From: "Adam P. Coutts" <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Call for papers: 2nd Workshop on Capabilities and Happiness
http://dep.eco.uniroma1.it/~soccap/eng-index.htm
Dipartimento di Economia Politica, Milano-Bicocca
The Capability Network
16 - 18 June 2005
Università di Milano-Bicocca
The Keynote Speakers include:
Amartya Sen, Harvard
Ed Diener, University of Illinois
Richard Easterlin, University of Southern California
Carol Graham, Brookins Institution, Washington
Robert Sugden, UEA, Norwich
Richard Ryan, University of Rochester
Carol Ryff, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Scientific Committee
Martha Nussbaum, University of Chicago
Amartya Sen, Harvard University
Ed Diener, University of Illinois
Enrica Chiappero, University of Pavia
Flavio Comim, St. Edmund College, Cambridge
Luigi Pasinetti, Catholic University, Milan.
Pier Luigi Porta, University of Milano-Bicocca
Stefano Zamagni, University of Bologna
Researches on the "Economics and Happiness" are increasingly taking a
considerable place among the interests of social scientists: quality of
life, the relationship between goods and well-being, relational goods,
intrinsic motivations, and the impact of basic need and relational
satisfactions to motivation and wellness. These inquiries overlap with
the "Capabilities Approach", which very much directs attention to these
issues.
In March 2004 the CSC (Capability and Sustainability Centre, St. Edmund
College, Cambridge) organized in Cambridge the 1st workshop
"Capabilities and Happiness", and the participants were persuaded that the
connection capabilities-happiness can be extremely stimulating and potentially
able of opening a very promising new field of research, an idea shared also by
the Capability Network. This second workshop is also a by-product of the
researches on happiness undertaken at the Department of Economics of
Milano-Bicocca. The workshop itself is a follow up to the first
International Conference on the Paradoxes of Happiness in Economics at
Milano-Bicocca 20-23 March 2003.
The Capabilities approach is unequivocally focussed on the objective
dimensions of good life, and considers happiness as a good indicator of
the quality of life only if accompanied with a wide capability set, which
goes well together with Amartya Sen's critique to happiness as a possibly
misleading concept in human development. The Happiness approach, yet,
today includes two methodologically quite different strands. On one side, we
have theories of a "subjective" nature which emphasize self-reported
feelings, pleasure, satisfaction, focused in particular on the measurement of
the corresponding variables. Examples of this subjective approach are
manifold in cognitive researches of happiness. That approach also falls within
the mainstream of current economic studies on happiness, and has continuity
with the Benthamite theory of happiness as utility. The other strand
focuses on "objective" analyses of happiness, conceived of as human
flourishing. In this strand scholars are interested in intrinsic
motivations, civic commitment, relationship status and quality and
personal growth as indicators of a happy life. This approach to happiness -
that has supporters in economics, sociology and psychology - is fully consistent
with the capabilities approach, and has been influenced by a
rediscovery of Aristotle's eudaimonic conception of happiness, as discussed in
the work of philosophers such as Martha Nussbaum. The principal aim of this
interdisciplinary workshop is to gather together scholars of all the
different methodological strands for a rich encounter.
Organization Committee
Luigino Bruni, Milano-Bicocca
Stefano Bartolini, University of Siena
Maurizio Pugno, University of Trent
Proposals have to be sent to [log in to unmask],
not after December, 31 2004.
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