Edinburgh from 1983, Ged Martin became a Reader in History in 1994, and in 1996 received the United Kingdom’s first permanent Chair in Canadian Studies. He also served from 1993 to 1997 as Deputy Director of the University’s International Social Sciences Institute. Since 2001 he has lived in Ireland. Ged Martin is an Emeritus Professor of the University of Edinburgh. He is also an honorary Adjunct Professor of History at the National University of Ireland Galway, and at the University of the Fraser Valley, British Columbia.

 

Professor emeritus Alan Hallsworth has a 40 year research record in both the service sector and the study of Canada. He graduated with a research Masters from Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, in 1971 and has since lectured at Universities including Surrey and Manchester Business School. He has been external examiner to degree programmes at Stirling and Glasgow Caledonian Universities. He has also served as President, Secretary and Treasurer of the British Association for Canadian Studies and a nine-year term on the Board of the Foundation for Canadian Studies. He is a past holder of the Prix du Quebec. He has co-published on Canadian topics with colleagues in BC, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec in journals such as The British Journal of Canadian Studies and The London Journal of Canadian Studies. He has been a regular contributor to the annual EUROPA Yearbook on The USA and Canada.

‘Macdonald’s Mouthpiece’ – Glasgow-born David Creighton and The Empire newspaper’ – Randy Boswell (Carleton University)

Abstract:

Recent revelations regarding John A. Macdonald’s birthplace in Glasgow (see attached news article by this writer) have shone a spotlight on The Empire newspaper, a Toronto-based publication founded in 1887 by Macdonald and other top Conservatives in Canada miffed at the perceived Liberal bias of the city’s two other main newspapers, The Mail and The Globe. Notably, Macdonald entrusted the job of publishing this new, aggressively pro-Conservative organ to David Creighton, a fellow native Glaswegian who emigrated to Canada at age 12 in 1855. This presentation would explore the significance of the Scottish connection between Creighton and Macdonald, the nature of partisan journalism in Canada during the post-Confederation era and the specific influence of both Creighton and The Empire in Canadian politics — particularly during the hard-fought 1891 election that Macdonald won but which, in his own mind and in Creighton’s, came at the cost of his health. Macdonald died just a few months after the vote. An Empire “memorial album” published after Macdonald’s death in June 1891 is now one of the earliest and strongest pieces of evidence suggesting that the future Father of Confederation was born at Brunswick Place in downtown Glasgow, though this long-forgotten document was only recently injected into today’s birthplace debate. Creighton, who also ran the Owen Sound Times newspaper and served as an opposition Conservative member in the Ontario legislature from 1875 to 1890, was widely viewed in those roles — but especially in his position as publisher of The Empire — as Macdonald’s mouthpiece. He has never been the subject of any extensive scholarly examination.

Biography:

Randy Boswell is an Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ont., Canada and freelance journalist, Toronto-based Postmedia News

‘Sir John A. Macdonald, Canadian Business, and the Preservation of the Capitalist Peace in the North Atlantic Triangle in the Civil War Era, 1861-1871’ – Andrew Smith (University of Liverpool),* and Laurence B. Mussio (McMaster University)

 

Abstract:

This paper re-examines Macdonald’s place in the history of the North Atlantic triangle by drawing on the literature of the theory of the capitalist peace. The 1860s were a turning point in the relationships between Britain, the United States, and Canada. In the 1860s, the British Empire and the United States came to the brink of war. Canadians were especially concerned that the Anglo-American War of 1812-1815 might be repeated, this time with a deadlier generation of weapons. This article shows that Macdonald played an active and important role in relations between the United States and the British Empire during a tumultuous period surrounding the American Civil War. The paper relates Macdonald’s actions as a statesman to his private interests as a businessman. The paper therefore helps to re-discover a forgotten aspect of Macdonald’s career- his private business activities. The paper discussed Macdonald’s response to British plans for the remilitarization of the Canada-US border and the Great Lakes, the bodies of water shared by the two countries. The paper then examines Macdonald’s response to Edward Cardwell’s plan to withdraw most British troops from Canada.  This paper is based on a wide range of primary sources, including contemporary newspapers and pamphlets, parliamentary speeches, the correspondence of government officials, as well as documents in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom. The Macdonald papers have, of course, been used.

 

Biography:

Andrew Smith is based in the Management School, University of Liverpool.

Laurence B. Mussio is based in Communication Studies and Multimedia, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. Canada.

 

 

‘Sir John A. Macdonald: Warts and All’ – Ed Whitcomb (Independent scholar)

 

Abstract:

Sir John A. is definitely one of the ten most important people in Canadian history, arguably the number one person, though his long career also produced many mistakes.  Canadian nationalists emphasize his achievements and ignore the mistakes – they make him a super-hero because a nation needs heroes and they agree with the goals he pursued.  But there is no need to ignore the negative, because, even with the warts, John A. is still one of the most important Canadians ever. This paper will cover the achievements AND the mistakes.  John A. is frequently described as THE Father of Confederation.  But Confederation consisted of two developments, the union of the colonies, for which he made the greatest contribution, and the adoption of federalism, which he opposed.  Macdonald never abandoned the attempt to make Canada a unitary state, a policy that reflected the fact that Scottish culture flourished in unitary Great Britain.  His greatest achievements included rounding out the Dominion to include BC, PEI, and the prairies, maintaining independence from the USA, making the new federal system work, and building a transcontinental economy.  The mistakes include two unnecessary rebellions, the execution of Louis Riel, putting the CPR over the wrong mountain pass, attempting to undermine responsible government in the provinces, needless fights with Ontario, and the unequal treatment of all provinces which produced unfairness, resentment, and the pattern of asymmetrical federalism that has bedevilled the country since 1867.  But warts and all, he remains Canada’s greatest Prime Minister.

 

Biography:

Ed Whitcomb holds a Ph.D. from University College London and has written histories of all of Canada’s provinces. He is currently writing a history of federal -provincial relations.

 

 

‘Macdonald’s Glasgow’ – Stephen Mullen (University of Glasgow)

 

Abstract:

This paper illuminates ‘Macdonald’s Glasgow’- a five year period from Sir John A. Macdonald’s birth in 1815 until the family emigrated to Quebec in 1820. A case study of the Macdonald family is placed in both a regional and international context: social and economic conditions in commercial Glasgow, migration from the Highlands to the city as well as emigration from the Clyde to the Canadas after the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815. Finally, the Macdonald family journey across the Atlantic and the processes that facilitated such emigration is examined.

 

Biography:

Stephen Mullen is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Glasgow. He has published on Glasgow connections with the New World in the colonial period.

 

 

‘Great Grains and Monolithic Minerals: Building a Canadian Nation at Glasgow’s International Exhibitions’ – Rosie Spooner (University of Glasgow)

 

Abstract:

Described by historian Paul Greenhalgh as the “extraordinary cultural spawn of industry and empire”, International Exhibitions served as platforms for the display of objects, the movement of people, and the dissemination of ideas across the British Empire and beyond. In the late-nineteenth century these highly popular and dynamic events sprung up in cities all over the world. Despite being the so-called ‘Second City of the Empire’, Glasgow only hosted its first exhibition in 1888. Given the strength of the historic links between Scotland and Canada – represented by figures like Sir John A. Macdonald, as well as countless other Scots who worked, traveled and settled there – it was a priority to secure Canadian participation. As one of the exhibition’s organisers stressed to the government’s representative in Glasgow, “I venture to hope from the intimate relations, commercial and personal, subsisting between your colony and this part of the Empire, that…we may receive your hearty support and co-operation.” This paper considers the relationship between Scotland and Canada, looking at how it played out at the International Exhibitions Glasgow hosted in the late-Victorian period. Specifically, it examines how Canadian authorities used these exhibitions to construct and promote a burgeoning sense of unique national identity. Although Canada was the empire’s largest Dominion territory, in some senses it remained a young country, having only achieved federal unity in 1867. As such, this paper addresses some of the legacies of Confederation, adding to analyses of this decisive political moment by framing the unification of Canada as a complex and on-going cultural process.

 

Biography:

Originally from Toronto, Rosie Spooner is a Ph.D. candidate in Art History at the University of Glasgow. Examining the material culture of empire, her research focuses on the circulation of objects, people and ideas between Britain and Canada through the mechanisms of the International Exhibition, exploring how varied and complex colonial, national and imperial identities interacted at events staged between the 1880s and the 1930s. Her developing curatorial practice brings together historic and contemporary objects, artworks and exhibitionary models in an effort to re-frame these categories, issues which similarly underpin her academic research.

 

 

‘The Controversy of Commemoration: Sir John A. Macdonald and his Debated Legacy’

– Dawn Westwater (Brock University)

 

Abstract:

Controversy has recently grown in Canada surrounding the commemoration of the approaching bicentennial of the birth of the country’s first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald. Debate about the commemoration centres on the argument that some of the political legacies which have come to characterize Macdonald as a historical figure, are not necessarily positive, and therefore should not be ignored in favour of his remembrance. The two main positions on this controversy highlight questions about how historical figures should be commemorated and whether individuals, like Macdonald, should be judged by modern standards of ‘politically correct’ or acceptable behaviours, or by the views and opinions that were current and acceptable in their own time. Questions have recently been asked in newspaper and magazine articles by various citizens about whether or not it is appropriate or fitting to be perpetuating the legacy of an arguably ‘racist’ individual. If Sir John A. Macdonald’s legacy in Canada remains one of the longest and most significant in the nation’s history, then why has controversy plagued the process of commemoration of his life? This paper will examine how modern politics and social standards are effecting popular attitudes toward the potential commemoration of the founding father of the nation of Canada and will question the division among citizens in pondering whether Canadians’ struggle to share a cohesive view of their collective history is in part based on a tendency to judge historical figures by modern standards.

 

Biography:

Dawn Westwater is a currently a Master of Arts (History) candidate at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. She is studying mid-twentieth century Canadian social history with a research topic of gender and alcohol and the post-war shift toward the social acceptance of women consuming alcohol as an act of leisure.





Sven Beckert and Cotton

31 12 2014

In the twenty-first century, it is rare for books by academic historians to generate a buzz in the mainstream media. That’s largely a reflection of the narrow research focus of most history professors.  However, Sven Beckert’s epic new global history of cotton has succeeded in generating lot of attention. The book has been favourably reviewed by Slate, the New York Times,  and the Economist.

Here is the description of the book on the publisher’s website

The epic story of the rise and fall of the empire of cotton, its centrality to the world economy, and its making and remaking of global capitalism.

Cotton is so ubiquitous as to be almost invisible, yet understanding its history is key to understanding the origins of modern capitalism. Sven Beckert’s rich, fascinating book tells the story of how, in a remarkably brief period, European entrepreneurs and powerful statesmen recast the world’s most significant manufacturing industry, combining imperial expansion and slave labor with new machines and wage workers to change the world. Here is the story of how, beginning well before the advent of machine production in the 1780s, these men captured ancient trades and skills in Asia, and combined them with the expropriation of lands in the Americas and the enslavement of African workers to crucially reshape the disparate realms of cotton that had existed for millennia, and how industrial capitalism gave birth to an empire, and how this force transformed the world.

The empire of cotton was, from the beginning, a fulcrum of constant global struggle between slaves and planters, merchants and statesmen, workers and factory owners. Beckert makes clear how these forces ushered in the world of modern capitalism, including the vast wealth and disturbing inequalities that are with us today. The result is a book as unsettling as it is enlightening: a book that brilliantly weaves together the story of cotton with how the present global world came to exist.

Beckert discusses the historiography of capitalism and slavery here.  Beckert published a summary of his book in the Atlantic.

Beckert is co-chair of the Program on the Study of Capitalism at Harvard University , and co-chair of theWeatherhead Initiative on Global History (WIGH). Beyond Harvard, he co-chairs an international study group on global history, is co-editor of a series of books at Princeton University Press on “America in the World,” and has co-organized a series of conferences on the history of capitalism. He is a 2011 Guggenheim Fellow. He also directs the Harvard College Europe Program.

Beckert’s work is likely to be influential for two reasons. First, it was based on extensive research. Second, this superb research was done by a tenured Harvard professor.

One of the reasons I’m pleased Beckert’s book is getting so much attention is that it highlights many of the same issues (slavery in supply chains, business ethics) that are central a paper on sugar that I’m working on with Kirsten Greer right now.

P.S. This is my first blog post of 2015.





The Bloomington School and the Crisis in Ferguson

23 12 2014

I use concepts taken from the Bloomington School of Political Economy in some of my research on the history of environmental regulation. I also think that the Bloomington School offers a number of really important insights for many pressing political-economic issues. That’s why I was delighted when I found that Jesse Walker has published an article that introduces readers to the ideas of Elinor and Vincent Ostrom and then applies them to the problems plaguing the St Louis suburb of Ferguson.  The conventional wisdom right now is that the residents of Ferguson would benefit if its police force were merged into that of a neighbouring municipality. Policing in Greater S.t Louis is notoriously fragmented because of the absence of a single metro-wide police force. One of the results of this fragmentation is that policing in the predominantly African-American suburb of Ferguson is provided by an overwhelmingly white police force that extracts wealth from the local population through predatory fining. Ferguson’s police force is often contrasted with the more professional and civil-rights respecting police forces in the area.

After noting that a wide range of observers on the left, right, and centre of the political spectrum have called for the end of the patch-work quilt of policing in Greater St. Louis, Jesse Walker describes why this seemingly reasonable proposal may actually make a bad situation worse:

Technocrats are constantly calling for consolidated regional governments, so it’s no surprise to see them taking an opportunity to do it again…

Consider a series of studies conducted by the economist and political scientist Elinor Ostrom and her colleagues in the 1970s. These came at a time when academic and political opinion on local power was being tugged in two different directions. On one hand, there was a drive toward merging municipal governments and tightening their professional standards, moving away from the sorts of part-time work and volunteerism that many small communities rely on. On the other hand, a vocal group of dissidents—some on the right, while others came out of the New Left and black power movements—pushed hard for decentralization and community control.

Ostrom, who would later win a Nobel Prize in economics, decided to put the arguments to an empirical test. The results helped convince her that highly centralized government was inferior to what she called “polycentric” systems, in which political units of varying size can cooperate but act independently, without a clear hierarchy

The full article is well worth a read.





Bartow Elmore on Citizen Coke

21 12 2014

Bartow Elmore is an assistant professor of U.S. history at the University of Alabama and a regular attendee of the Business History Conference. He does research that straddles the line between business and environmental history.  He has published an article in Fortune that gives readers the main highlights of his new book Citizen Coke: The Making of Coca-Cola Capitalism. Essentially, he argues that Coca-Cola’s business model involves externalising as many of the environmental costs associated with production as possible.

I call this money-making approach Coca-Cola capitalism. Coke followed this path throughout the 20th century. It involved getting others, whether it was government-owned water works or vertically integrated sugar refineries, to invest in the production and distribution systems needed to turn the “Real Thing” into a real thing. What made Coke great, in other words, was not really what it did, but what it didn’t do. It proved incredibly adept at getting independent businesses and local governments to bear the majority of the costs of producing and distributing its products.

It sounds like the classic story of socialised costs and privatized profits, which is tale that is familiar from countless industries. I’m really looking forward to reading this book and to seeing how Elmore deals with the following questions:

To what extent was Coca-Cola’s competitive advantage due to a greater willingness/ability to shift environmental costs to others than its rivals?

Why did the legal and political systems of the countries Coca-Cola operates in allow the firm to get away with the arrangements Elmore views as bad for overall social welfare?

To what extent did the weakening of common-law remedies for environmental externalities in the United States encourage Coca-Cola to pursue this strategy?





BLOG #2: The Importance of Reconnaissance Trips in Research Projects – A Photo Essay

19 12 2014

My research collaborators on the Empire Trees Climate project have posted an update about the recent Bermuda research trip on our blog. The post, which contains some great images, contains some great information that highlights the interdisciplinary nature of the project.

empiretimber's avatarempire trees climate

By: Kirsten Greer

This past December, Empire Trees Climate travelled to Bermuda to conduct preliminary research for the project’s May 2015 research trip. Working with the National Museum of Bermuda and Conservation Services, Bermuda Government, team members Kirsten Greer and Adam Csank toured the island to core trees, identify historic buildings, and examine records in the archives.  The May 2015 trip will centre on sampling historic buildings and shipwrecks associated with British North American and Bermudian timbers, as well as critically reconstructing past landscapes and climates in both Bermuda and Atlantic Canada.

1. RESEARCH PARTNERS IN BERMUDA

Our project would not be possible without the support of the National Museum of Bermuda and Conservation Services, Bermuda Government. Staff members helped us identify potential field sites, assisted with fieldwork, and housed us during our stay. Thank you to Elena Strong, Mark Outerbridge, Edward Harris, Andrew Harris, and Alison Copeland for helping…

View original post 971 more words