"175 years of The Economist: An International Conference"
24 and 25 September, 2015
Department of Science and Technology Studies, UCL
Deadline for submissions: 15 May, 2015
In 2018 the Economist magazine will be 175 years old. This conference
is a prelude to a book that will examine the political, economic and
cultural impact of one of the most significant news publications in
the modern world.
The workshop will take place at University College London over 2 days:
24-25 September 2015. We seek to bring together journalists and
researchers from many fields including economic, social and political
historians, cultural analysts, sociologists, literary and media
scholars.
Papers are invited on any topic connected to The Economist, past and
present, and the following suggested topics are intended to be neither
prescriptive nor comprehensive:
• Controversies: Corn laws, currency vs banking school, free trade,
the people’s budget, the welfare state, nationalisations, the making
and unmaking of Bretton Woods, the oil shocks, privatisations, the
Great Depression, the Great Recession;
• Editors, Economists and intellectuals in The Economist: Walter
Bagehot and others;
• Ownership, censorship and the law;
• Publishing history: journalists and their recruitment, women in The
Economist, US and China editions, the Economist Intelligence Unit,
digital expansion, statistics, rankings and methods, futurology;
• Management: industrial policy, labour relations, corporate strategy,
personal finance, the global economy;
• Readers: the anti-corn law league, in academia, use by campaigners,
correspondents and letter writers, in the City, use by lobbyists, and
in international relations (WTO, IMF etc);
• Typography and design: covers, cartoonists, designers, printers and
publishing and branding strategies;
• War: The First World War, The Second World War, the Cold War, and
pan global conflicts
Please send proposals (around 300 words) for papers of 20 minutes
duration to [log in to unmask] by 15 May 2015.
For further details on the event see: http://www.economist-175.eu and
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/sts/research/projects/economics_in_the_public_sphere/events/economist175
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