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DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250615T152110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250807T165910Z
UID:10007472-1755158400-1755277200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Sustainable Finance from the South to COP30
DESCRIPTION:In recent studies\, ECLAC has identified three development gaps for Latin America: environmental\, social and external. This region is characterized by being socially unequal\, macroeconomically conditioned by the dynamics of the external sector (through commercial and financial channels) and with growing challenges in terms of the protection of its biodiversity and natural resources. \nThe proposals to attack the three gaps through the financing of climate change protection\, mitigation and adaptation activities\, as well as the necessary energy transition\, focus on the issuance of environmental\, social and governance (ESG) bonds\, both corporate and sovereign; as well as different Debt Exchange (CD) mechanisms\, especially by nature or in exchange for environmental services. \nThe growth and development of these tools in recent years at the global and Latin American level make them an important issue to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. However\, some studies warn about the ineffectiveness of ESG bonds and Debt-for-Nature Swaps\, in a scenario where the international financial architecture is characterized by asymmetric relationships\, where many countries in the Global South face conditions in their economic policies as a result of their subordinate position in international monetary hierarchies (and therefore have limited fiscal space). Likewise\, if the energy transition involves importing technologies from central countries\, the external gap can be exacerbated and the dependence of the countries of the region can intensify. While the limited fiscal space of peripheral economies as a result of their productive conditions\, monetary hierarchies\, and institutional norms (fiscal rules) limit the potential of local governments to carry out their role as dynamizers of the economic and social transformations that this era demands. \nThese debates take place in a context of redefinitions in geopolitics\, which entail growing uncertainty in environmental issues. The U.S. left the Paris Agreement\, while China has become the world leader in investments in renewable energy\, sustainable mobility\, and transition technologies. It has also intensified investments in this area in the region\, as well as in strategic minerals necessary for this purpose. \nThis workshop\, organized by the YSI working group in Latin America\, the Centre for Sustainable Finance at UFRJ\, the IDEAs network\, and supported by the Center for Sustainable Finance (CEFIS/IE-UFRJ)\, the Finance and Development Research Group (FINDE/UFF)\, the Electric Energy Studies Group (GESEL/UFRJ)\, CORECON (Regional Council of Economics of Brazil)\, Latindadd (Latin American and Caribbean Network for Economic\, Social and Climate Justice)\, and Oxfam. This space\, therefore\, aims to develop activities that facilitate discussion of the various dimensions of these initiatives from a Latin American perspective. \n  \nYoug scholars will present their work in progress in sessions during August 14th\, they will receive feedback and there will be sessions with experts and policy makers during August 15th. \nThere will be sessions with experts and instances of research presentation for young researchers. It is planned to produce material that is relevant to policymakers towards COP30 to be held in Brazil in November. \n  \nHow to attend \nYoung researchers (Master and PhD students and early PhD scholars-less than 3 years from PhD completion) are invited to submit proposals that include topics such as: \n\nESG bonds\,\nfinancial subordination in Latin America\,\nfinancing and geopolitics of the energy transition\,\nsustainable finance\,\nproposals for Latin America towards COP30\,\nother related topics.\n\nSubmissions: Interested scholars are invited to apply to the workshop by submitting a short preliminary article (4.000 -5000 words). The major prerequisites for acceptance are completeness and relatedness to the required topics. Submitted work will most likely be considered if it is fully readable and does not lack substantial sections. We encourage authors to send their articles in English\, Portuguese or Spanish. To apply\, you must have an active YSI profile. \nWorkshop presentations: In the workshop\, mentors will give feedback to the participants. The workshop will be organized in different sessions according to the research topic. \nFinancial support: is available\, although resources are scarce. In this sense\, partial support can only be given to scholars who are based in the region. Please indicate the need for funding in the application. In case of acceptance\, organizers will contact details about the amount granted. \nImportant dates \nReception of short articles (4000-5000 words): 18th July 2025 \nAcceptance announcement: 20th July 2025 \nWorkshop: August 14-15\, 2025 \nHosted by Working Groups: Latin America \nOrganizers: \nLuiz Fernando de Paula (UFRJ)\nSergio M. Páez (UFRJ)\nMargarita Olivera (IDEAs/UFRJ)\nLeonardo Rojas (YSI/UNAL)\nLeandro Bona (FLACSO/CONICET/UNLP)\n (Spanish Version)  \nConvocatoria de Ponencias\nFinanzas Sostenibles desde el Sur hacia la COP30\nWorkshop YSI @ Instituto de Economía – Universidad Federal de Río de Janeiro \nFecha\n14 de agosto\, 9:00 am – 15 de agosto\, 8:00 pm \nLugar\nInstituto de Economía\, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro\, Río de Janeiro (Urca)\, Brasil. \nSocios Locales\nInstituto de Economía (UFRJ)\, Centro de Finanzas Sustentables (IE/UFRJ). \nDescripción\nEstudios recientes de la CEPAL han identificado tres brechas de desarrollo en América Latina: ambiental\, social y externa. La región se caracteriza por su desigualdad social\, condicionamientos macroeconómicos derivados de la dinámica del sector externo (a través de canales comerciales y financieros) y crecientes desafíos en la protección de su biodiversidad y recursos naturales. \nLas propuestas para abordar estas brechas mediante el financiamiento de acciones de protección\, mitigación y adaptación al cambio climático —así como la necesaria transición energética— se centran en la emisión de bonos ambientales\, sociales y de gobernanza (ASG)\, tanto corporativos como soberanos\, junto con mecanismos de Canje de Deuda por Naturaleza (CDN)\, especialmente aquellos vinculados a servicios ecosistémicos. \nEl crecimiento de estos instrumentos a nivel global y latinoamericano los posiciona como herramientas clave para alcanzar los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible de la ONU. Sin embargo\, investigaciones advierten sobre su ineficacia en un escenario de arquitectura financiera internacional asimétrica\, donde países del Sur Global enfrentan restricciones en sus políticas económicas debido a su posición subordinada en las jerarquías monetarias internacionales (limitando su espacio fiscal). Además\, si la transición energética depende de importar tecnologías de países centrales\, podría ampliarse la brecha externa y profundizarse la dependencia regional. A esto se suma el reducido margen fiscal de economías periféricas —determinado por sus condiciones productivas\, jerarquías monetarias y normas institucionales (como reglas fiscales)\, lo que restringe la capacidad de los gobiernos locales para impulsar las transformaciones económicas y sociales que esta época exige. \nEstos debates ocurren en un contexto de redefinición geopolítica que incrementa la incertidumbre ambiental: Estados Unidos abandonó el Acuerdo de París\, mientras China se consolida como líder global en inversiones en energías renovables\, movilidad sostenible y tecnologías de transición\, incluyendo minerales estratégicos. \nJóvenes investigadores presentarán su trabajo en sesiones durante el día a4 de Agosto\, recibirán comentarios y sugerencias. El 15 de Agosto habrá mesas redondas de expertos. \nEste taller\, organizado por el grupo de trabajo de YSI de Latinoamérica; el Centro de Finanzas Sostenibles de la UFRJ\, la red IDEAs; y acompañan el Centro de Finanças Sustentáveis (CEFIS/IE-UFRJ)\, Grupo de Pesquisa em Financeirização e Desenvolvimento (FINDE/UFF)\, Grupo de Estudos de Energia Elétrica (GESEL/UFRJ)\, CORECON (Conselho Regional de Economia do Brasil)\, Latindadd (Red Latinoamericana y del Caribe por Justicia Económica\, Social y Climática) y Oxfam. El espacio tiene como objetivo desarrollar actividades que permitan debatir las diversas dimensiones de estas iniciativas\, desde la perspectiva de América Latina\, con sesiones de expertos y presentaciones de jóvenes investigadores. El objetivo es generar insumos relevantes para políticas públicas hacia la COP30\, que se realizará en Brasil en noviembre. \nCómo Participar\nInvitamos a jóvenes investigadores (maestrandos\, doctorandos y doctorados con hasta tres años posteriores a la finalización del doctorado) a enviar propuestas sobre: \n\nBonos ESG\,\nSubordinación financiera en América Latina\,\nFinanciamiento y geopolítica de la transición energética\,\nFinanzas sostenibles\,\nPropuestas para América Latina rumbo a la COP30\,\nOtros temas afines.\n\nEnvíos: Los interesados deben postular enviando un artículo preliminar (4\,000–5\,000 palabras). Se evaluarán la consistencia y pertinencia temática. Se priorizarán textos legibles y estructurados. Idiomas aceptados: inglés\, portugués o español. Requisito: perfil activo en YSI. \nPresentaciones: Durante el taller\, mentores brindarán retroalimentación. Las sesiones se organizarán por ejes temáticos. \nApoyo Financiero: Hay recursos limitados para cubrir gastos parciales de investigadores radicados en la región. Indicar necesidad de financiamiento en la postulación. Los aceptados recibirán detalles del monto asignado. \nFechas Clave \n\nFecha límite para envío de artículos: 18 de julio de 2025\nNotificación de aceptación: 20 de julio de 2025\nWorkshop: 14–15 de agosto de 2025\n\nCoordinadores: \nLuiz Fernando de Paula (UFRJ)\nSergio M. Páez (UFRJ)\nMargarita Olivera (IDEAs/UFRJ)\nLeonardo Rojas (YSI/UNAL)\nLeandro Bona (FLACSO/CONICET/UNLP)\n (Portuguese Version)  \nChamada para Artigos\nFinanças Sustentáveis do Sul para a COP30\nWorkshop YSI @ Instituto de Economia – Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro \nData\n14 de agosto\, 9h – 15 de agosto\, 20h \nLocal\nInstituto de Economia\, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro\, Rio de Janeiro (Urca)\, Brasil. \nTipo de Evento\nWorkshop \nParceiros Locais\nInstituto de Economia (UFRJ)\, Centro de Finanças Sustentáveis (IE/UFRJ). \nDescrição\nEstudos recentes da CEPAL identificaram três lacunas de desenvolvimento na América Latina: ambiental\, social e externa. A região é caracterizada por desigualdade social\, condicionamentos macroeconômicos derivados da dinâmica do setor externo (por meio de canais comerciais e financeiros) e desafios crescentes na proteção de sua biodiversidade e recursos naturais. \nAs propostas para enfrentar essas lacunas por meio do financiamento de ações de proteção\, mitigação e adaptação às mudanças climáticas — assim como a necessária transição energética — concentram-se na emissão de títulos ambientais\, sociais e de governança (ESG)\, tanto corporativos quanto soberanos\, além de mecanismos de Troca de Dívida por Natureza (TDN)\, especialmente aqueles vinculados a serviços ambientais. \nO crescimento desses instrumentos em nível global e latino-americano os torna ferramentas-chave para alcançar os Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável da ONU. No entanto\, pesquisas alertam para sua ineficácia em um cenário de arquitetura financeira internacional assimétrica\, onde países do Sul Global enfrentam restrições em suas políticas econômicas devido à sua posição subordinada nas hierarquias monetárias internacionais (limitando seu espaço fiscal). Além disso\, se a transição energética depender da importação de tecnologias de países centrais\, a lacuna externa pode se ampliar\, aprofundando a dependência regional. Somam-se a isso as limitações fiscais das economias periféricas — determinadas por suas condições produtivas\, hierarquias monetárias e normas institucionais (como regras fiscais) —\, o que restringe a capacidade dos governos locais de impulsionar as transformações econômicas e sociais exigidas neste momento. \nEsses debates ocorrem em um contexto de redefinição geopolítica que aumenta a incerteza ambiental: os EUA saíram do Acordo de Paris\, enquanto a China se consolidou como líder global em investimentos em energias renováveis\, mobilidade sustentável e tecnologias de transição\, incluindo minerais estratégicos. \nJovens pesquisadores apresentaram seu trabalho o dia 14 de agosto e receberam comentários de expertos. O dia 15 de agosto serão organizadas mesas de expertos. \nEste workshop\, organizado pelo grupo de trabalho da YSI na América Latina\, pelo Centro de Finanças Sustentáveis da UFRJ\, pela rede IDEAs e apoiado pelo Centro de Finanças Sustentáveis (CEFIS/IE-UFRJ)\, pelo Grupo de Pesquisa em Finanças e Desenvolvimento (FINDE/UFF)\, pelo Grupo de Estudos em Energia Elétrica (GESEL/UFRJ)\, pelo CORECON (Conselho Regional de Economia do Brasil)\, pela Latindadd (Rede Latino-Americana e Caribenha de Justiça Econômica\, Social e Climática) e pela Oxfam\, tem como objetivo desenvolver atividades que permitam debater as diversas dimensões dessas iniciativas a partir de uma perspectiva latino-americana. O objetivo é gerar subsídios relevantes para políticas públicas em direção à COP30\, que será realizada no Brasil em novembro. \nComo Participar\nConvidamos jovens pesquisadores (mestrandos\, doutorandos ou jovens doutorados – até 3 anos após a finalização do doutorado) a enviar propostas sobre: \n\nTítulos ESG\,\nSubordinação financeira na América Latina\,\nFinanciamento e geopolítica da transição energética\,\nFinanças sustentáveis\,\nPropostas para a América Latina rumo à COP30\,\nOutros temas relacionados.\n\nSubmissões: Os interessados devem se inscrever enviando um artigo preliminar (4.000–5.000 palavras). Serão avaliados a completude e a pertinência temática. Priorizam-se textos legíveis e estruturados. Idiomas aceitos: inglês\, português ou espanhol. Requisito: perfil ativo no YSI. \nApresentações: Durante o workshop\, mentores fornecerão feedback aos participantes. As sessões serão organizadas por eixos temáticos. \nApoio Financeiro: Há recursos limitados para cobrir parcialmente os gastos de pesquisadores baseados na região. Indique a necessidade de financiamento na inscrição. Os aceitos receberão detalhes sobre o valor concedido. \nDatas Importantes \n\nPrazo para envio de artigos: 18 de julho de 2025\nNotificação de aceitação: 20 de julho de 2025\nWorkshop: 14–15 de agosto de 2025\n\nCoordenadores: \nLuiz Fernando de Paula (UFRJ)\nSergio M. Páez (UFRJ)\nMargarita Olivera (IDEAs/UFRJ)\nLeonardo Rojas (YSI/UNAL)\nLeandro Bona (FLACSO/CONICET/UNLP)\n\n\n\n  \nProgram of Workshop: “Sustainable Finance from the Global South towards COP30”\nRio de Janeiro\, Institute of Economics – IE/UFRJ\, room 203 \nAugust 14th\, 2025 (Thursday) \n\n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n09.00 – 10.30\nGreen financing and public investment (post-graduate students) \n  \nChair: Leonardo Rojas (National University of Colombia/ YSI) \n  \nJessica Vasconcelos (UFRJ-Brasil). COP30 e o Novo Paradigma do Financiamento Climático: Um Estudo de Caso do Brasil \nNikolas Passos (EUI-Itália). The importance of being earnest: how sovereign sustainability-linked bonds can evade sustainability commitments \nConrado Krivochein (UFF-Brasil). Reframing Solvency: Reclassifying Public Expenditures for Intertemporal Investment and Public Value \n  \nComments: Leandro Bona (CONICET and UNLP)\n\n\n  \n10.30 – 11.00\n  \nCoffee Break \n \n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n11.00 – 12.30\nChallenges\, geopolitics and new industries among energy transition (post-graduate students) \n  \nChair: Leandro Bona (CONICET and UNLP) \n  \nPedro Ludovico (UFRJ-Brasil). A Energia Solar na Estratégia de Segurança Energética da China: vulnerabilidade externa\, política industrial e disputa geopolítica \nJorge Guzmán (CIDE-México). El Sol no brilla igual para todos: (in)justicia energética en la adopción de tecnología solar en México \nLázaro Días (UNICAMP-Brasil). Missions of ‘Nova Indústria Brasil’: A Window of Opportunity for a Green Leapfrogging? \n  \nComments: Fernando Teixeira (UFF and CEFIS/UFRJ)\n\n\n  \n12.30 – 14.00\n  \nBrunch \n \n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n14.00 – 15.30\nSocial and environmental risks in the 21st century (post-graduate students) \n  \nChair: Leonardo Rojas (National University of Colombia/ YSI) \n  \nLissandro Botelho (IFAmazonas-Brasil). A máquina da pobreza na Amazônia brasileira. Um paradoxo de riqueza e desigualdade \nDiego Arturo Cortés (UNAL-Colombia). Impactos heterogéneos entre países sobre la inversión extranjera directa por los riesgos climáticos físicos nacionales \nRolandó García (UNPAZ/CONICET-Argentina). The return of agriculture: structuring factors of productive change in the Pampas region in the 21st century and emerging alternatives \n  \nComments: Sergio Páez (IE/UFRJ and IPPUR/UFRJ)\n\n\n  \n15.30 – 16.00\n  \nCoffee Break \n \n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n16.00 – 17.30\nThe role of banks in the environmental agenda (post-graduate students) \n  \nChair: Leandro Bona (CONICET and UNLP) \n  \nLorena B. de Holanda (UFRJ-Brasil). Desafios e alternativas dos Bancos Centrais na crise climática\, ambiental e social \nIuri Monteiro (UFRJ-Brasil). Economia Verde e Bancos Estatais: Estudo de caso do Banco da Amazônia S.A. na Amazônia Legal \nIago Montalván (UNICAMP-Brasil). O financiamento climático para o sul global e os Bancos Multilaterais de Desenvolvimento: limites e alternativas \n  \nComments: Fernanda Feil (UFF and CEFIS/UFRJ)\n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n18.00 – 19.30\n  \nSession: The challenges of sustainable finance for Latin American economies \n  \nChair: Carlos Frederico Rocha (IE/UFRJ) \n  \nLuiz Fernando de Paula (CEFIS/UFRJ) \nCamila Gramkow (CEPAL) \nCarlos Aguilar (OXFAM) \n \n\n\n  \n20.00 \n \n  \nDinner at Gal do Mar (Av Portugal\, 96 – Urca)\n\n\n\n  \n\n  \n  \nAugust 15h\, 2025 (Friday) \n\n\n\n  \n  \n  \n09.00 – 10.30\nSession: Financing the fair sustainable transition. The role of development banks \n  \nChair: Leonardo Rojas (National University of Colombia/ YSI) \n  \nRogerio Studart (CEBRI) \nKlelia Guerrero (Latindadd) \nEduardo González (BCIE) \nFernanda Feil (UFF and CEFIS/UFRJ) \n \n\n\n  \n10.30 – 11.00 \n \n  \nCoffee break\n\n\n  \n  \n11.00 – 12.30 \n  \n \n  \nProposal: Young scholars agenda \n  \nProposal: Red de finanzas sustentables latinoamericana\n\n\n  \n12.30 – 14.00 \n \n  \nBrunch\n\n\n  \n  \n  \n14.00 – 15.30\nSession: The policy making of fair sustainable transition in Latin America \n  \nChair: Sergio Páez \n  \nLaura Carvalho (Open Society) \nDiego Guevara (Former Minister of Finance\, Colombia) \nDaniel Ortega (BioCarbon) \n  \n \n\n\n  \n15.30 – 16.00 \n \n  \nCoffee Break\n\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n16.00 – 18.00\nSession: Sustainable development goals. Proposals for a new international financial architecture considering social justice\, gender issues and debt sustainability \n  \nChair: Leandro Bona (CONICET and UNLP) \n  \nCharles Abugre (IDEAS) \nMargarita Olivera (IDEAS/UFRJ) \nCarola Mejía (Latindadd) \n \n\n\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/sustainable-finance-from-the-south-to-cop30/
LOCATION:Rua Antônio Barros de Castro\, Institute of Economics – IE/UFRJ\, room 203\, Rio de Janeiro\, Rio de Janeiro\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Rua Antônio Barros de Castro Institute of Economics – IE/UFRJ room 203 Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro Brazil;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=Institute of Economics – IE/UFRJ\, room 203:geo:-43.1728965,-22.9068467
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250814T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250815T190000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250521T160019Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250701T122631Z
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SUMMARY:YSI Workshop on Energy transition and sectoral challenges @ VI EEA-SE 2025
DESCRIPTION:The Urban and Regional Economics Working Group is glad to announce the YSI Workshop on Energy transition and sectoral challenges as part of the VI EEA conference. \nEconomic development and energy transition are central themes in the current debate on future prospects at both regional and national scales. The need to reconcile sustained economic growth with the decarbonization of the economy is especially relevant in contexts such as the Brazilian Northeast\, where structural challenges coexist with strategic opportunities in the energy sector. In this scenario\, understanding the dynamics of sectoral transformation becomes essential for building inclusive and resilient development pathways. \n  \nThis event brings together scholars whose research sheds light on the sectoral dimensions of the energy transition in Brazil. \nThe Workshop will consist of the following special activities: \nDay 01 – 14th August: \n01) Minicourse – Data Science applied to regional and sectoral economic analysis with Lucas Carvalho\, professor at the Center for Regional Development and Planning – Cedeplar/UFMG; \n02) Networking meeting fostering a colaborative moment to the young scholars to share their research and ideas\, fostering collaboration with experts and peers in the field of energy transition and its impacts on Economic Sectors and Regional Development. \nDay 02 – 15th August \nPanel Discussion – Energy transition and sectoral challenges \nAdmir Betarelli (UFJF) will address the broader implications of decarbonization and its effects across economic sectors; Rafael Faria de Abreu Campos (UFV) will explore the potential of sustainable agro-industrial chains; and André Luiz da Silva Teixeira (UNIFAL) will discuss how digital transformation is reshaping industrial processes. Together\, these contributions will offer valuable insights into how Brazil can navigate the energy transition while fostering regional development. \nThis activities will happen during the 6th Sergipe Applied Economics Meeting (VI EEA-SE)\, in Aracaju\, Sergipe\, Brazil\, on August 14th and 15th\, 2025. Selected young scholars will receive partial travel stipends and accommodation to attend the YSI Panel and the whole conference. \nAbout the Conference: \nThe event is the result of a partnership between the Federation of Industries of the State of Sergipe (FIES)\, through the Euvaldo Lodi Institute (IEL)\, and the Federal University of Sergipe (UFS)\, through the Laboratory of Applied Economics for Regional Development (LEADER)\, the Academic Program for Postgraduate Studies in Economics (PPGE) and the Department of Economics (DEE)\, with support from the Foundation for Support for Research and Technological Innovation of the State of Sergipe (FAPITEC) and the Banco do Nordeste do Brasil (BNB). \nEconomic development and energy transition are central themes in the current debate on future prospects on a regional and national scale. The need to reconcile sustained economic growth aligned with the decarbonization of the economy is even more relevant in contexts such as Sergipe and the Brazilian Northeast\, where structural challenges coexist with strategic opportunities in the energy sector. \nFull articles will be presented in four thematic area: \nArea 1: Regional economy and environment\nArea 2: Labor\, social and educational economics\nArea 3: Economic growth and innovation\nArea 4: Economic theory and quantitative methods \nParticipants are encouraged to submit full papers in one of the four thematic areas of the event. Preference for travel grants and accommodation support will be given to those with approved full papers. \nFor more information about the event and submission\, please follow the conference’s official website: https://nie.fies.org.br/inscricao/home \n(Article submissions closed on 06/05/2025)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-workshop-on-energy-transition-and-sectoral-challenges-vi-eea-se-2025/
LOCATION:Universidade Federal de Sergipe\, Avenida Marechal Rondon\, São Cristóvão\, Sergipe\, São Cristóvão\, 49100-000\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250819T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250819T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
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SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-08-19/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-08-19/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Montevideo:20250822T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Montevideo:20250823T170000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250313T155414Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250717T102138Z
UID:10007395-1755853200-1755968400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Structural change and environmental sustainability
DESCRIPTION:The international economy faces challenges such as rising inequality\, geopolitical tensions\, financial instability\, environmental crises\, and technological asymmetries between developed and developing nations. Various economic paradigms seek to explain these crises and propose policies for sustainable development in its economic\, social\, and environmental dimensions. \nThis workshop brings together researchers from diverse intellectual traditions—Post-Keynesian\, Structuralist\, Institutionalist\, Evolutionary\, and Schumpeterian\, among others—to discuss their findings and ongoing work. It especially encourages PhD students and early-career scholars (within three years of earning a PhD) to contribute in areas such as: \n\nEconomic\, industrial\, and technological policies for a fair transition\nGender\, care economy\, development\, and climate change models\nCenter-periphery dynamics and shifts in global economic integration\nMacroeconomic policies and their effects on structural change\, income distribution\, and sustainability\nHistorical perspectives on structural change and inequality\nFinancial instability\, debt\, and sustainable development financing\nThe complementarities and tensions between different economic schools of thought\nSustainable Development Goals and productive structures\n\nExtended abstracts and full paper submissions: Interested scholars are invited to apply to the workshop by submitting an extended abstract (1000-1500 words). The major prerequisites for acceptance are completeness and relatedness to the required topics. Submitted work will most likely be considered if it is fully readable and does not lack substantial sections. We encourage authors to send their abstract in English\, Portuguese or Spanish. Full paper submissions are accepted written in English\, Spanish or Portuguese.  To apply\, you must have an active YSI profile. \nWorkshop presentations: In the workshop\, mentors will give feedback to the participants. The workshop will be organized in different sessions according to the research topic. Moreover\, we will count with a special edition Review of Keynesian Economics so selected papers will have the chance to submit their work.  \nFinancial support: is available\, although resources are scarce. In this sense\, partial support can only be given to scholars who are based in the region. Please indicate the need for funding in the application. In case of acceptance\, organizers will contact details about the amount granted.  \nImportant deadlines:\nReception of extended abstracts (1000-1500 words): 22th  April 2025 \nAcceptance announcement: 7th May 2025 \nFull paper submissions: 15th July  \nFor any questions regarding the call\, please contact:  \nworkshop_montevideo_2025@fcea.edu.uy   \nCLICK HERE TO APPLY \nAcademic Committee: Luis Bértola\, Carlos Bianchi\, Fernando Isabella\, Florencia Jaccoud\, Gabriel Porcile\, Carolina Roman\, Tiago Couto\, Giuliano Yajima\, Jimena Castillo\, Carol Baltar\, Sebastian Valdecantos\, Esteban Perez Caldentey\, Lucia Pittaluga \nOrganizer Committee: Carlos Bianchi\, Jimena Castillo\, Tiago Couto\, Fernando Isabella\, Florencia Jaccoud\, Gabriel Porcile\, Giuliano Yajima\, Mateo Cattivelli
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/structural-change-and-environmental-sustainability/
LOCATION:Facultad de Ciencias Economicas y de Administracion\, Doctor Lauro Müller\, Montevideo\, 11200\, Uruguay
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250825
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250830
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250212T203335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T171802Z
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SUMMARY:YSI – Pre Conference Day (Early Career Day) @ 24 BIEN Congress
DESCRIPTION:This project aims to bring together young scholars from diverse backgrounds to engage in discussions on basic income and its role in addressing inequality\, with a particular focus on Latin America. Organized by the YSI Inequality and Latin America Working Groups\, this initiative will take place as part of the BIEN Congress 2025 in Brazil\, a major international conference dedicated to exploring universal basic income (UBI) as a policy tool for economic and social transformation\, this year with a focus on Basic Income & Solidarity Economy: New Horizons for Social Protection \nBy participating in this project\, young researchers will have the opportunity to present their work\, engage in interdisciplinary discussions\, and connect with leading experts in the field. The project is designed to create a collaborative space where participants can critically examine the effectiveness\, challenges\, and future prospects of basic income policies\, particularly in regions characterized by high levels of inequality. \n\nWe invite submissions of articles and posters\, in English\, Portuguese or Spanish.\nSubmissions that explore basic income and solidarity economy\, focusing\, but not limited to\, the following themes: \n\n\nBasic Income and Social Justice: Examining the potential of basic income to address poverty\, inequality\, and precarity. \n\n\nEnvironmental Sustainability: Exploring how basic income intersects with ecological justice and climate resilience. \n\n\nGender Justice and Basic Income: Investigating how basic income can contribute to gender equity\, particularly in relation to care work and economic independence. \n\n\nCommunity and Solidarity Economies: Understanding how grassroots initiatives can complement or enhance the implementation of basic income. \n\n\nInnovative Methodologies: Creative approaches to researching basic income and its impacts. \n\n\nWe encourage submissions from early-career scholars\, particularly those from underrepresented backgrounds or institutions. \n\n\nWhat to Expect\nYSI organizer and participants will actively engage in various activities designed to foster collaboration and intellectual exchange: \n\nYSI Panel Sessions: Presentations and discussions featuring early-career researchers alongside established academics and policymakers.\nWorkshops and Roundtables: Interactive sessions where participants can refine their research ideas\, receive feedback\, and collaborate on future projects.\nNetworking Opportunities: Opportunities to connect with scholars\, activists\, and policymakers working on social protection and inequality in Latin America and beyond.\nSite Visits (TBD): If feasible\, participants may visit locations implementing experimental basic income programs\, such as Maricá\, to observe real-world applications.\nAfter the presentation in the Early Career Day\, participants are more than welcome to attend the rest of the Congress!\n\nWho Should Participate?\nThis project is open to young scholars\, early-career researchers\, graduate students\, and practitioners with an interest in inequality\, social policy\, basic income\, and economic development. While the focus is on Latin America\, we encourage participants from all regions to apply\, as comparative perspectives enrich the discussion. Selected participants will be entitled to travel stipend\, and accomodation for the whole duration of the Congress. \nWhy Take Part?\nBy joining this initiative\, participants will: \n\nGain exposure to cutting-edge debates on basic income and inequality.\nEngage with policymakers and practitioners working on real-world applications of UBI.\nExpand their academic and professional networks within YSI and the broader research community.\nContribute to shaping the discourse on economic justice and innovative policy solutions.\n\nThis is a unique opportunity to be part of a globally significant conversation on economic justice while developing research collaborations and insights that can inform both academic work and policy debates. \nHow to apply?\nFirst\, register on the BIEN website https://bien2025.com.br/. Remember to select “Early Career Day” option.\nThen\, click the “Apply Now” button on this webpage\, complete the form with your personal information\, explaininig your motivation for applying\, and submit an abstract\, a small bio and 5 keywords related to your topic of research. \n\nDeadline: 20 of March!!
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-pre-conference-day-or-early-career-day-24-bien-congress/
LOCATION:Universidade Federal Fluminense\, Niteroi\, Rio de Janeiro\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250826T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250826T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
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SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-08-26/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-08-26/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250829
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250604T204955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250703T030303Z
UID:10007475-1756425600-1761782399@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor
DESCRIPTION:El Seminario “Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor” es una iniciativa académica consolidada desde 2019. Originalmente impulsado por la División de Estudios Profesionales de la Facultad de Economía de la UNAM y\, posteriormente\, por su División de Estudios de Posgrado\, ha estado bajo la coordinación académica de la Dra. Seyka Sandoval y la Dra. Paty Montiel. A partir de 2024\, se integró el Dr. Iván Cortés\, de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa\, y recientemente a través del apoyo de la Dra. Julia Juárez García\, hemos abierto el proyecto a través de la plataforma del Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). \nEn sus últimas tres ediciones\, el Seminario ha reunido anualmente a más de 100 participantes\, entre académicos y estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado provenientes de distintos países de América Latina\, consolidando un amplio reconocimiento institucional. A lo largo de este lustro\, el seminario ha dado lugar a colaboraciones académicas en el marco de grupos de trabajo de redes como ESOCITE y 4S\, así como a diversas publicaciones y direcciones de tesis de posgrado. \n\nINSCRIBIRSE EN:\nhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeYbEzhXJHtTx5SCiiYRdKFwIA3fwsLaBm3NFQfTRwKHyrQcw/viewform?usp=header\n  \nEn esta edición\, extendemos una cordial invitación a la comunidad académica en general —estudiantes de posgrado\, investigadores jóvenes y docentes— a participar en las distintas mesas y talleres que conforman el programa. Para ello\, deberán registrarse a través del formulario indicado en la convocatoria. \nEs importante señalar que se trata de una actividad híbrida\, por lo que quienes deseen asistir presencialmente serán bienvenidos. No obstante\, aclaramos que el evento no cuenta con financiamiento para transporte o alojamiento. \nIdioma oficial del seminario: Español.Todos los horarios del programa están en Tiempo del Centro de México (CDMX). \nPara más información contactar: julia.juarez.garcia@comunidad.unam.mx \nPrograma\nMesa 1: Reconfiguraciones del Estado y nuevas estrategias de desarrollo en América Latina\nEsta sesión introduce la discusión a partir de la configuración actual del Estado latinoamericano en un contexto marcado por crisis sucesivas (económica\, sanitaria y tecnológica)\, abordando cómo distintas corrientes de pensamiento económico representan y analizan la configuración estatal frente a desafíos estructurales: crecimiento\, digitalización\, innovación y desigualdad social. Preguntas ejes para la discusión: ¿qué perspectivas teóricas permiten problematizar las configuraciones del Estado en el capitalismo actual y periférico?\, ¿cuáles son las características del Estado? y ¿cuáles son las estrategias de desarrollo para América Latina? \nPonentes: \n\nCarolina Lauxmann (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Argentina).\nPaty Montiel (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).\nEmilia Ormaechea (confirmada) (Universidad de Hamburgo).\n\nFecha: viernes 29 de agosto de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nMesa 2: Políticas de desarrollo comparadas: aprendizajes de Brasil\, Colombia\, Asia y Europa\nEsta sesión busca identificar experiencias recientes de políticas que busquen inspirar respuestas estratégicas en América Latina frente a los desafíos de la desaceleración económica\, las tensiones comerciales\, los retos del cambio climático y la desigualdad persistente. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo estratégicas actuales?\, ¿qué características del Estado permiten el impulso de políticas de desarrollo? \nPonentes: \n\nValeria Lopes Ribeiro (confirmada) (Universidade Federal do ABC\, Brasil)\nJulia Juárez (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México\, México)\nMónica Simanca- Sotelo (confirmada) (Universidad de Córdoba\, Colombia).\n\n  \nFecha: viernes 26 de septiembre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00-11:30 \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nTaller 1: Medición sobre valor agregado y evaluación de políticas en los encadenamientos productivos. Experiencias para México\, América Latina y China\nInstructoras:  \n\nLesbia Pérez-Santillan y Rosalinda Arriaga Navarrete (por confirmar) (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) [24 de septiembre]\nRosa Gómez (conformada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) [25 de septiembre]\n\nFecha: miércoles 24 y jueves 25 de septiembre (en línea) \nHorario: Por definir \nMesa 3: Desafíos del Estado y las políticas ante la reorganización productiva global y la economía digital en México\nEsta sesión profundiza en los retos particulares que México enfrenta hoy en día en términos de política industrial\, digitalización y soberanía tecnológica\, en el marco de las presiones comerciales derivadas del T-MEC y las estrategias nacionales frente al dominio creciente de plataformas digitales. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las determinaciones geopolíticas y económicas de México? y ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo ante esas determinaciones? \nPonentes: \n\nSeyka Sandoval (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nMonika Meireles (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\n\nFecha: viernes 24 de octubre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/1/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/1/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/CVG-SEM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250829
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250830
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250604T204955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250703T030303Z
UID:10007476-1756454400-1756486800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor
DESCRIPTION:El Seminario “Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor” es una iniciativa académica consolidada desde 2019. Originalmente impulsado por la División de Estudios Profesionales de la Facultad de Economía de la UNAM y\, posteriormente\, por su División de Estudios de Posgrado\, ha estado bajo la coordinación académica de la Dra. Seyka Sandoval y la Dra. Paty Montiel. A partir de 2024\, se integró el Dr. Iván Cortés\, de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa\, y recientemente a través del apoyo de la Dra. Julia Juárez García\, hemos abierto el proyecto a través de la plataforma del Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). \nEn sus últimas tres ediciones\, el Seminario ha reunido anualmente a más de 100 participantes\, entre académicos y estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado provenientes de distintos países de América Latina\, consolidando un amplio reconocimiento institucional. A lo largo de este lustro\, el seminario ha dado lugar a colaboraciones académicas en el marco de grupos de trabajo de redes como ESOCITE y 4S\, así como a diversas publicaciones y direcciones de tesis de posgrado. \n\nINSCRIBIRSE EN:\nhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeYbEzhXJHtTx5SCiiYRdKFwIA3fwsLaBm3NFQfTRwKHyrQcw/viewform?usp=header\n  \nEn esta edición\, extendemos una cordial invitación a la comunidad académica en general —estudiantes de posgrado\, investigadores jóvenes y docentes— a participar en las distintas mesas y talleres que conforman el programa. Para ello\, deberán registrarse a través del formulario indicado en la convocatoria. \nEs importante señalar que se trata de una actividad híbrida\, por lo que quienes deseen asistir presencialmente serán bienvenidos. No obstante\, aclaramos que el evento no cuenta con financiamiento para transporte o alojamiento. \nIdioma oficial del seminario: Español.Todos los horarios del programa están en Tiempo del Centro de México (CDMX). \nPara más información contactar: julia.juarez.garcia@comunidad.unam.mx \nPrograma\nMesa 1: Reconfiguraciones del Estado y nuevas estrategias de desarrollo en América Latina\nEsta sesión introduce la discusión a partir de la configuración actual del Estado latinoamericano en un contexto marcado por crisis sucesivas (económica\, sanitaria y tecnológica)\, abordando cómo distintas corrientes de pensamiento económico representan y analizan la configuración estatal frente a desafíos estructurales: crecimiento\, digitalización\, innovación y desigualdad social. Preguntas ejes para la discusión: ¿qué perspectivas teóricas permiten problematizar las configuraciones del Estado en el capitalismo actual y periférico?\, ¿cuáles son las características del Estado? y ¿cuáles son las estrategias de desarrollo para América Latina? \nPonentes: \n\nCarolina Lauxmann (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Argentina).\nPaty Montiel (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).\nEmilia Ormaechea (confirmada) (Universidad de Hamburgo).\n\nFecha: viernes 29 de agosto de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nMesa 2: Políticas de desarrollo comparadas: aprendizajes de Brasil\, Colombia\, Asia y Europa\nEsta sesión busca identificar experiencias recientes de políticas que busquen inspirar respuestas estratégicas en América Latina frente a los desafíos de la desaceleración económica\, las tensiones comerciales\, los retos del cambio climático y la desigualdad persistente. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo estratégicas actuales?\, ¿qué características del Estado permiten el impulso de políticas de desarrollo? \nPonentes: \n\nValeria Lopes Ribeiro (confirmada) (Universidade Federal do ABC\, Brasil)\nJulia Juárez (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México\, México)\nMónica Simanca- Sotelo (confirmada) (Universidad de Córdoba\, Colombia).\n\n  \nFecha: viernes 26 de septiembre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00-11:30 \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nTaller 1: Medición sobre valor agregado y evaluación de políticas en los encadenamientos productivos. Experiencias para México\, América Latina y China\nInstructoras:  \n\nLesbia Pérez-Santillan y Rosalinda Arriaga Navarrete (por confirmar) (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) [24 de septiembre]\nRosa Gómez (conformada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) [25 de septiembre]\n\nFecha: miércoles 24 y jueves 25 de septiembre (en línea) \nHorario: Por definir \nMesa 3: Desafíos del Estado y las políticas ante la reorganización productiva global y la economía digital en México\nEsta sesión profundiza en los retos particulares que México enfrenta hoy en día en términos de política industrial\, digitalización y soberanía tecnológica\, en el marco de las presiones comerciales derivadas del T-MEC y las estrategias nacionales frente al dominio creciente de plataformas digitales. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las determinaciones geopolíticas y económicas de México? y ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo ante esas determinaciones? \nPonentes: \n\nSeyka Sandoval (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nMonika Meireles (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\n\nFecha: viernes 24 de octubre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/2/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/2/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/CVG-SEM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250901T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250902T210000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250812T125708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T180846Z
UID:10007523-1756713600-1756846800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Course in Ecological Economics pre-conference
DESCRIPTION:Organizamos un Curso Internacional pre-congreso de Economía Ecológica\, abierto a la comunidad\, a realizarse los días 1 y 2 de septiembre de 2025. La Asociación Argentino-Uruguaya de Economía Ecológica ( ASAUEE ) organizará el 12º Congreso de Economía Ecológica y el 2º Encuentro Latinoamericano de Economía Ecológica\, que se desarrollarán del 3 al 6 de septiembre de 2025\, en el campus de la UNJu . \nASAUEE\, con su enfoque transdisciplinario —que integra elementos de economía\, ecología\, biología\, física y sociología— se ha consolidado como un espacio de encuentro para la discusión y el desarrollo de herramientas para la gestión del desarrollo sostenible. \nLa principal motivación de este proyecto es fomentar la participación de jóvenes investigadores y estudiantes en estos espacios de debate y formación. En particular\, buscamos fortalecer la difusión internacional de estos congresos y fomentar nuevas oportunidades de participación académica y profesional. \nAdemás\, esta iniciativa marcará el inicio de una colaboración entre ASAUEE y YSI (y también entre grupos de YSI)\, sentando las bases para una cooperación duradera entre las dos organizaciones. \nDesde una perspectiva inclusiva\, la conferencia incorporará una perspectiva de género\, garantizando la participación activa de mujeres y personas de todas las edades durante todo el evento. Se promoverá la equidad en la representación en paneles y mesas redondas\, garantizando un espacio de intercambio plural y diverso. \nEste proyecto contribuirá significativamente al fortalecimiento del grupo de trabajo mediante: \n  \n\nFomentar el intercambio entre estudiantes y jóvenes investigadores de la región\, promoviendo la creación de redes académicas y profesionales en América Latina.\n\n  \n\nAmpliar las actividades del grupo de trabajo\, incorporando dinámicas innovadoras de compromiso y participación que no se habían explorado anteriormente.\n\n  \n\nConsolidar la colaboración con YSI y dentro de YSI (Sutentability y Grupos)\, lo que generará nuevas oportunidades para futuras iniciativas conjuntas en el campo de la Economía Ecológica.\n\n  \n\nPromover la diversidad y la inclusión\, garantizando que el evento sea un espacio accesible y representativo de la pluralidad de voces en el ámbito de la economía ecológica.\n\nContenido \nLunes 1 de septiembre \n10h Historia de la Economía Ecológica (clásicos) \n11h Economía Ecológica Latinoamericana \n14h La Relación Economía-Ecología (Termodinámica\, Funciones Ecosistémicas) \n15h Indicadores Biofísicos y Política Ambiental \n17h Evaluación de Impacto y Sistemas Complejos\n 18h Evaluación/Análisis Multicriterio \nMartes 2 de septiembre \n10h Intercambio Ecológicamente Desigual \n11h Deuda Ecológica y Canje de Deuda \n14h Ordenamiento Territorial \n15h Historia Ambiental \n17h Educación Ambiental / Ecofeminismo \n18h Gestión Cultural \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-course-in-ecological-economics-pre-conference/
LOCATION:Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias UNJu\, Alberdi N° 47\, San Salvador de Jujuy\, Jujuy\, Y4600DTA\, Argentina
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250902T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250902T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008147-1756821600-1756827000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-02/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-02/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20250904T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20250904T193000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20240117T145948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T170413Z
UID:10007547-1757008800-1757014200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money and Finance Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:This reading group has been created to amplify and deep our knowledge on money and finance from a wide perspective that can embrace the complexity of money’s nature\, thus\, the complexity of the financial system and its dynamics. Moreover\, as it was cleverly unveiled by Émile Zola in his book L’Argent\, the first book discussed in this reading group\, money and finance are rooted in every sphere of human beings (social\, political\, religious\, personal\, etc.)\, therefore\, their inquiring and comprehension cannot neglect this this reality. \nThe reading group started with an initial selection of books proposed by Professor Jan Toporowski\, however\, the path we will walk together will be opened and determined by the interests and tastes of the group members. \nList of Readings: \nZola Émile\, L’Argent\, 1891      Discussed \nSchumpeter\, J.A.S. History of Economic Analysis\, Chapter 8 on ‘Money\, Credit and Cycles’.  This chapter will be divided in two sessions. The first session will be on 25/01/24 and include sections 1 – 5 (From page 1040 to page 1074)\, the second will be on 29/02/2024 and include sections 6 – 9 (From page 1074 to page 1101). Discussed \nDiscussion of Schumpeter’s Chapter with the contribution of Professor Jan Toporowski. Discussed \nChick\, V. ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving\, Investment and Interest’ Économies et Sociétés Série MP no. 3 1986 and Arestis and Dow (eds.) On Money\, Method and Keynes\, Selected Essays of Victoria Chick 1992. Discussed on 11/04/2024 \nFor the last session on Chick’s Paper we will have Sheila Dow. Discussed on 3 May 2023. \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022\, Part 1. Discussed on 30/05/2024 \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022. Discussed on 05/07/2024 \n\n\n\nToporowski\, J. ‘Marx’s Critical Notes on the Classical Theory of Interest’ in J. Dellheim and F.O. Wolf (eds.) The Unfinished System of Karl Marx Critically Reading Capital as a Challenge to our Times London: Palgrave Macmillan 2018. Discussed on 01/08/2024 \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Grundrisse Chapter 1\, on Money . Discussed on Discussed on 24/10/2024 \nPaper presentation ““Kalecki-Levy Profit Equation and Money View Angles on Chinese Economy and Markets”\, by Shengbei Guo\, on 21/11/2024. \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 1 and 2\, will be discussed on 26/12/2024. \n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 3 to 6\, discussed on 30/01/2025. \nOn Marx’s monetary theory talk given by Riccardo Bellofiore\, retired Professor of Economics at the University of Bergamo\, Italy\, who has authored and co-authored “Theory of Plus-Value”\, “Marx on Money”\, “Production\, Circulation and Money”\, within others. Discussed on 06/03/2025. \nBellofiore\, R.\, ‘The monetary aspects of the capitalist process in the Marxian system: an investigation from the point of view of the theory of the monetary circuit’ in Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals 2005. Discussed on 27/03/2025 \nBellofiore\, R. ‘Money and development in Schumpeter’ 1985. Discussed on 24/04/2025 \n\nTalk with Riccardo Bellofiore about the monetary theories of Marx\, the Theory of the Monetary Circuit\, Schumpeter and a bit of Wicksell. To be discussed on 29/05/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 1 and 2. Discussed on 26/06/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 3\, 4 and 5. Discussed on 24/07/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Good and Bad Trade or Currency and Credit 1919. From Ch 1 to  7\, inclusive. To be discussed on 04/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 3 and 4. To be discussed on 25/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 5\, 6\, 7 and 8. To be discussed on 30/10/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 9\, 10\, 11. To be discussed on 04/12/2025 \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Introduction by Bertil Ohlin\, Preface and Introduction (Ch 1) \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Ch 2\, 3\, 4\, 5\, 6.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-09-04/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-09-04/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250907T200000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250907T220000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250905T081044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T233632Z
UID:10007903-1757275200-1757282400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Reading Group: “False Nostalgia by JC Punongbayan” Debunking Martial Law Dictatorship in the Philippines
DESCRIPTION:UPDATE: TALK BACK SESSION IS MOVED TO November 22\, 2025 \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group invites participants to a special Public Book Club series featuring False Nostalgia: The Marcos “Golden Age” Myths and How to Debunk Them by Dr. JC Punongbayan. This initiative aims to foster thoughtful dialogue on history\, economics\, and disinformation\, timed with the 53rd anniversary of Martial Law in the Philippines. Through this book—which uses accessible data\, historical accounts\, and economic analysis to dismantle nearly 50 myths about the Marcos era—participants will examine the role of narrative in shaping economic memory\, public opinion\, and political outcomes\, with relevance not only to the Philippines but also to broader East Asian and global contexts. \nThe discussion series will run online on September 7\, 14\, and 21\, culminating in a live talkback session with Dr. Punongbayan. Dr. Punongbayan is an Assistant Professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics and a former Visiting Fellow of the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. He earned his PhD from UPSE in 2021\, graduating summa cum laude in 2009\, and received the José Encarnación Jr. Award for Excellence in Economics and the Gerardo P. Sicat Award for Best Undergraduate Thesis. Before joining academe\, he worked at the Securities and Exchange Commission\, the World Bank Office in Manila\, the FEU Public Policy Center\, and the National Economic and Development Authority. His current research focuses on macroeconomics\, Philippine economic history\, education economics\, and development economics. In addition to his weekly economics column for Rappler.com\, his debut book False Nostalgia was published in 2023 by Ateneo de Manila University Press\, and in 2024 he received The Outstanding Young Men (TOYM) Award for Economics. \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group is a community of emerging scholars dedicated to rethinking economic frameworks and fostering dialogue about East Asia’s historical\, cultural\, and economic trajectories. By situating this Book Club within YSI’s global network\, we aim to bridge local economic discourse with international perspectives\, create space for collective inquiry\, and strengthen scholarly connections between East Asia and the wider world. \nInterested participants can sign up at tinyurl.com/EkonseptoBookClub1
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-07/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-07/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/bookclub_ysi.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Rio_Branco:20250908T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Rio_Branco:20250908T170000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250319T173605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250319T173605Z
UID:10007392-1757318400-1757350800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI  Special Session @ XVI ECOECO
DESCRIPTION:[ENGLISH BELOW]\n  \nSessão Especial YSI @ XVI ECOECO\, Amazônia em Direção à COP-30: Economias dos Povos da Floresta e Outros Enfrentamentos à Emergência Climática.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDesde a fundação da Sociedade Brasileira de Economia Ecológica – ECOECO\, em 1994\, sua missão tem sido a difusão e construção da economia ecológica no Brasil\, por meio da integração de seus associados e de contrapartes de outros países. A ECOECO visa promover uma abordagem entre estudos e pesquisas no campo da economia ecológica com estratégias e políticas de gestão da sustentabilidade dentro do setor público (local\, regional e nacional)\, do setor privado (empresas e associações empresariais) e de organizações não governamentais. \n  \nEm 2025\, a 16ª edição ocorrerá em Cruzeiro do Sul\, Acre\, na região amazônica\, de 8 a 12 de setembro\, na UFAC\, Campus Floresta. Ela acontece em um momento crítico para a Amazônia. Com a COP-30 se aproximando em Belém\, a região se tornou central nas discussões climáticas globais. No entanto\, a Amazônia não é um monólito; suas vastas distâncias e realidades diversas exigem uma abordagem multifacetada para evitar as armadilhas históricas da colonização que levaram à exploração de suas populações e destruição de seus recursos. \n  \nCom o tema “Amazônia em Direção à COP-30: Economias dos Povos da Floresta e Outros Enfrentamentos à Emergência Climática”\, esta edição busca destacar a diversidade da região\, focando em conhecimentos emergentes de alguns de seus territórios mais negligenciados\, como o Vale do Juruá. Esta área é conhecida por sua rica socio-biodiversidade\, mas também luta com alguns dos menores índices de Desenvolvimento Humano (IDH) do Brasil\, comparáveis a países como a Etiópia. Apesar dos desafios\, esses territórios e seus povos são contribuintes essenciais para potenciais soluções para um planeta em crise. \n  \nA participação da YSI no evento tem sido extremamente bem-sucedida em duas edições (2019 e 2023). O objetivo da sessão dedicada à YSI é fornecer aos jovens pesquisadores a oportunidade de apresentar suas pesquisas em andamento à comunidade da ECOECO e receber feedback de um professor da área de Economia Ecológica. O workshop da YSI ocorrerá um dia antes das sessões padrão da conferência\, permitindo que os estudantes se conectem com outros jovens pesquisadores e se envolvam plenamente no evento. \n  \nPrincipais Tópicos a Serem Discutidos na Conferência: \n\n\nComo podemos fortalecer a liderança dos povos da floresta na transição para uma economia verde? \n\n\nQual é o papel das economias locais amazônicas na COP-30 e na agenda climática global? \n\n\nQuais são os riscos das estratégias de desenvolvimento econômico na Amazônia em meio à crise climática? \n\n\nComo soluções climáticas sustentáveis podem ser financiadas em regiões florestais\, minimizando os impactos negativos nas comunidades locais? \n\n\n  \nPara se inscrever na sessão especial da YSI\, por favor\, preencha o formulário de inscrição clicando no botão “Apply here”. No formulário\, você deve fornecer uma breve descrição de suas motivações e incluir um resumo curto de um projeto ou pesquisa em andamento para o qual você gostaria de receber feedback durante nossa sessão especial. \n  \nOs participantes selecionados terão sua taxa de conferência coberta pela organização da ECOECO. Se você for selecionado\, por favor não pague a taxa de conferência por conta própria no site da ECOECO. Além disso\, a YSI fornecerá uma ajuda de custo de transporte parcial. Como esse apoio é limitado (NÃO cobrirá o total de suas despesas)\, encorajamos você a buscar financiamento adicional para cobrir o restante de suas despesas. Hospedagem compartilhada será oferecida pela organização para os dias do evento. \n  \nEmbora não seja obrigatório para participar da Sessão Especial da YSI\, os participantes da YSI também são encorajados a enviar seus resumos de pesquisa expandidos para as sessões normais da conferência. As inscrições estão abertas aqui. \n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nYSI Special Session @ XVI ECOECO\, Amazon Towards COP-30: Forest Peoples’ Economies and Other Responses to the Climate Emergency\nSince the foundation of the Brazilian Society for Ecological Economics-ECOECO in 1994\, its mission has been the diffusion and construction of ecological economics in Brazil\, through the integration of its associates and among counterparts from other countries. ECOECO aims to promote an approach between studies and research in the field of ecological economics with strategies and policies for sustainability management within the public sector (local\, regional and national)\, the private sector (companies and business associations) and non-governmental organizations. \nIn 2025\, the 16th edition will take place in Cruzeiro do Sul\, Acre\, in the Amazon region from September 8 to 12 in the UFAC\, Campus Floresta. It takes place at a critical moment for the Amazon. With COP-30 approaching in Belém\, the region has become central to global climate discussions. However\, the Amazon is not a monolith; its vast distances and diverse realities require a multi-faceted approach to avoid the historical pitfalls of colonization that have led to exploitation of its populations and destruction of its resources. \nWith the theme “Amazon Towards COP-30: Forest Peoples’ Economies and Other Responses to the Climate Emergency”\, this edition seeks to highlight the region’s diversity by focusing on knowledge emerging from some of its most overlooked territories\, such as the Juruá Valley. This area is known for its rich socio-biodiversity but also struggles with some of Brazil’s lowest Human Development Index (HDI) scores\, comparable to countries like Ethiopia. Despite its challenges\, these territories and their peoples are essential contributors to potential solutions for a planet in crisis. \nThe YSI’s participation in the event has been extremely successful in two editions (2019 and 2023). The purpose of the YSI-dedicated session is providing young scholars with the opportunity to present their ongoing research to the ECOECO community and receive feedback from a professor in the Ecological Economics area. The YSI workshop will take place one day before the conference’s standard sessions\, allowing students to connect with other young scholars and fully engage in the event. \nKey Topics to Be Discussed within the Conference: \n\nHow can we strengthen the leadership of forest peoples in the transition to a green economy?\nWhat role do local Amazonian economies play in COP-30 and the global climate agenda?\nWhat are the risks of economic development strategies in the Amazon amidst the climate crisis?\nHow can sustainable climate solutions be financed in forest regions while minimizing negative impacts on local communities?\n\n  \n  \nTo apply for the YSI special session\, please fill out the application form by clicking the “Apply here” button. In the form\, you should provide a brief description of your motivations and include a short abstract of a project or ongoing research for which you would like to receive feedback during our special session. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSelected participants will have their conference fee covered by the ECOECO organization. If you are selected\, please do not pay the conference fee yourself on the ECOECO website. Additionally\, YSI will provide a partial travel stipend. As this support is limited (it WILL NOT cover the total of your expenses)\, we encourage you to seek additional funding to cover the remainder of your expenses. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDespite not being mandatory for participating in the YSI Special Session\, the YSI participants are also encouraged to send their expanded research abstracts to the normal conference sessions. Subscriptions are open here.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-special-session-xvi-ecoeco/
LOCATION:UFAC\, Campus Floresta\, Cruzeiro do Sul\, Cruzeiro do Sul\, 69895-000\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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SUMMARY:Is it time to rethink technological change and innovation in Latin America?
DESCRIPTION:About the LALICs  \n  \nThe VI International LALICS Conference (Rio de Janeiro\, Brazil) aims to provide a platform for scholars working on innovation\, development\, and the economics of sustainability in Latin American countries to present and discuss their research. In particular\, we will be part of the LALICS´ Academy co-organizing two working sessions that will serve as a unique opportunity for PhD students to engage with peers and receive feedback from different scholars. \nThe Academy will last two days (September 8 and September 9)[1]. It is expected that selected PhD students will attend the entire event. \nAware that traditional conference formats can be overly formal and discourage active participation from early-career researchers\, we propose a roundtable-based approach. Sessions are designed to encourage an interactive and engaging discussion environment where young scholars can share their work in progress\, receive constructive comments\, and build professional networks within the innovation and development research community. \n  \nCall for Presentations: Re-thinking technological change and innovation in Latin America \n  \nRecent global challenges\, such as climate change\, fragile value chains and accelerated digitalization -evidenced after the pandemic- have renewed policy makers and researchers’ interests in technological change. There is a renewed global call for productive transformation\, with industrial policy measures increasing since early 2023.[2] However\, developing countries—particularly in Latin America—have often lagged behind and face specific challenges\, including the failure of past productive transformations\, limited budgets\, and right-wing governments that are not committed to industrialization\, among others. \nWe invite PhD students at all stages of research to submit their work in progress (see guidelines below) for presentations on topics related to innovation\, technological change\, development\, and sustainability—within the context of Latin America—. We particularly welcome submissions that address: \n\nTechnological change and technological specialization\nDigital transitions; local capabilities and capacities (limits and possibilities)\nPolitical economy of industrial and innovation policy\n\n  \nEligibility \nPhD candidates are encouraged to apply. Submissions should align with the broad themes of  innovation\, technological change\, and development in Latin American countries and related policy problems. \n  \nSubmission Guidelines \nSubmissions may be based on work in progress. We welcome submissions at different stages of doctoral research\, from early-stage proposals to advanced findings. \nManuscripts should be no longer than 6000 words and must clearly outline the research question\, literature review and theoretical framework\, methodological proposal\, main findings (if applicable) and references (APA style). Please include an abstract up to 200 words and 5 keywords. \nSubmissions must be in English\, Spanish or Portuguese. \n10th August: deadline for submission. \n15th August: notification of acceptance. LALICS Academy Committee will take part in the selection process. \n1st September: deadline for written cross-review comments. \n  \nFormat of the Session \nSelected participants will present their research in friendly sessions\, allowing for direct interaction and discussion with attendees. Presentations can be made in Spanish\, English or Portuguese. Please translate your slides\, if applicable\, to another language. \nParticipants will engage in a structured cross-review process to foster deeper academic exchange. Each participant will be assigned a colleague’s work in progress to review and provide written feedback via email before the event. Additionally\, the participants should comment during the session. \n  \nPreliminar Program – 08th September 2025 \n13.45h – 14hs: Registration and YSI opening \n14h – 15.30h: Session 1 – \n\nPaper 1 –\nPaper 2 –\nPaper 3 –\nPaper 4 –\n\n  \n15.30h – 16h: coffee break \n16h – 17h30: Session 2 – \n\nPaper 5 –\nPaper 6 –\nPaper 7 –\nPaper 8\n\n17h30 – 18: Final remarks \n  \nTravel and Funding \nLimited financial support -for accommodation and/or travel expenses- may be available for selected participants. More details on funding opportunities will be provided upon acceptance. \n  \n  \nVersión en español \n  \nAcerca de LALICS \nLa VI Conferencia Internacional LALICS (Río de Janeiro\, Brasil) tiene como objetivo proporcionar una plataforma para que quienes trabajan en innovación\, desarrollo y economía de la sostenibilidad en los países latinoamericanos presenten y discutan sus investigaciones. En particular\, seremos parte de la Academia LALICS co-organizando dos sesiones de trabajo que servirán como una oportunidad única para que estudiantes de doctorado se relacionen con sus pares y reciban retroalimentación de investigadores/as con trayectoria en el campo. \nLa Academia durará dos días (8 y 9 de septiembre)[3]. Se espera que los/as estudiantes de doctorado que resulten seleccionados/as asistan a todo el evento. \nConscientes de que el formato tradicional de las conferencias puede resultar\, en ocasiones\, excesivamente formal desincentivando la participación de investigadores/as en formación\, proponemos presentaciones basadas en mesas redondas. Las sesiones están pensadas para fomentar un entorno en el que los/as jóvenes académicos/as pueden compartir su trabajo en desarrollo\, recibir comentarios constructivos y construir redes profesionales dentro de la comunidad de investigación en innovación y desarrollo. \n  \nConvocatoria: Repensando el cambio tecnológico y la innovación en América Latina \nLos recientes desafíos globales\, como el cambio climático\, la fragilidad de las cadenas de valor y la aceleración de la digitalización -marcada después de la pandemia- han renovado el interés de los/as responsables de políticas e investigadores/as en el cambio tecnológico. Hay un renovado llamado global a la transformación productiva\, que se evidencia\, por ejemplo\, en un aumento de las medidas de política industrial desde inicios del 2023[4]. Sin embargo\, los países en desarrollo\, particularmente en América Latina\, están rezagados y enfrentan desafíos específicos\, como transformaciones productivas pasadas insuficientes\, presupuestos limitados y gobiernos más preocupados por realizar políticas dedicadas a sostener -y en algunos casos lograr- el orden macroeconómico\, entre otros. \nInvitamos a los/as estudiantes de doctorado en todas las etapas de la investigación a presentar sus trabajos en curso (ver lineamientos a continuación) sobre temas relacionados con la innovación\, el cambio tecnológico\, el desarrollo y la sostenibilidad —en el contexto de América Latina—. En particular\, damos la bienvenida a las presentaciones que aborden lo siguiente: \n\nEl cambio tecnológico; la especialización tecnológica\nTransiciones digitales; capacidades locales (límites y posibilidades)\nEconomía política de las políticas pro-industria y pro-innovación\n\n  \nElegibilidad \nSe anima a los/as candidatos/as a doctorado a postularse. Las propuestas deben alinearse con los temas generales de innovación\, cambio tecnológico y desarrollo en los países de América Latina y los problemas de política relacionados. \n  \nDirectrices para la presentación de propuestas \nLas presentaciones pueden basarse en trabajos en curso. Damos la bienvenida a presentaciones en diferentes etapas de la investigación doctoral\, desde planes doctorales a hallazgos más avanzados. \nLos manuscritos no deben tener más de 6000 palabras y deben describir claramente la pregunta de investigación\, la revisión de la literatura y el marco teórico\, la propuesta metodológica\, los principales hallazgos (si corresponde) y las referencias (estilo APA). Debe incluir un resumen de hasta 200 palabras y 5 palabras clave. \nLas presentaciones deben estar en inglés\, español o portugués. \n10 de agosto: fecha límite de presentación. \n15 de agosto: notificación de aceptación. El Comité de la Academia LALICS participará en el proceso de selección. \n1 de septiembre: fecha límite para la presentación de comentarios por escrito. \n  \nFormato de la sesión \nQuienes resulten seleccionados/as presentarán su investigación en sesiones distendidas\, lo que permitirá la interacción directa y la discusión entre los/as asistentes. Las presentaciones se pueden realizar en español\, inglés o portugués. Por favor\, traduzca sus diapositivas a un idioma distinto a aquel en el que presente. \nSe realizará un proceso estructurado de revisión cruzada para fomentar un intercambio académico más profundo. A cada participante se le asignará el trabajo en progreso de un/a colega para que lo revise y proporcione comentarios por escrito por correo electrónico antes del evento. Además\, deberán comentar sobre el trabajo asignado durante la sesión. \n  \nPrograma preliminar – 08 de septiembre de 2025 \n13.45h – 14hs: Inscripciones y apertura de YSI \n14 h – 15.30 h: Sesión 1 – \n\nDocumento 1 –\nDocumento 2 –\nDocumento 3 –\nDocumento 4 –\n\n15.30h – 16h: café \n16 h – 17:30 h: Sesión 2 – \n\nDocumento 5 –\nDocumento 6 –\nDocumento 7 –\nDocumento 8 –\n\n17h30 – 18: Palabras finales \n  \nViajes y financiamiento \nExiste apoyo financiero -para alojamiento y/o gastos de viaje- para algunos/as participantes seleccionados/as. Se proporcionarán más detalles sobre las oportunidades de financiamiento una vez aceptado el envío. \n  \nVersão em português \n  \nSobre os LALICS \nA VI Conferência Internacional LALICS (Rio de Janeiro\, Brasil) tem como objetivo fornecer uma plataforma para acadêmicos/as que trabalham em economia de inovação\, desenvolvimento e sustentabilidade em países latino-americanos apresentarem e discutirem suas pesquisas. Em particular\, faremos parte da Academia LALICS co-organizando duas sessões de discussão que servirão como uma oportunidade única para os alunos de doutorado se relacionarem com seus colegas e receberem feedback de diferentes acadêmicos. \nA Academia terá duração de dois dias (8 e 9 de setembro)[5]. Espera-se que as alunas e os alunos de doutorado selecionados/as participem de todo o evento. \nConscientes de que o formato tradicional das conferências pode\, por vezes\, ser excessivamente formal e pouco propício à participação ativa de pesquisadores/as em formação\, propomos uma abordagem baseada em mesas-redondas. As sessões são projetadas para promover um ambiente de discussão interativo e envolvente\, onde jovens acadêmicos/as podem compartilhar seus trabalhos em andamento\, receber feedback construtivo e construir redes profissionais dentro da comunidade de pesquisa em inovação e desenvolvimento. \n  \nChamada de Trabalhos: Repensando a Mudança Tecnológica e a Inovação na América Latina \nOs recentes desafios globais\, como as mudanças climáticas\, a fragilidade das cadeias de valor e a aceleração da digitalização – evidenciados após a pandemia – renovaram o interesse de formuladores/as de políticas e pesquisadores/as na mudança tecnológica. Há um apelo global renovado para a transformação produtiva\, com um aumento nas medidas de política industrial desde o início de 2023[6]. No entanto\, os países em desenvolvimento\, particularmente na América Latina\, muitas vezes foram deixados para trás e enfrentam desafios específicos\, incluindo o fracasso de transformações produtivas passadas\, orçamentos limitados e governos de direita que não estão comprometidos com a industrialização\, entre outros. \nConvidamos estudantes de doutorado em todas as etapas de pesquisa a enviar seus trabalhos em andamento (veja as diretrizes abaixo) para apresentações sobre tópicos relacionados à inovação\, mudança tecnológica\, desenvolvimento e sustentabilidade – no contexto da América Latina. Em particular\, aceitamos submissões que abordem o seguinte: \n\nMudança tecnológica e especialização tecnológica\nTransições digitais; Capacidades locais (limites e possibilidades)\nEconomia política da indústria e inovação\n\n  \nElegibilidade \nCandidatos/as a doutorado são incentivados a se inscrever. As propostas devem estar alinhadas com os temas abrangentes de inovação\, mudança tecnológica e desenvolvimento nos países latino-americanos e questões políticas relacionadas. \n  \nDiretrizes para a submissão de propostas \nAs submissões podem ser baseadas no trabalho em andamento. Aceitamos submissões em diferentes estágios de pesquisa de doutorado\, desde propostas em estágio inicial até descobertas avançadas. \nOs manuscritos não devem ter mais de 6000 palavras e devem descrever claramente a questão de pesquisa\, revisão da literatura e referencial teórico\, proposta metodológica\, principais achados (se aplicável) e referências (estilo APA). Inclua um resumo de até 200 palavras e 5 palavras-chave. \nAs apresentações devem ser em inglês\, espanhol ou português. \n10 de agosto: Data limite para submissão. \n15 de agosto: Notificação de aceitação. O Comitê da Academia LALICS participará do processo de seleção. \n1 de setembro: Prazo para apresentação de comentários escritos. \n  \nFormato da sessão \nAqueles que são selecionados/as apresentarão suas pesquisas em sessões amigáveis\, permitindo interação direta e discussão com os participantes. As apresentações podem ser feitas em espanhol\, inglês ou português. Traduza seus slides\, se aplicável\, para outro idioma. \nAlém disso\, se envolveram em um processo estruturado de revisão cruzada para promover um intercâmbio acadêmico mais aprofundado. Cada participante receberá um trabalho em andamento de um/uma colega para revisar e fornecer feedback por escrito por e-mail antes do evento. Além disso\, as e os participantes devem comentar durante a sessão. \n  \nPrograma Preliminar – 08 de setembro de 2025 \n13h45 – 14h: Inscrição e abertura do YSI \n14h – 15h30: Sessão 1 – \n\nDocumento 1 –\nDocumento 2 –\nDocumento 3 –\nDocumento 4 –\n\n  \n15.30h – 16h: pausa para café \n16h às 17h30: Sessão 2 – \n\nDocumento 5 –\nDocumento 6 –\nDocumento 7 –\nDocumento 8 –\n\n17h30 – 18: Palavras finais \n  \nViagens e financiamento \nParticipantes selecionados/as podem ter apoio financeiro limitado – para despesas de acomodação ou viagem. Mais detalhes sobre as oportunidades de financiamento serão fornecidos assim que forem aceitos. \n  \n[1] For detail information\, check Academy LALICS – LALICS Rio 2025 \n[2] See\, for example\, Industrial Policy is Back But the Bar to Get it Right Is High. Last access: 03/12/2025 \n[3]  Para más información\, acceder a Academy LALICS – LALICS Rio 2025 \n[4]  Ver\, por ejemplo\, Industrial Policy is Back But the Bar to Get it Right Is High. Último acceso: 03/12/2025 \n[5]  Para informações detalhadas\, consulte Academy LALICS – LALICS Rio 2025 \n[6] Ver\, por exemplo\, Industrial Policy is Back But the Bar to Get it Right Is High. Último acesso: 03/12/2025
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/is-it-time-to-rethink-technological-change-and-innovation-in-latin-america/
LOCATION:UFRJ\, Rua Antônio Barros de Castro\, Rio de Janeiro\, Rio de Janeiro\, 21941-853\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250909
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250910
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250201T174813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250201T174813Z
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SUMMARY:WINIR Young Scholars Pre-Conference Workshop on Innovation\, Entrepreneurship & Institutions
DESCRIPTION:The WINIR Conference on Institutions\, Entrepreneurship & Shared Prosperity will be held at the Prague University of Economics and Business in Prague\, Czechia\, on 10-12 September 2025. \n\n\n\n\nEarly-career researchers exploring the intersections of institutional theory\, innovation\, and entrepreneurship are invited to submit their work to the WINIR Young Scholars Pre-Conference Workshop on Innovation\, Entrepreneurship & Institutions that will be held in Prague on 9 September 2025. The Workshop aims to advance scholarly understanding of how institutions shape and are shaped by innovation and entrepreneurship\, with a focus on the pressing global challenges of sustainability\, inequality\, and economic transformation. \n\n\n\n\nThe theme situates institutional theory at the heart of debates around post-growth paradigms in the Global North\, sustainable development imperatives in the Global South\, and the role of entrepreneurship across public\, private\, and cooperative sectors in driving social and environmental change. The Workshop seeks to explore how institutional dynamics influence and are influenced by the ways societies produce\, consume\, and thrive\, fostering innovative and sustainable pathways for the future. Contributions should engage institutional methods and perspectives to examine entrepreneurship and innovation across diverse contexts. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nWe welcome submissions addressing – but not restricted to – one or more of the following thematic areas: \n\nInstitutions\, Innovation\, and Resilience – How institutional frameworks influence innovation ecosystems across diverse contexts\, institutional voids in emerging markets and their impact on entrepreneurial innovation\, along with the role of governance structures and policy frameworks in fostering resilience. Relevant submissions could include comparative analyses and sector-specific case studies that illuminate these institutional dynamics.\nEntrepreneurial Responses to Institutional Pressures – How entrepreneurs navigate and respond to complex institutional environments\, research on entrepreneurial initiatives that challenge institutional contradictions\, institutional entrepreneurship as a driver of systemic change\, and analyses of informal entrepreneurship in under-institutionalized settings. Theoretical and methodological advances in studying institutional entrepreneurship also relate to this them\nSocial and Sustainable Entrepreneurship – The ways in which entrepreneurial activity addresses global sustainability challenges and promotes social inclusion. This includes studies of institutional frameworks enabling sustainable entrepreneurship\, innovative business models incorporating sustainability principles\, and impact measurement methodologies. The theme encompasses research on institutional networks and collaborative approaches for scaling sustainable solutions\nEntrepreneurship Beyond the Private Sector – This may include research on the entrepreneurial state’s role in innovation and market creation\, entrepreneurship as a catalyst for governance reform\, and cross-sectoral collaborations. The theme encompasses studies of how entrepreneurial approaches reshape public institutions and drive systemic change across sectors.\n\nWe also invite submissions that relate to institutions\, innovation and entrepreneurship but which do not fit neatly into any of the four themes above. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nEligibility and funding\n\n\n\n\n\n\nApplicants working in economics\, law\, sociology\, anthropology\, development studies\, and other related disciplines are encouraged to apply. Eligible applicants should either be enrolled in a doctoral research programme or have graduated no more than three years before 31 March 2025. Successful applicants will be invited to present their research to a supportive audience of peers and senior scholars and receive constructive conceptual and methodological critique; and may receive partial funding in respect of travel and accommodation expenses for their participation in the pre-conference event and main conference. \nPriority will be given to first-time attendees at the WINIR Young Scholars conferences. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nSubmission guidelines\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSubmissions should be sent using the designated form. Please follow these instructions closely: \n\nAbstract: A 500-word abstract with 3 to 5 keywords. Save the file as: LastName_FirstName_Title.\nShort Bio: A brief biography indicating your discipline and institutional affiliation. Save the file as: LastName_FirstName_Bio.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSubmissions should be sent using this form. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nKey dates\n15 February 2025 – Submission deadline\n5 March 2025 – Notifications of acceptance \n\n\n\n\n\n\nPlease address all inquiries to youngscholars@winir.org. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout WINIR Young Scholars \n\n\n\n\nWINIR Young Scholars (WYS) aims to identify and promote the next generation of institutional scholars from diverse geographies\, sociocultural contexts and disciplines. Its major activities are directed towards creating an inclusive and supportive space for young scholars to receive guidance and mentorship in their journey toward establishing themselves as knowledge creators and navigating the academic job market. \nWYS is a collaboration between the World Interdisciplinary Network for Institutional Research (WINIR)\, the Law as Science Project\, and the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI) of the Institute for New Economic Thinking. \n\n\n\n\nConvenors: Christina Mosalagae (Institute for New Economic Thinking)\, Nikhilesh Sinha (Hult International Business School\, UK)\, Simon Sun(National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University\, Taiwan)\, Vanessa Villanueva (European University Institute\, Italy).
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/winir-young-scholars-pre-conference-workshop-on-innovation-entrepreneurship-institutions/
LOCATION:Prague University of Economics and Business\, Prague\, Czech Republic
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Prague-1.jpeg
GEO:50.0755381;14.4378005
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250909T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250909T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008148-1757426400-1757431800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-09/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-09/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250910T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250910T110000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20240112T203210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T153433Z
UID:10005641-1757498400-1757502000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Monthly Office Hours for (Aspiring) Organizers
DESCRIPTION:Ask any questions about how to run projects in YSI\nThe conversation may cover: \n\nWhat it means to be an organizer in YSi\nHow to think about projects in general\nThe logistics of virtual projects\nThe logistics of in-person projects\nQuestions you have about a specific project\n\nYou can watch recordings from previous calls here: \n\n February 2024
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2025-09-10/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2025-09-10/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250914T200000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250914T220000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250905T081044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T233632Z
UID:10007904-1757880000-1757887200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Reading Group: “False Nostalgia by JC Punongbayan” Debunking Martial Law Dictatorship in the Philippines
DESCRIPTION:UPDATE: TALK BACK SESSION IS MOVED TO November 22\, 2025 \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group invites participants to a special Public Book Club series featuring False Nostalgia: The Marcos “Golden Age” Myths and How to Debunk Them by Dr. JC Punongbayan. This initiative aims to foster thoughtful dialogue on history\, economics\, and disinformation\, timed with the 53rd anniversary of Martial Law in the Philippines. Through this book—which uses accessible data\, historical accounts\, and economic analysis to dismantle nearly 50 myths about the Marcos era—participants will examine the role of narrative in shaping economic memory\, public opinion\, and political outcomes\, with relevance not only to the Philippines but also to broader East Asian and global contexts. \nThe discussion series will run online on September 7\, 14\, and 21\, culminating in a live talkback session with Dr. Punongbayan. Dr. Punongbayan is an Assistant Professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics and a former Visiting Fellow of the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. He earned his PhD from UPSE in 2021\, graduating summa cum laude in 2009\, and received the José Encarnación Jr. Award for Excellence in Economics and the Gerardo P. Sicat Award for Best Undergraduate Thesis. Before joining academe\, he worked at the Securities and Exchange Commission\, the World Bank Office in Manila\, the FEU Public Policy Center\, and the National Economic and Development Authority. His current research focuses on macroeconomics\, Philippine economic history\, education economics\, and development economics. In addition to his weekly economics column for Rappler.com\, his debut book False Nostalgia was published in 2023 by Ateneo de Manila University Press\, and in 2024 he received The Outstanding Young Men (TOYM) Award for Economics. \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group is a community of emerging scholars dedicated to rethinking economic frameworks and fostering dialogue about East Asia’s historical\, cultural\, and economic trajectories. By situating this Book Club within YSI’s global network\, we aim to bridge local economic discourse with international perspectives\, create space for collective inquiry\, and strengthen scholarly connections between East Asia and the wider world. \nInterested participants can sign up at tinyurl.com/EkonseptoBookClub1
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-14/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-14/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires:20250916T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires:20250916T170000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250827T170538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250920T163248Z
UID:10007514-1758009600-1758042000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Terceras Jornadas Financieras y Monetarias Heterodoxas
DESCRIPTION:We  inform that the first day of the Conference took place as planned. The second day\, originally scheduled for September 17\, has been postponed to October 1 due to a large university march that took place in Buenos Aires last Wednesday. \nThis project aims to foster critical debate on financial and monetary policies from a heterodox perspective. Now in its third edition\, the conference builds on the momentum of previous gatherings held in 2019 and 2023. Organized by the Centro Cultural de la Cooperación and the Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, this initiative brings together researchers\, policymakers\, and institutions committed to pluralistic analysis. \n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nView this post on Instagram\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \nA post shared by Lic Economía Política (@ecopol.ungs) \n\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/terceras-jornadas-financieras-y-monetarias-heterodoxas/
LOCATION:Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Juan María Gutiérrez\, Los Polvorines\, Malvinas Argentinas\, B1613\, Argentina
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Flyer-Economia-Politica.png
GEO:-34.5206014;-58.7004345
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250916T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250916T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008149-1758031200-1758036600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-16/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-16/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250916T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250916T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250624T124125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T150025Z
UID:10007527-1758034800-1758038400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI-RSA Webinar Series on Regional Inequalities and Perceived Left-Behindness
DESCRIPTION:The YSI Urban and Regional Economics\, and Behavior and Society Working Groups\, in partnership with the Regional Studies Association (RSA) invite students\, early scholars and all members to join the Webinar Series on Regional Inequalities and Perceived Left-Behindness. \n  \nThe objective is to explore the growing relevance of perceived left-behindness and subjective well-being in economics. Over four sessions\, we will delve into how feelings of relative deprivation\, spatial inequalities\, and socio-economic discontent are reshaping regional trajectories and influencing economic outcomes. By bringing together scholars working at the intersection of perception\, well-being\, and place\, the series aims to foster a deeper understanding of how these dimensions can enrich regional analysis\, inform policy\, and ultimately contribute to more inclusive territorial development. \n  \n4) November 12\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Policy\, Perception and Place: Rethinking Regional Development Strategies (Malin Roiha & Emma Fàbrega – European Social Research Unit & University of Barcelona\, Spain) \nConcluding the series\, this webinar will focus on how subjective indicators and local perceptions can be better integrated into policy-making. We’ll explore innovative approaches and the challenges of designing place-sensitive strategies that address both material and perceived inequalities. \n  \nPrevious sessions: \n  \n1) July 16\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Subjective well-being and spatial inequalities (Paolo Veneri – GSSI\, Italy) \nThe literature from the last decade has highlighted the paradox of urban well-being\, where cities offer economic advantages at a cost to residents’ life satisfaction. However\, this is not true everywhere. This webinar focuses on subjective well-being spatial differences and on the factors driving those differences. After accounting for observable individual characteristics\, evidence on the urban-rural gap in life satisfaction is provided across different world regions\, together with the factors associated with such gaps. Subsequently\, focusing on European cities\, we review how individual and city characteristics drive observed differences in life satisfaction\, drawing on novel empirical analysis and on the most recent contributions in the literature. \n  \n2) September 16\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Spatial imaginaries of ‘left behind places’ in policy discourse (Grete Gansauer – University of Wyoming\, US) \nThe “left behind place” is an emerging spatial imaginary which evokes an idealized set of social\, economic and political conditions assigned to a generalized type of place. This session will untangle how left-behindness is imagined and explore how spatial imaginaries manifest themselves in different regional and political discources. We’ll examine the roots of such perceptions\, their links to territorial inequalities\, and offer empirical insights into how spatial imaginaries of ‘left behind places’ shape regional development trajectories. \n  \n3) October 15\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Electoral outcomes as a form of discontent (Arndt Leininger – Chemnitz University of Technology\, Germany) \nThis session explores how electoral results can reflect underlying socio-economic and territorial discontent. Drawing on recent research\, the discussion will examine how votes for populist\, extremist\, or anti-establishment parties often signal perceived inequalities\, loss of status\, and a sense of being “left behind” among certain groups and regions. \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-rsa-webinar-series-on-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/2025-09-16/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-rsa-webinar-series-on-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/2025-09-16/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/YSI-RSA_Promo_2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T113000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250630T195039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T024257Z
UID:10007907-1758105000-1758108600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Stablecoins Uncovered: Regulation\, Innovation\, Evidence\, and the Future of Digital Money
DESCRIPTION:An exclusive interview series dedicated to exploring the dynamic world of stablecoins and their transformative impact on finance. This series delves deep into the latest policy changes\, groundbreaking innovations\, and evidence shaping the future of digital money. Discussions center on stablecoins—what they are\, how they work\, and why they matter for the evolving financial landscape. \nThe series is thrilled to bring audiences conversations with leading experts\, forward-thinking developers\, influential policymakers\, and insightful academicians—all at the forefront of stablecoin technology and regulation. Each episode uncovers truths\, challenges assumptions\, and presents real-world evidence as it charts the way forward for stablecoins and related financial innovations. \nWhether listeners are professionals in the field\, curious observers\, or passionate about the future of finance\, this series is designed to be engaging\, informative\, and welcoming. Audiences are invited to join as the series connects with visionaries shaping the future of digital money\, and to discover the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in this exciting sector.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-09-17/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-09-17/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250917T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250917T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250903T062158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250903T062158Z
UID:10007533-1758126600-1758132000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Milan Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research Seminar Series (MInERS) – Fourth Lecture and YSI Italy Hub Meeting
DESCRIPTION:MInERS is seminar series organized by a network of scholars located in Milan dedicated to promoting events\, networking and research in the area of Innovation\, Science and Entrepreneurship. As part of the YSI Hub Meeting\, we promote participation in the a seminar\, scheduled for 10 June 2025\, 16:30\, at Catholic University of the Sacred Heart\, Largo Gemelli\, 1\, Milan\, 20123. \nKeynote: Prof. Margaret Kyle holds the Chair in Intellectual Property and Markets for Technology at Mines-Paris PSL. She has previously held academic positions at the Toulouse School of Economics\, London Business School\, Duke University\, Carnegie Mellon University\, and was a visiting professor at Kellogg School of Management and the University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on innovation\, productivity\, and competition\, particularly in the pharmaceutical industry. \nTitle: Are Cancer Drugs Worth the Price? \nAbstract: This paper\, co-authored with Pierre Dubois\, examines the effect of pharmaceutical innovation on cancer mortality rates. Cancer is a leading cause of death in developed countries\, and cancer treatments are the top category of pharmaceutical spending in the United States and Europe. This paper investigates whether novel cancer therapies reduce mortality and their cost per statistical life year saved. The study analyzes data from 24 countries and 22 cancer sites over 20 years\, examining the causal relationship between the availability of approved treatments and cancer-specific mortality. \nDiscussant: Demetrio Cavicchia (Head of IP of Angelini Industries & European Patent and Trademark Attorney). Master of Science in Physics with specialization in Applied Physics and Nanotechnology obtained at the University of L’Aquila in 2012\, with a thesis on the growth and magnetic characterization of magnetic multilayer systems for application in the field of spintronics. Experience in the field of scientific research in various aspects of applied physics such as magnetic devices\, artificial geochemical materials\, design and development of measuring equipment and data analysis systems. From 2012 to 2013 he performed the duties of assistant and collaborator researcher at the Institut Laue-Langevin (Grenoble\, France) taking part in a collaboration between several institutions. From 2014 to 2015 he worked at the University of Hamburg as a research assistant. He worked for more than 2 years at GLP srl Intellectual Property Office in Udine as patent attorney assistant. Now\, he is working in the Legal Dept. of Angelini Holding SpA and he is an Italian and European Patent and Trademark Attorney. \nA Q&A session is planned afterwards. Then\, join us for the a complimentary aperitivo organized as a YSI Hub Meeting by MInERS at at Cantina Carducci\, Via Giosuè Carducci\, 9 from 18:00 (post-seminar). \nPlease refer to our website for additional information \nWho Should Participate?\nWe welcome expressions of interest from graduate students\, postdoctoral researchers\, early-career researchers\, professors and professionals residing in Milan and its surrounding areas. Participants should have an interest in Science\, Technology\, Innovation and Entrepreneurship research. \nYSI Hub Meeting Registration:\nTo express your interest in this initiative\, please register in this link. \nFor organizational efficiency\, registration is important: upon registration\, you will receive an entry form to allow immediate access to the seminar premises on the day of the event. Please be aware that the complimentary aperitivo has limited space\, available on a first-come\, first-served basis\, with registered seminar attendees receiving priority. To ensure your attendance\, we highly recommend confirming your participation as early as possible. However\, participation to the seminar remains possible also without registration and the aperitivo will be\, in the worst case\, at the participant’s cost. \nFor inquiries\, please contact: behavior@youngscholarsinitiative.org \nWe look forward to your participation! \nKey information: \nDate: September 17th 2025 \nSeminar at Department of Economic Policy – Time: 16h30 CET\, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart\, Largo Gemelli\, 1 – Room G.242\, Milan\, MI 20123 \nYSI Hub Meeting: 18h00 (post-seminar) at Cantina Carducci\,  Via Giosuè Carducci\, 9\, Milan. \nStefano Baruffaldi – Polytechnic University of Milan\nMartina Iori – Catholic University of the Sacred Heart\nMarco Guerzoni – University of Milan – Bicocca\nGabriele Pellegrino – Catholic University of the Sacred Heart\nFelix Poege – Bocconi University\nAnita Quas – University of Milan – Statale\nStefano Romito – University of Milan – Statale\nDaniel Souza – Polytechnic University of Milan
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/milan-innovation-and-entrepreneurship-research-seminar-series-miners-fourth-lecture-and-ysi-italy-hub-meeting/
LOCATION:Catholic University of the Sacred Heart\, Largo Gemelli\, 1\, Milan\, MI\, 20123\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250918
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250920
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250313T170737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250313T170737Z
UID:10007410-1758153600-1758326399@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Rethinking Fiscal and Monetary Coordination: Policy Trade-offs in times of Polycrisis
DESCRIPTION:In mainstream economics\, central banks’ independence from governments is taken almost as a given or precondition for a functioning monetary system. The assumption is that governments tend to spend too much and get too heavily indebted. Only technocratic central banks\, with a different mandate\, would have an interest in fiscal austerity and take the unpopular but necessary measures to guarantee price stability. However\, in a time of fiscal fatigue and the necessity to address multiple crises\, this seems almost cynical. There is a dire need to finance the green transition\, a looming recession in many countries and the need for countercyclical investment measures\, overburdened infrastructures\, and last but not least a rising level of inequality in our credit-based economies. \nIn this young scholar workshop organised by the Hamburg Institut for Social Research and the Young Scholars Initiative\, we want to engage critically with the matter of fiscal and monetary cooperation: Which motives and interests currently drive\nmonetary and fiscal policies? To what degree is coordination already taking place in practice but merely unofficially? How could central bank independence be challenged politically? In which circumstances would it be beneficial to do so? Who is benefitting from the current design? Who would have an interest in greater policy coordination? What are the dangers attached to it in times of right-wing populist governments gaining prominence in many countries all around the world? \nTo discuss these and many more questions\, we want to invite young scholars across disciplines\, schools of thought and with a pluralism in methods to join us and present their work. \nHere are some examples for possible topics. Please don’t understand them as exhaustive! If you work on something that is not listed but speaks to the matter of fiscal and monetary coordination in some way\, you are more than welcome to apply! \n• Fiscal and monetary coordination in different schools of thought\n• Empirical studies of debt management and monetary policy implementation and their provision of liquidity\n• Institutionalist\, comparative and historical approaches to fiscal and monetary coordination\n• State finance relationship with respect to public debt\n• Expectation management\, demand elasticity and interpretation of the yield curve in the context of monetary and fiscal policies\n• Fiscal and monetary policy implementation in the context of innovating financial markets\, market-based banking\, and shadow banking\n• Financial stability\, banking regulation and their effect on / relevance for fiscal and monetary policy implementation\n• Market making\, and market making of last resort in sovereign securities markets\n• Restraints to fiscal and monetary policies and their coordination in the Global South and peripheral economies in the context of international currencies and monetary hierarchies\n• Fiscal and monetary coordination in the context of diverse economic structures (export-led\, demand-led economies\, etc. ) \nThe workshop will be spread out over two days with an initial keynote and a practitioners panel towards the end. In between there will be parallel groups to present\, discuss and give feedback on each other’s work. You will be asked to share a draft of your work two weeks before the workshop and to comment on another person’s paper. It will be a flat hierarchy environment with only young scholars participating\, so you can feel free to share early stage work and any doubts or struggles that you might have. Travel costs\, accommodation and food will be provided\, but unfortunately\, there is only limited funding for transatlantic travel. Despite these funding limitations\, we want to encourage applications from underrepresented researchers. If any of this has caught your interest\, please apply with your abstract by 5.5.2025 using the following link: \nhttps://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=odBNZ2Kux0Kjn2nuGZU3qMn7iXo984ZEvbj84ZUrW7tUQ0lOTUhEQ1A3MUhJNFkyQjdZQ1A1UkhaRi4u \nFor any questions feel free to drop us an email: ysihamburg2025@gmail.com \nThis event is organised by Luca Kokol (Hamburg Institute for Social Research)\, Marina Clavijo (Young Scholars Initiative)\, Arpan Chakraborty (Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur)\, Enrico Pulieri (SOAS London University)\, Lionel Stiglitz (National University of San Martin) \nImportant dates: \n05.05. Deadline to submit application\n06.06. Information about acceptance\n23.06. Deadline to confirm attendance\n01.09. Deadline to send the papers to the discussant
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-fiscal-and-monetary-coordination-policy-trade-offs-in-times-of-polycrisis/
LOCATION:Hamburg Institute for Social Research\, Mittelweg 36\, 20148 Hamburg\, Germany
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:53.5691886;9.994734
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250919T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250919T200000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250908T164117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250908T164117Z
UID:10007906-1758301200-1758312000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Toronto Hub Meeting
DESCRIPTION:The TO YSI Hub will be meeting at our new location\, the Morpheus Clinic for Hypnosis to enjoy drinks\, discussion\, and a presentation from Dr. DT Cochrane from “Canadians for Tax Fairness.” Dr. Cochrane will be leading a discussion on tax fairness\, and how this relates to Canada’s lack of investment\, failing productivity\, and our need to transition to a carbon neutral economy.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-toronto-hub-meeting/2025-09-19/
LOCATION:The Morpheus Clinic for Hypnosis\, 49 Elm Street\, Toronto\, ONTARIO\, M5G 1H1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:A series of in-person events
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GEO:43.6571615;-79.3840277
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Morpheus Clinic for Hypnosis 49 Elm Street Toronto ONTARIO M5G 1H1 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=49 Elm Street:geo:-79.3840277,43.6571615
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250921T200000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Manila:20250921T220000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250905T081044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T233632Z
UID:10007905-1758484800-1758492000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Reading Group: “False Nostalgia by JC Punongbayan” Debunking Martial Law Dictatorship in the Philippines
DESCRIPTION:UPDATE: TALK BACK SESSION IS MOVED TO November 22\, 2025 \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group invites participants to a special Public Book Club series featuring False Nostalgia: The Marcos “Golden Age” Myths and How to Debunk Them by Dr. JC Punongbayan. This initiative aims to foster thoughtful dialogue on history\, economics\, and disinformation\, timed with the 53rd anniversary of Martial Law in the Philippines. Through this book—which uses accessible data\, historical accounts\, and economic analysis to dismantle nearly 50 myths about the Marcos era—participants will examine the role of narrative in shaping economic memory\, public opinion\, and political outcomes\, with relevance not only to the Philippines but also to broader East Asian and global contexts. \nThe discussion series will run online on September 7\, 14\, and 21\, culminating in a live talkback session with Dr. Punongbayan. Dr. Punongbayan is an Assistant Professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics and a former Visiting Fellow of the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. He earned his PhD from UPSE in 2021\, graduating summa cum laude in 2009\, and received the José Encarnación Jr. Award for Excellence in Economics and the Gerardo P. Sicat Award for Best Undergraduate Thesis. Before joining academe\, he worked at the Securities and Exchange Commission\, the World Bank Office in Manila\, the FEU Public Policy Center\, and the National Economic and Development Authority. His current research focuses on macroeconomics\, Philippine economic history\, education economics\, and development economics. In addition to his weekly economics column for Rappler.com\, his debut book False Nostalgia was published in 2023 by Ateneo de Manila University Press\, and in 2024 he received The Outstanding Young Men (TOYM) Award for Economics. \nThe YSI East Asia Working Group is a community of emerging scholars dedicated to rethinking economic frameworks and fostering dialogue about East Asia’s historical\, cultural\, and economic trajectories. By situating this Book Club within YSI’s global network\, we aim to bridge local economic discourse with international perspectives\, create space for collective inquiry\, and strengthen scholarly connections between East Asia and the wider world. \nInterested participants can sign up at tinyurl.com/EkonseptoBookClub1
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-21/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/reading-group-false-nostalgia-by-jc-punongbayan-debunking-martial-law-dictatorship-in-the-philippines/2025-09-21/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250923
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250924
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250528T140512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250530T064813Z
UID:10007145-1758585600-1758671999@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Pluralist Perspectives on Digital Technologies and Societal Transformation
DESCRIPTION:EAEPE and the Philosophy of Economics Working Group of the INET YSI are putting their forces together to organize the 11th pre-conference workshop which will be held on 23 September 2025 in Athens.  \n We are pleased to announce the following talks:  \n“Environmental Intelligence: AI for a Diverse Society” by Sabina Leonelli (Technical University of Munich)  \n“Political economy vs. evolutionary perspectives on (digital) technology and innovation” by George Liagouras (University of the Aegean)  \n“Media Discourses\, Digital Capitalism\, and the Struggle for Socio-Ecological Futures” by Hendrik Theine (Johannes Kepler University Linz)  \n The purpose of this year’s EAEPE YSI pre-conference workshop is to explore pluralist perspectives on digital technologies\, and to bring them together on a common ground. Artificial intelligence (AI) and digital technologies are reshaping our society at an unprecedented pace\, sparking debates and discussions across disciplines and opening up spaces to analyze existing social challenges in a new light. But the discourse surrounding digital technologies is too fragmented in different strands of disciplines such as standard economics\, political economy approaches\, and Science and Technology Studies (STS) without a common framework clear of ambiguities. Bridging these perspectives is both timely and necessary. The pre-conference speakers and participants will reflect on how different strands of disciplines can be integrated or contrasted to provide a more nuanced understanding of digital technologies and their role for societal transformation.  \nFollowing the talks\, participants will have the chance to participate in group discussions. Furthermore\, there will be a get-together session where young scholars will introduce themselves and their research interests and get the chance to get feedback from and pair up with other young and senior scholars. Coffee break\, lunch\, and a social dinner will provide further space to connect and warm up for the main conference.  All pre-conference participants are warmly invited to participate at EAEPE’s main conference.  \n  \nApplication \nYou can apply for the pre-conference during the registration process for the main conference. Please register for the main conference by choosing the ‘PhD registration for members.’ After you ‘proceed to check out\,’ you will be directed to enter your information and answer some questions. Among them is ‘apply for the pre-conference?’ where you should click on ‘yes.’  \nThe reduced rate (90 euro) for PhD students covers the costs of coffee breaks and lunches during the main conference. Participation in the pre-conference (including all meals and social dinner) is free of charge for those who registered for the main conference.  Pre-conference application opens on May 27\, 2025\, and closes on June 28\, 2025. You will receive a notification of acceptance per email by the pre-conference organizers around July 10.  \nIn addition\, thanks to the INET YSI support\, we have some limited stipends available to partially cover the travel expenses of young scholars who do not have support from their home institutions. To apply\, please send a short application letter before June 20\, 2025\, to eaepe.preconference@gmail.com  \nFor more information please visit the EAEPE YSI Pre-Conference Website.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/pluralist-perspectives-on-digital-technologies-and-societal-transformation/
LOCATION:National Center for Scientific Research ‘Demokritos’\, Athens\, Greece
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:37.9838096;23.7275388
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250923T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250923T153000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008150-1758636000-1758641400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-23/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-23/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250924
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250925
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250604T204955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250703T030303Z
UID:10007477-1758700800-1758733200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor
DESCRIPTION:El Seminario “Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor” es una iniciativa académica consolidada desde 2019. Originalmente impulsado por la División de Estudios Profesionales de la Facultad de Economía de la UNAM y\, posteriormente\, por su División de Estudios de Posgrado\, ha estado bajo la coordinación académica de la Dra. Seyka Sandoval y la Dra. Paty Montiel. A partir de 2024\, se integró el Dr. Iván Cortés\, de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa\, y recientemente a través del apoyo de la Dra. Julia Juárez García\, hemos abierto el proyecto a través de la plataforma del Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). \nEn sus últimas tres ediciones\, el Seminario ha reunido anualmente a más de 100 participantes\, entre académicos y estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado provenientes de distintos países de América Latina\, consolidando un amplio reconocimiento institucional. A lo largo de este lustro\, el seminario ha dado lugar a colaboraciones académicas en el marco de grupos de trabajo de redes como ESOCITE y 4S\, así como a diversas publicaciones y direcciones de tesis de posgrado. \n\nINSCRIBIRSE EN:\nhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeYbEzhXJHtTx5SCiiYRdKFwIA3fwsLaBm3NFQfTRwKHyrQcw/viewform?usp=header\n  \nEn esta edición\, extendemos una cordial invitación a la comunidad académica en general —estudiantes de posgrado\, investigadores jóvenes y docentes— a participar en las distintas mesas y talleres que conforman el programa. Para ello\, deberán registrarse a través del formulario indicado en la convocatoria. \nEs importante señalar que se trata de una actividad híbrida\, por lo que quienes deseen asistir presencialmente serán bienvenidos. No obstante\, aclaramos que el evento no cuenta con financiamiento para transporte o alojamiento. \nIdioma oficial del seminario: Español.Todos los horarios del programa están en Tiempo del Centro de México (CDMX). \nPara más información contactar: julia.juarez.garcia@comunidad.unam.mx \nPrograma\nMesa 1: Reconfiguraciones del Estado y nuevas estrategias de desarrollo en América Latina\nEsta sesión introduce la discusión a partir de la configuración actual del Estado latinoamericano en un contexto marcado por crisis sucesivas (económica\, sanitaria y tecnológica)\, abordando cómo distintas corrientes de pensamiento económico representan y analizan la configuración estatal frente a desafíos estructurales: crecimiento\, digitalización\, innovación y desigualdad social. Preguntas ejes para la discusión: ¿qué perspectivas teóricas permiten problematizar las configuraciones del Estado en el capitalismo actual y periférico?\, ¿cuáles son las características del Estado? y ¿cuáles son las estrategias de desarrollo para América Latina? \nPonentes: \n\nCarolina Lauxmann (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Argentina).\nPaty Montiel (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).\nEmilia Ormaechea (confirmada) (Universidad de Hamburgo).\n\nFecha: viernes 29 de agosto de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nMesa 2: Políticas de desarrollo comparadas: aprendizajes de Brasil\, Colombia\, Asia y Europa\nEsta sesión busca identificar experiencias recientes de políticas que busquen inspirar respuestas estratégicas en América Latina frente a los desafíos de la desaceleración económica\, las tensiones comerciales\, los retos del cambio climático y la desigualdad persistente. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo estratégicas actuales?\, ¿qué características del Estado permiten el impulso de políticas de desarrollo? \nPonentes: \n\nValeria Lopes Ribeiro (confirmada) (Universidade Federal do ABC\, Brasil)\nJulia Juárez (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México\, México)\nMónica Simanca- Sotelo (confirmada) (Universidad de Córdoba\, Colombia).\n\n  \nFecha: viernes 26 de septiembre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00-11:30 \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nTaller 1: Medición sobre valor agregado y evaluación de políticas en los encadenamientos productivos. Experiencias para México\, América Latina y China\nInstructoras:  \n\nLesbia Pérez-Santillan y Rosalinda Arriaga Navarrete (por confirmar) (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) [24 de septiembre]\nRosa Gómez (conformada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) [25 de septiembre]\n\nFecha: miércoles 24 y jueves 25 de septiembre (en línea) \nHorario: Por definir \nMesa 3: Desafíos del Estado y las políticas ante la reorganización productiva global y la economía digital en México\nEsta sesión profundiza en los retos particulares que México enfrenta hoy en día en términos de política industrial\, digitalización y soberanía tecnológica\, en el marco de las presiones comerciales derivadas del T-MEC y las estrategias nacionales frente al dominio creciente de plataformas digitales. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las determinaciones geopolíticas y económicas de México? y ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo ante esas determinaciones? \nPonentes: \n\nSeyka Sandoval (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nMonika Meireles (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\n\nFecha: viernes 24 de octubre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-09-24/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-09-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/CVG-SEM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250924T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250924T103000
DTSTAMP:20260411T144455
CREATED:20250630T195039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T024257Z
UID:10007911-1758708000-1758709800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Stablecoins Uncovered: Regulation\, Innovation\, Evidence\, and the Future of Digital Money
DESCRIPTION:An exclusive interview series dedicated to exploring the dynamic world of stablecoins and their transformative impact on finance. This series delves deep into the latest policy changes\, groundbreaking innovations\, and evidence shaping the future of digital money. Discussions center on stablecoins—what they are\, how they work\, and why they matter for the evolving financial landscape. \nThe series is thrilled to bring audiences conversations with leading experts\, forward-thinking developers\, influential policymakers\, and insightful academicians—all at the forefront of stablecoin technology and regulation. Each episode uncovers truths\, challenges assumptions\, and presents real-world evidence as it charts the way forward for stablecoins and related financial innovations. \nWhether listeners are professionals in the field\, curious observers\, or passionate about the future of finance\, this series is designed to be engaging\, informative\, and welcoming. Audiences are invited to join as the series connects with visionaries shaping the future of digital money\, and to discover the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in this exciting sector.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-09-24/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-09-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/stablecoins.jpeg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR