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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260511
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260514
DTSTAMP:20251204T133024Z
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SUMMARY:PhD and Early Career Paper Development Workshop: Regional Inequalities and Perceived Left-Behindness
DESCRIPTION:Academic and policymakers have highlighted interpersonal and interterritorial inequalities as key factors behind rising feelings of discontent and left-behindness across different types of territories\, including rural and urban areas.  \nThis two-day workshop will bring together senior scholars and young researchers to examine the drivers of life satisfaction and dissatisfaction\, the construction of narratives and spatial imaginaries of ‘left-behind regions’\, and alternative expressions of discontent. Participants will explore how inequality\, economic restructuring\, social identities\, and policy frameworks shape subjective well-being across diverse populations\, as well as the emotional and material implications of perceived marginalisation.  \nDuring the workshop\, senior scientists will provide young scholars with the latest insights into ongoing and top-level research in the field and discuss their work. \n  \nObjectives:  \n\nTo deepen understanding of life satisfaction\, discontent\, and left-behindness from a multidisciplinary perspective.\nTo explore how socioeconomic inequalities influence subjective well-being in various contexts (urban/rural\, national/cross-national).\nTo foster collaboration and knowledge exchange between senior scholars and early-career researchers in the field.\nGiving participants the opportunity to present\, discuss and get extensive feedback on their on-going work.\nFacilitating networking among young scholars and make their voices and ideas visible within the discourse.\nTo encourage the development of new research directions\, policy implications\, and interventions.\n\nResearch themes:  \n\nTheorisations and empirical manifestations of perceived left-behindness\nRegional discontent and perceived marginalisation\nRural–urban disparities in life satisfaction and well-being\nAlternative expressions and dimensions of discontent\nConstruction and circulation of narratives and spatial imaginaries of ‘left-behind regions’\nMaterial\, emotional\, and policy implications of spatial imaginaries and feelings of exclusion\nPolicy responses and best-practice initiatives aimed at addressing left-behindness\n\nTarget Audience:  \nYoung scholars (PhD Students and Early Career Researchers) who are committed to interdisciplinary research\, especially bridging a gap between topics\, are strongly encouraged to apply. \n  \nConfirmed Speakers: \n\nAndrés Rodríguez-Pose | Princesa de Asturias Chair and Professor of Economic Geography Department of Geography and Environment – The London School of Economics and Political Science\nSimona Iammarino | Professor of Applied Economics – Gran Sasso Science Institute\nStefania Fiorentino | Associate Professor in Planning and Urban Regeneration – University of Cambridge\n\nApplication Process: \nStep 1: Interested PhD Students and Early Career Researchers (5 years from PhD) are invited to submit an extended abstract (between 500 and 1\,000 words in PDF format\, using standard academic formatting) until the 1st of March 2026). \nAbstracts will be selected based on clarity\, relevance\, originality\, suitability with the overall workshop theme and (preliminary) results. We will inform all applicants by the 16th of March about the outcome of the selection process and subsequently invite the selected young scholars to proceed to Step 2. \nStep 2: The selected young scholars are expected to submit a full working paper version of their research (between 5\,000 and 8\,000 words\, inclusive of abstract\, references\, figure/table captions and endnotes) until the 20th of April 2026. Only participants who submit a full paper will be able to join the workshop. All paper presenters will also be assigned as discussants for another paper. \n  \nFinancial Support: \n\nWe aim to make the workshop as inclusive as possible for PhD students and Early Careers. The workshop will therefore be free of charge.\nThe event will offer financial support for selected participants if needed\, specifically: Partial stipend for accommodation and/or partial travel stipend. The level of support will depend on the available budget.\nAs co-financing for travel expenses with participant’s own resources is expected\, we also encourage an early application to the wide range of external opportunities for small travel grants.\n\n  \nSpecial issue: \nThere is an ongoing Call for Papers for the Special Issue in Regional Studies “Spatial inequalities and feelings of left-behindness: perceptions\, imaginaries\, and policy responses”. Participants in the workshop are encouraged to consider submitting their work to this Special Issue. While presentation at the workshop does not guarantee acceptance\, the sessions will offer an opportunity to receive valuable feedback that may help strengthen their manuscripts prior to submission. \nScientific Committee: \nFabiano Compagnucci\, Alessandra Faggian\, Giulia Urso and Paolo Veneri
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/phd-and-early-career-paper-development-workshop-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/
LOCATION:Gran Sasso Science Institute\, Viale F. Crispi\, 7\, L'Aquila\, L'Aquila\, 67100\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20260511T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20260511T170000
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CREATED:20260424T135444Z
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SUMMARY:Dependency Theory: Contemporary Relevance and Challenges in the Current Global Crisis
DESCRIPTION:INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR (HYBRID) \nDependency Theory: Contemporary Relevance and Challenges in the Current Global Crisis \n11–13 May 2026 \nFrom 9am (4pm) to 4pm (11pm) – Mexico City time (Portugal/UK Time) \n(A bi-continental meeting: Europe–Latin America and the Caribbean) \nInstitutional Organisers: \n\nNational Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) – México\nFaculty of Economics of University of Coimbra (FEUC); Centre for Social Studies (CES); University Institute of Lisbon (ISCTE); Lisbon School of Economics and Management (ISEG) – Portugal\nAssociation for Heterodox Economics (AHE) – United Kingdom\nLatin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO)\nUniversity of Buenos Aires (UBA) – Argentina\nLatin American Studies (LAS) of the Leiden University – Netherlands\nEuropean Association of Development Research and Training Institute (EADI)\nYoung Scholar Initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking (YSI-INET)\n\nIntroduction \nIn a context shaped by the reconfiguration of the world order\, the intensification of geopolitical disputes\, the structural financialisation of the economy\, the ecological crisis\, and the deepening of social inequalities\, Dependency Theory has once again become an indispensable perspective for understanding the dynamics of contemporary capitalism. Far from constituting a closed chapter in Latin American thought\, the dependency approach offers decisive analytical tools for interpreting the current global crisis and its implications for Latin America and the Caribbean. \nThis international seminar\, bi-continental in scope and held in a hybrid format\, brings together leading scholars with the aim of debating the contemporary relevance\, renewal\, and future trajectory of Dependency Theory in the twenty-first century. \nWithin this framework\, the programme will also include the presentation of Decolonizing Economics: An Introduction (Devika Dutt\, Carolina Alves\, Surbhi Kesar\, and Ingrid Harvold Kvangraven). The book examines the Eurocentric foundations that have shaped the economics discipline and constrained its capacity to engage with phenomena such as structural racism\, uneven development\, the climate crisis\, and labour relations. It proposes “decolonising” economics by challenging the norms of neutrality and objectivity from which the discipline often claims to speak\, and by opening space for approaches that take structural power\, exploitation\, and colonial legacies seriously. This session will include discussion by leading thinkers from the Latin American tradition of Dependency Theory and is conceived as a direct dialogue with the seminar’s thematic strands—particularly in rethinking the political economy of global capitalism from non-Eurocentric frameworks. \nThematic strands \nStrand 1. The historical development and contemporary relevance of Dependency Theory \nThis strand addresses the historical development and contemporary relevance of Dependency Theory\, examining its main analytical categories\, internal debates\, and explanatory power in the face of recent transformations in global capitalism. \nStrand 2. (Neo-)imperialisms\, geopolitical tensions\, and international economic relations from a dependency perspective \nThis strand analyses (neo-)imperialisms\, geopolitical tensions\, and international economic relations from a dependency perspective\, interrogating global power configurations\, inter-power rivalry\, and the place of the periphery within the emerging world architecture. \nStrand 3. New theoretical and methodological horizons: Dependency Theory as a framework for the contemporary world structure \nThis strand explores new theoretical and methodological horizons to consolidate Dependency Theory as an analytical framework for today’s world structure\, engaging with debates on financialisation\, extractivism\, global value chains\, the ecological crisis\, and transformations of work. \nMore than a commemorative exercise\, this seminar advances a strategic discussion: to think dependency today is to think about the conditions of possibility for sovereignty\, development\, and emancipation in a contested world. \nLatin American Speakers: \n\nAdrián Sotelo\, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)\nAna Grondona\, University of Buenos Aires (UBA)\nClaudio Katz\, University of Buenos Aires (UBA)\nDiego Giller\, National University of General Sarmiento (UNGS)\nEmir Sader\, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)\nFacundo Lastra\, IIES – National University of the South*\nJosé G. Gandarilla\, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)\nMarcelo Dias Carcanholo\, Fluminense Federal University (UFF)\nMariano Treacy\, National University of General Sarmiento (UNGS)\nMónica Bruckmann\, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)\nNildo Ouriques\, Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC)\nRaúl Delgado Wise\, Autonomous University of Zacatecas (UAZ)\nRené Ramírez\, Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO) and National University of the Arts (UNA)\nRoberto Escorcia Romo\, Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAM)\nSebastián Sztulwark\, National University of General Sarmiento (UNGS)\n\nEuropean Speakers \n\nAndrew Fischer\, Institute of Social Studies (ISS)\nAngus McNelly\, King’s College London (KCL)\nCarla Coburger\, Duisburg-Essen (U DEU)\nDevika Dutt\, King’s College London (KCL)\nFabio Maldonado\, King’s College London (KCL)\nIngrid Harvold Kvangraven\, King’s College\nJonas Van Vossole\, Centre for Social Studies (CES)\nLuis Mah\, University Institute of Lisbon (ISCTE)\nMaría Gabriela Palacio\, Leiden University (LU)\nNatália Bracarense\, Toulouse Capitole University (UTC)\nPatrick Mockre\, Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU Vienna)\nRogelio Madrueño\, University of Bonn\n\nOrganising Committee: Ernesto Nieto-Carrillo (FEUC-AHE)\, René Ramírez (CLACSO-UNA)\, Adrián Escamilla Trejo (UNAM)\, María Gabriela Palacio (LU)\, Ana Cordeiro Santos (CES)\, Roberto Ruiz Blum (FEUC)\, Gabriela Riera (ISCTE).
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/dependency-theory-contemporary-relevance-and-challenges-in-the-current-global-crisis/2026-05-11/
LOCATION:Colégio de S. Jerónimo Apartado 3087\, Colégio de S. Jerónimo Apartado 3087\, Coímbra\, Coímbra\, Coímbra\, Portugal
CATEGORIES:A series of in-person events
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