Cracow Academy of Economics,
Chair of the History of Economic Thought
Jagiellonian University in Cracow
and College of Business Administration,
St. John's University
are pleased to announce an international conference
ECONOMIC TRANSITION IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE:
WHAT CAN BE LEARNED FROM THE HISTORY OF ECONOMICS?
A three day conference for scholars interested in economic transitions and
transformations. The conference will be held in Cracow (Krakcw), Poland.
The conference shall have plenary sessions with invited speakers.
Date: 17 to 20 September 1998.
PREPARATORY TIMETABLE
15 December 1997 : We invite proposals for organizing sessions and also
welcome proposals for presenting individual papers. Those wishing to
contribute to this conference are invited to send before December 15, 1997
a session title and an abstract of no more than 150 words for the session
and proposals ( no more than 150 words) to the organizers at the following
addresses:
30 January 1998: The participants will be informed of the decisions of the
programme committee.
Mail from America, Ireland, Great Britain, and Japan should be sent to:
Charles M. A. Clark Department of Economics College of Business
Administration St. John's University 8000 Utopia Parkway Jamaica, NY 11439
USA Email: [log in to unmask]
Mail from Continental Europe and Asia should be sent to
Janina Rosicka
Jagiellonian University
Sobieskiego 20
32-400 Myslenice, Poland
Email [log in to unmask]
Call for Papers
ECONOMIC TRANSITIONS IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE:
What can be learned from the History of Economics?
Economic transitions and transformations have always prompted a
rethinking of accepted economic theories and dogmas, both by its
alteration of the phenomena economists theorize about and in its
influence on the "intellectual mileau." The developments in Eastern and
Central Europe over the past decade are singular in their speed of change,
but not in their scope. Conspicuously absent from most of the contemporary
analysis of the economies and societies in Eastern and Central Europe is an
historical perspective. Although each historical event is a unique
experience and creation, much could be learned from examining how previous
economists explained and understood the dramatic changes in their economies
and societies. The great economists were not mere arm chair theorists,
oblivious to the world around them. The issue of economic of economic
transition plays an important role in the writings of "worldly
philosophers" : Adam Smith, David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx,
Alfred Marshall, Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter
and Karl Polanyi, yet contemporary analysis of economic transition has the
most part ignored this rich tradition.
The purpose of this conference is to see if looking back can help us with
understanding the present and looking forward, if the insights from the
history of economic thought can yield benefits for understanding the issues
in the transformations of the Eastern and Central European economies and
societies. We focus on the following themes:
1. Usefulness of Philosophical History for Understanding the Issue of
Economic Transformation. Writers on the decomposition the global
system, or the ideal system.
2. Insights from the History of Economic Thought and the Great Economists
on the general topic of economic transformation and the specific topics
including but not limited to: privatization; institutional adjustment;
corruption; the role of ethics and values in economic transition; creation
of social elites.
3. Insights from the writings of Eastern and Central European
Economists. Relationship between Western and Eastern/Central economic
traditions; should Eastern and Central European economists adopt the
theories and dogmas dominant in the West, or develop an independent
economic explanation.
The PUBLICATION OF PROCEEDINGS:
One of the leading editors is interested in publication the Proceedings of
the conference in book form. There is a possibility to publish the
Proceedings in Polish in book form too. Further information about the
organization of the conference can be obtained on demand from the above
addressees.
CONFERENCE COSTS
Early registration (through April 30, 1998) $100. Late registration
(after April 30, 1998) $140. The conference fee for participants from
Russia, Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia will be canceled; for
others post communist countries $10. We will most likely be in the
position to help towards covering the travel cost for participants from
Central and Eastern Europe. You may apply for this assistance by sending
your cost calculation.
Hotels
The range of hotel prices for the conference will be:
High Quality: US $ 60
Medium Quality: US$ 40
Our special limited offer: US$ 25.
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