Warsztaty European Graduate School for Training in Economic and Social Historical Research (ESTER) – Research Design Course
W dniach 6-8 listopada br. w Instytucie Historii i Archiwistyki Uniwersytetu Pedagogicznego w Krakowie odbędą się międzynarodowe warsztaty projektowania badań naukowych dla doktorantów – ESTER Research Design Course, Krakow 2017. Podczas trzydniowych obrad 38 doktorantów z 26 europejskich uniwersytetów i instytucji zaprezentuje projekty swoich prac doktorskich z zakresu historii społecznej i gospodarczej, które staną się przedmiotem dyskusji między autorami, doktorantami i komentatorami – bardziej doświadczonymi badaczami rekrutującymi się z 13 ośrodków badawczych w Europie. Program przewiduje następujące wystąpienia:
- Stephanie Allen (University of Hertfordshire), Performing Deceit: Committing bodily fraud in early modern England 1540-1750
- Esther Beeckaert (Ghent University), The organizing of access to land in the Southern Netherlands, ca. 1650-1850
- Christian Beyer (Hochschule Ostwestfalen-Lippe), Cartelization in the Coal Industry of the 19th Century
- Dieter Marcel Bruneel (Ghent University), The contentious politics of use-rights in the Southern Netherlands (Belgium), 1750-1900
- Davide Cristoferi (Ghent University), Inequalities and Growth in the Late Medieval mezzadria Tuscany (15th-early 16th c.)
- Amaury de Vicq (Utrecht University), The evolution of the Dutch banking system regarding the funding of Small – and Medium Sized Enterprises (SMEs) in the 20th century
- Maarten Draper (European University Institute), Italian merchants in Amsterdam, 1650-1700
- Michal Durco (Slovak Academy of Sciences), Road infrastructure development as a prerequisite for socio-economic development of the regions of Slovakia during interwar period
- Greta Fedele (University of Bologna), The transitional justice: the trials of French partisans in the aftermath of World War II
- Jonathan Fink-Jensen (European University Institute), Mutual sickness insurance and welfare-state formation in Belgium, Denmark, England and the Netherlands, 1870-1950
- Maria Goungor Filis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), The influence and interpretation of the work of Karl Marx in the Japanese economic thought during the early 20th century
- Kristina Hodelin-ter Wal (Radboud University), Migration, missionaries, South Asia, Southeast Asia
- Merit Hondelink (University of Groningen), A taste of historic cookery: a reconstruction of the daily meal as prepared by common burghers of Early Modern Dutch cities, 1500-1850
- Alice Janssens (Erasmus University Rotterdam), The Rise and Fall of Berlin as a Fashion Capital: 1924-1939
- Uygar Karaca (Koç University), Revisiting Economic Growth in Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria 1840-2000
- Katarzyna Kotula (Uniwersytet Pedagogiczny im. KEN w Krakowie), Aliyah bet of polish Jews before the II world war
- Monika Kozlowska (Uniwersytet w Białymstoku), Economic response of Little Ice Age of early modern Poland
- Jan Kratochvíl (Charles University in Prague), The role of coin production and its receiving during the evolution of power structure in the Czech early medieval society
- Christos Kyriapoulos (University of Crete), Fortified Port-Cities in the Ottoman Mediterranean Borderlands: The case study of Methoni, Koroni and Navarino (1500-1820)
- Minghui Li (University of Groningen), Transforming Childbirth Practices: New Style Midwifery in China, 1912 – 1949
- Kristof Loockx (University of Antwerp), Migration, employment and life: Foreign seamen on Belgian ships in the port of Antwerp, 1850-1914
- Dirk Lueb (University of Antwerp), Smuggling in the Napoleonic Southern Netherlands
- Maarten Manse (Leiden University), Taxation in the Netherlands East Indies (NEI), ca. 1870-1942
- Laura May (University of Antwerp), Suburban place-making: a research into the agency of development coalitions in the periphery of Antwerp during the periurban phase, c.1860-c.1940
- Robert Nasarek (Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg), The classification of historical occupations in early modern encyclopedias. A contribution to digital humanities and to the history of labour
- Mattias Näsman (Umeå University), Driving Environmental Change – A business history of Volvo Cars and the environment
- Ruben Peeters (Utrecht University), The Challenges of Change: Small and medium size firm funding in the Netherlands, 1860-1940
- María del Carmen Pérez Artés (Tübingen University), Development of Human Capital in Spain throughout 16 and 18th centuries.
- Robin Philips (International Institute of Social History), Low Countries, High Development. Changing industrial location in the Netherlands and Belgium (ca. 1820-2010)
- Roman Roobroeck (Ghent University), The 'Geuzenhoek’: religious coexistence and multiple identities in rural Flanders (1600-1750)
- Matthias Rosenbaum-Feldbrügge (Radboud University Nijmegen), Parental Loss, Household Composition and Later-Life Outcomes: Studying Orphans’ Life Courses in the 19th, 20th and 21st Century
- Wout Saelens (University of Antwerp), Private energy consumption before and during the early industrial revolution: Flanders and Holland compared (c. 1650-1850)
- Dolores Sesma Carlos (Radboud University), Internal migrations and mortality over the life course, 1850-2010
- Patrycja Szwedo (Uniwersytet Warszawski, IH PAN), Casimir IV Jagiellonian’s urban policy in the Greater Poland (1447 –1492).
- Gijs van Campenhout (Erasmus University Rotterdam), Who may represent the nation? Changing citizenship in international football, 1930-2014
- Sietske Van den Wyngaert (University of Antwerp), The pre-industrial transformation of child labour. From learning through apprenticeships to being employed as an unskilled, cheap workforce? (1550-1800)
- Anke Verbeke (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Surviving old age: coping strategies of the elderly labouring poor in Gent, Brussels and Antwerp, 1750-1850.
- Harm Zwarts (Wageningen University), The Development of Innovation in Dutch Agriculture, c. 1880-1970
Organizacja warsztatów została sfinansowana ze środków: Wydziału Humanistycznego Uniwersytetu Pedagogicznego (działalność wspomagająca badania), Uniwersytetu im. Radbouda w Nijmegen oraz Miasta Krakowa (w ramach programu Krakowskie Konferencje Naukowe). Wydarzenie zorganizowane zostało we współpracy z Instytutem N. W. Posthumusa oraz inicjatywą WEast.