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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20250901T185935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251218T161346Z
UID:10007902-1769587200-1769619600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:The challenges of ecological transition: North-South perspective
DESCRIPTION:Call for Papers\nDeadline Extended: November 10\, 2025\n\nWe are pleased to announce the conference “The Challenges of Ecological Transition: North-South Perspective”\, jointly organized by Tuscia University (UNITUS)\, the Faculty of Higher Studies Acatlán of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM FES-A)\, and the Latin American Institute (LAI) of the Freie Universität\, with the support of Review of Keynesian Economics (ROKE)\, ECLAC Review\, and PSL Quarterly Review. \nThis conference is aimed at researchers interested in ecological transition\, sustainable development\, and related topics. Participants are invited to submit an extended abstract of up to 1000 words presenting their current research. The event provides a platform to share insights\, engage in discussions\, and explore critical challenges and opportunities faced by developing and emerging economies in the context of the green transition. \nKey topics include: \n\nFiscal sustainability and the Green Transition\nInternational Financial Architecture and Access to Green Finance\nThe role of public and multilateral finance in supporting a just transition\nTrade\, Technological Dependency\, and the Reconfiguration of Global Value Chains\nImpacts of decarbonization on export structures reliant on natural resources\nIndustrial policy strategies for a green transformation under external constraints\nDemand-led Growth and Ecological Transition\nJust Transition\, Employment\, and Inequality\nAssessing the potential of green sectors to absorb informal and precarious labor\nClimate Change\, Debt\, and Macroeconomic Resilience\nEconomic vulnerability to climate disasters\nPolitical Economy of the Green Transition\nDistributional conflicts and institutional coalitions in Green Transition\n\nThe conference seeks to foster critical debate and knowledge exchange\, emphasizing both theoretical insights and practical policy implications. \nSelected contributions may be considered for publication in Review of Keynesian Economics (ROKE) and PSL Quarterly Review\, providing participants the opportunity to share their work with an international academic audience. \nDates: 28 January 2026 \nLocation:  Department of Economics\, Engineering\, Society and Business\, University of Tuscia  \, Viterbo\, Italy\nLanguage: English \nApplication deadline: October 31\, 2025\nNotification of results: by November 14\, 2025 \n  \nPlease note that no funding is available\, and participants are expected to cover their own travel and accommodation costs. \nCoordinator: Julia Juarez \nUNITUS: Chiara Grazini – Giulio Guiarini \nLAI: Manuel Santos Silva \nUNAM: Alejandra Arredondo
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/the-challenges-of-ecological-transition-north-south-perspective/
LOCATION:Via Santa Maria in Gradi\, Viterbo\, Viterbo\, 01100\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251011T050418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251218T160713Z
UID:10007939-1769592600-1769598000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Rethinking Capitalism and Economic Order III
DESCRIPTION:The History of Economic Thought Working Group and East Asia Working Group of the Young Scholars Initiative is launching a webinar series that brings critical attention to the idea\, practice\, and evolution of capitalism. This project aims to reconnect the history of economic ideas with the world they sought to describe\, reform\, or transform. Capitalism is not just an economic system; it is a lived experience\, a political project\, and an ideological battleground. \n  \nWe seek to open a conversation about capitalism as it has been theorised\, imagined\, and contested across historical periods and geographies. From early critiques of enclosures and slavery\, to colonial accumulation and contemporary platform economies\, capitalism’s forms have shifted\, but its underlying logics—commodification\, accumulation\, exclusion—continue to shape our worlds. \n  \nThis series will invite senior scholars who work across traditions—Marxist\, classical\, feminist\, ecological\, decolonial—to speak to these shifting realities. Our goal is not to arrive at a unified definition of capitalism\, but to stay with its plurality. What is the nature of capitalism in our time? What kind of capitalism is being debated in different contexts? What kind of resistance does it provoke? How do economic theories shape their justification or critique? \n  \nOur approach to history foregrounds tension\, silence\, and the politics of knowledge. The HET WG places special emphasis on themes like decolonisation\, pluralism\, epistemic difference\, and the often under-acknowledged intellectual contributions from the Global South. We invite our participants to think about histories of caste\, race\, gender\, and land\, alongside more familiar categories such as markets\, property\, and the state. \nKey areas of focus include: \n\nHistories of capitalism across continents: not just as diffusion from Europe\, but as co-productions and frictions and histories of capitalism have their centres spreading across the globe\, not only in the WEST but in the EAST too\, from Malacca\, Hugli\, Calicut\, Macao\, Nagasaki\, Pegu to Batavia\, to name a few.\nCapitalism’s relationship with colonialism\, racialisation\, and dispossession\nProperty regimes\, financial architectures\, and state-market entanglements\nTrade\, Tariffs and Wars\nDebates on crisis: inflation\, debt\, austerity\, climate collapse\nIntellectual genealogies: from Marx and Gandhi to Du Bois\, Luxemburg\, Fanon\, and Polanyi\nThe metabolism of capital and planetary boundaries\nThe role of economics as a discipline in naturalising or resisting capitalist logics\n\nThis series is not an attempt to replace critique with nostalgia or celebration. Instead\, we want to create a space where histories of capitalism can inform strategies for its transformation or transcendence. Theories of capitalism are not just descriptions; they are interventions. We hope to create a space where critique and imagination work in tandem. \n  \nProf. David McNally\n  \nSlavery and Capitalism: A New Marxist History\, Wednesday\, 28 January 2026\, 9.00 am EST\n  \nKarl Marx’s writings on enslavement and labor have fallen out of favor among historians\, but David McNally injects new life into them. Slavery and Capitalism gives the first systematic Marxist account of the capitalist character of Atlantic slavery—using colonial travel literature\, planter records and diaries\, and slave narratives—to support the provocative claim for enslaved labor in the plantation system as capitalist commodity production. \nWeaving together history\, political economy\, and radical abolitionism\, McNally demonstrates that plantation slaves formed a modern working class. Unlike those scholars who insist that enslaved people were too sensible to set their sights on liberty\, he highlights the self-activity of enslaved people fighting for their freedom and reframes their resistance as labor struggles over production and reproduction\, with significant implications for US and Atlantic history and for understanding the roots of racial capitalism. \nDavid McNally is the Cullen Distinguished Professor of History and Business at the University of Houston (UH) and Director of the Center for the Study of Capitalism. David came to UH after teaching political economy at York University Toronto for over thirty years. \n  \nAs a high school student\, David McNally joined the movement against the Vietnam War; on entering university\, he organized a campus chapter of the Committee to Free Angela Davis—early steps in a lifetime of activism in global justice\, anti-racist\, and socialist movements. Along the way\, he earned a Ph.D. in Social and Political Thought in 1983 and was hired as Professor of Political Science at York University\, Toronto\, before joining the Department of History at the University of Houston in 2018. \n  \nDavid is the author of seven books: Political Economy and the Rise of Capitalism (1988); Against the Market: Political Economy Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique (1993); Bodies of Meaning: Studies on Language\, Labor and Liberation (2001); Another World is Possible: Globalization and Anti-Capitalism (2002; second revised edition 2006); Global Slump: The Economics and Politics of Crisis and Resistance (2011); Monsters of the Market: Zombies\, Vampires and Global Capitalism (2011); and Blood and Money: War\, Slavery\, Finance\, and Empire (2019). His articles have appeared in many journals\, including Historical Materialism\, Studies in Political Economy\, Capital and Class\, History of Political Thought\, New Politics\, and Review of Radical Political Economics. His next major project involves a study of capitalism and slavery. \n  \nDavid has won a number of awards\, including the Paul Sweezy Award from the American Sociological Association for his book\, Global Slump\, and the Deutscher Memorial Award for Monsters of the Market. David’s research interests include the history and political economy of capitalism; social reproduction theory and socialist-feminism; slavery\, capitalism and anti-racism; the political economy of money and late capitalism; classical and Marxian political economy; the theory and practice of democracy; Hegel and dialectical social theory; and the history of abolitionism and anti-capitalist movements. \n  \nDavid has a long history of active support for a number of organizations including the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty\, Faculty for Palestine\, Toronto New Socialists\, and the Campus Antifascist Network. He is now developing solidarity connections with social movements in Houston. David is also on the Advisory Editorial Board for Historical Materialism: A Journal of Critical Marxist Research. A lengthy interview with David about his intellectual and political biography has been published in Socialist Studies\, available here. \n  \n‍David McNally lives with his partner and their youngest son in Houston\, where he continues to indulge his love of jazz\, baseball\, and surrealism. \n  \nRelated Sessions\nS01: The Law of Capitalism and How to Transform It with Prof. Barbara Harriss-White\nS02: A Different Approach to Informality with Prof. Barbara Harriss-White
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-capitalism-and-economic-order-iii/
CATEGORIES:A one-time zoom
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-capitalism-and-economic-order-iii/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260129
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260131
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260227T174932Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260227T174932Z
UID:10007915-1769644800-1769817599@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Beyond Financial Hegemony:  China’s Quest for Domestic Autonomy\,  Creation of Global Dependencies?
DESCRIPTION:China’s expanding global footprint and perceived influence raises questions about its strategic ambitions and the practices and mechanisms through which it reshapes the global financial and economic order. We are moving away from a unipolar\, hegemonic moment towards a new constellation that could be characterized as inter-imperial competition. Beyond U.S. hegemony \, we are increasingly observing the formation of multiple centres of power\, each with its own zone of influence\, as well as growing geopolitical tensions between them. In response to growing geopolitical and economic pressures\, particularly Western efforts to contain the rise of China\, a diverse set of actors from China has sought to enhance autonomy from incumbent powers. Autonomy\, defined as the ability to make independent decisions without relying on external forces\, has been central to the party-state’s strategy since the 2010s. However\, this very effort has also deepened global dependencies on its economy\, finance or technology\, especially among states\, companies\, and platforms. We invite scholars to examine how Chinese political and economic actors navigate this complex relationship between autonomy and dependence amidst a changing global financial and economic order.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/beyond-financial-hegemony-chinas-quest-for-domestic-autonomy-creation-of-global-dependencies/
LOCATION:Goethe University Frankfurt\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Germany
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260129T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260129T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20240117T145948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T170413Z
UID:10008062-1769709600-1769715000@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/2026-01-29/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2026-01-29/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260203T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260203T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008169-1770127200-1770132600@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/2026-02-03/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-02-03/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260210
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260212
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260114T144718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260126T111939Z
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SUMMARY:Research Development Workshop on Strategic Minerals and Industrial/Regional Development from a Southern perspective
DESCRIPTION:Strategic Minerals and Industrial/Regional Development from a Southern perspective\nWorkshop – University of Pisa\nThe so called- critical raw materials & minerals have become a cornerstone of the ongoing structural transformation of the global economy. New industrial policies involving decarbonization technologies (from renewable energy to electric mobility) are highly mineral-intensive\, and governments across the world have responded by formalizing specific Critical Raw Materials (CRMs) agendas focused on security of supply and industrial competitiveness (for example\, see EU Critical Raw Materials Act) \nIn resource-rich economies of the Global South\, however\, debates often go beyond “criticality” to emphasize strategic minerals: resources that are not only essential for the energy transition\, but also potentially central to industrial development\, social inclusion\, and geopolitical positioning. Latin America is particularly salient in this context\, given its diverse mineral endowments and the global relevance of producers such as Argentina\, Brazil\, Chile\, Mexico\, and Peru\, including the countries that make up the so-called Lithium Triangle. However\, the extraction of this materials also pose social and ecological challenges whose effects tends to be undermined. \nGiven the policy interest and public attention the Critical Raw Materials are having in northern areas\, we see an increasing area of interest inside the disciplines of Economics and Social scienes to understand its process of extraction\, monetizatino and distribution. Yet\, the majority of frameworks lack an integration Southern\, Northern\, and Transnational perspectives. \nTaking advantage of the visit of the argentinian scholar Martín Obaya (see bio below) to the University of Pisa\, this in-person workshop aims to create a dedicated space for dialogue between students and scholars working from Northern and Southern perspectives on industrial development (in general)\, and/or Critical Raw Materials (in particular). The objective is not only to compare approaches\, but to critically examine their complementarities\, the blind spots\, and their underlying assumptions\, particularly in relation to mainstream frameworks that often marginalize or overlook Southern experiences and conceptualizations. \nGiven Martín Obaya’s extensive expertise on lithium governance and industrial development in Latin America\, lithium will serve as a key empirical entry point to explore how different theoretical frameworks\, policy concepts\, and methodological approaches emerge when development is analyzed from a Southern perspective. At the same time\, the workshop welcomes engagement with other strategic minerals (e.g. cobalt\, copper\, nickel) and broader clean-technology value chains aiming to contribute to industrial and regional development. \nCore themes and guiding questions\nWe welcome master\, PhD and post-docs students whose academic projects engage empirically and/or theoretically with one or more of the following lines of inquiry: \n\n\nPolicy strategies in southern resource rich economies to build domestic capabilities linked to clean technologies and related value chains. \n\n\nOpportunities and obstacles for resource-based development strategies\, including industrial and regional policy\, innovation systems\, and local value addition. \n\n\nGeopolitical dynamics shaping critical mineral sourcing\, diversification strategies\, international partnerships and its effects. \n\n\nESG risks and governance associated with mineral extraction\, including multi-level governance frameworks and due-diligence regimes. \n\n\nConceptual and methodological challenges in incorporating Southern perspectives into debates on industrial development and the energy transition. \n\n\nStudents who explicitly feel they might be missing “something” in their frameworks\,  or that seek to widen their theoretical\, empirical\, or geographical scope: this workshop is for you! \nWorkshop format\nThe workshop is conceived as an interactive working session\, not as a conventional conference panel. Presentations will be limited to a maximum of five participants\, to make space for extensive discussions of the work as well as further questions prepared by the discussants. Each participant will have time to present their project and we will dedicate time to discuss between the whole group about each case. \nParticipants will have the opportunity to: \n\n\nPresent and refine their central research questions and methodologies of their projects; \n\n\nReceive and provide detailed peer feedback from a top southern scholar; \n\n\nDiscuss methodological and data challenges (qualitative\, quantitative\, and mixed methods); \n\n\nExchange sources of information (datasets\, policy documents\, corporate disclosures\, fieldwork strategies) and frameworks/perspectives; \n\n\nIdentify opportunities for collaboration and longer-term North–South research connections. \n\n\nPractical information\n\n\nDate: 10th February\, 2026 \n\n\nFormat: In-person \n\n\nLocation: University of Pisa\, Dipartimento di Economia e Management (Via Cosimo Ridolfi\, 10) \n\n\nApplication materials:  Abstract (max 1000 words) +  short bio/motivation \n\n\nFunding: Please note that no funding is available. Participants are expected to cover their own travel and accommodation costs. \n\n\nAbout the convenor\nMartín Obaya is a researcher at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina (CONICET) and Vice-Director of the Centro de Investigaciones para la Transformación (CENIT) at the National University of San Martín. He holds a BA in Economics (University of Buenos Aires)\, a MA in International Relations (University of Bologna)\, and a PhD from Monash University. \nFor over a decade\, his research has focused on the lithium mining industry\, with particular attention to the development of technological capabilities\, comparative governance frameworks across Latin America\, and the evolution of multi-level governance models for responsible sourcing. His work bridges political economy\, industrial policy\, and sustainability studies. \nThe final aim of the event is to streghten north-south links in terms of theories\, concepts\, frameworks and\, more importantly\, people. Apply till 25 of January!
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/research-development-workshop-on-strategic-minerals-and-industrial-regional-development-from-a-southern-perspective/
LOCATION:University of Pisa\, Via Cosimo Ridolfi\, 10\, Pisa\, Pisa\, 56124\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260210T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260210T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
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/2026-02-10/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-02-10/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260211T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260211T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20240112T203210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T153433Z
UID:10005646-1770804000-1770807600@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/2026-02-11/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Screen-Shot-2024-01-12-at-3.18.14-PM.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2026-02-11/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260217T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260217T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008171-1771336800-1771342200@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/2026-02-17/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-02-17/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260218T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260218T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260209T190720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260209T190720Z
UID:10007993-1771412400-1771425000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Public Research cafes exploring issues of equity and diversity in Economic studies.
DESCRIPTION:This is a series of Research Café sessions with the intent to share\, learn and connect. \nMonthly in-person exchanges between February and May 2026\, organised the third Wednesday each month and running for half a day. \nThe ambition is to create the space and enable local early career researchers : \n\nTo present  research to peers and receive optional feedback/presentation tips.\nTo meet and connect with others from beyond your discipline/subject-area.\nTo enjoy a networking lunch.\nTo engage in and learn from a facilitated discussion on a topic relevant to the life\, cultures and experiences of PhD education.\n\nResearch cafés will run according to the following format: \n\nDelivery of up to three research presentations of no more than 12 minutes each delivered by early career researchers on their work.\nOptional feedback on presentation style and skill to presenters (it will always be at the presenter’s discretion if they wish to receive this).\nBreak for networking lunch provided by the organiser\nDiscussion around the pre-set topics (equity and diversity in research).\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/public-research-cafes-exploring-issues-of-equity-and-diversity-in-economic-studies/2026-02-18/
LOCATION:community center\, Athens\, Greece
CATEGORIES:A series of in-person events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/download.jpg
GEO:37.9838096;23.7275388
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260218T123000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260219T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251223T125456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260211T112749Z
UID:10007212-1771417800-1771536600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Global crisis and the rising in precarity
DESCRIPTION:**SPANISH** \nEvento presencial: Contradicciones de la acumulación capitalista y la caida en las condiciones de vida. \nUna jornada de un día será realizada en la Universidad Complutense\, bajo la coordinación del departamento de Economia. La misma contará con la realización de un panel de expertos cooridnado por el Doc. Javier Murillo\, y dos mesas de trabajo posteriores. El evento tendrá lugar el 18 de febrero de 2026 y se realizará principalmente en español. \nEl programa seguirá la siguiente estructura: \nPanel: Competencia capitalista y migraciones internacionales: conexión estructural. \nSpeaker invitada: Cecilia Escobar   \nCoordinación: Doc. Javier Murillo \nEl panel aborda las contradicciones inherentes al proceso de acumulación capitalista\, entendidas como tensiones estructurales que emergen de la búsqueda permanente de valorización del capital. Siguiendo la tradición de la economía política crítica\, la acumulación capitalista se sostiene sobre una dinámica que\, al mismo tiempo que impulsa el crecimiento económico\, reproduce desigualdades sociales\, territoriales y de género\, y profundiza procesos de exclusión y precarización. Estas contradicciones se manifiestan\, entre otros aspectos\, en la concentración del ingreso y la riqueza\, la subordinación del trabajo a la lógica del capital financiero\, y la tendencia recurrente a las crisis\, que operan como mecanismos de disciplinamiento social y reconfiguración de las relaciones de poder. \nAsimismo\, el panel pone énfasis en las contradicciones contemporáneas del capitalismo global\, particularmente en su relación con los países periféricos y dependientes. La financiarización\, el endeudamiento externo y los modelos extractivistas intensifican el conflicto entre capital y vida\, al tensionar los límites ecológicos y sociales de la reproducción. Desde aportes feministas y marxistas\, se destaca que la acumulación se apoya crecientemente en el trabajo no remunerado\, la mercantilización de bienes comunes y el despojo territorial\, profundizando desigualdades interseccionales y vulneraciones de derechos humanos. En este marco\, el panel propone una lectura crítica que articula economía política\, geopolítica y coyuntura actual para comprender los límites estructurales del capitalismo y los desafíos que enfrenta la construcción de alternativas emancipatorias. \nCecilia Escobar es doctora en economía por la Universidad Nacional de Atenas. Ha trabajado como docente de la Universidad Centroamericana de El Salvador y como investigadora y consultora independiente. Su última publicación es The political economy of dissent: A research companion (Routledge\, 2026)\, como autora y editora junto a Peter Blunt y Vlassis Missos. \nMesa de trabajo 1: Impacto de la acumulación capitalista sobre las condiciones materiales de vida \nAbrimos la tarde con una mesa de trabajo en la que se presenten cuatro trabajos (15′ para cada ponente y luego abrimos discusión y debate) sobre la devaluación de las condiciones materiales de vida: desigualdad\, precariedad\, trabajo doméstico. \nLa Mesa 1 aborda el impacto de la acumulación capitalista sobre las condiciones materiales de vida\, poniendo el foco en cómo los procesos contemporáneos de acumulación configuran la distribución del ingreso\, el acceso a bienes y servicios básicos y la reproducción de la vida cotidiana. La acumulación capitalista\, especialmente bajo regímenes neoliberales y financierizados\, se ha asociado con la persistencia de la desigualdad\, la precarización del trabajo y el deterioro de la provisión pública. El estancamiento salarial\, la informalidad y el desempleo coexisten con el aumento de las ganancias y la concentración de la riqueza\, produciendo condiciones de vida profundamente desiguales tanto al interior de los países como entre ellos. Estas dinámicas afectan de manera desproporcionada a las mujeres\, a los grupos racializados y a las poblaciones del Sur Global\, reforzando asimetrías estructurales vinculadas a patrones históricos de dependencia y desarrollo desigual. \nSe propone se presenten trabajos que aborden: \n\nComparaciones entre norte-sur global\nEstudios que ahonden de manera cualitativa o cuantitativa las desigualdades estructurales actuales\nEstudios que se enfoquen en el racismo estructural y la inmigración\nOtros estudios que permitan conectar las contradicciones de la acumulación capitalista con el aumento en la precariedad de las clases trabajadoras mundiales\n\nMesa de trabajo 2: Dinámica competitiva en la economía mundial actual  \nEsquema similar a la mesa de trabajo anterior pero en este caso la temática hace referencia a las estrategias empresariales que despliega el capital para aliviar las presiones crecientes sobre la rentabilidad (subcontrataciones\, internacionalización\, etc.).  \nLa dinámica competitiva en la economía mundial actual se caracteriza por una intensificación de la competencia entre capitales\, empresas y complicidad con los Estados\, en un contexto de globalización\, financiarización y creciente concentración y centralización del capital. Las estrategias y la fragmentación del capital se apoyan cada vez más en la reducción de costos laborales\, la flexibilización productiva\, la innovación tecnológica excluyente y el control de cadenas globales de valor\, lo que profundiza las asimetrías entre países centrales y periféricos. En este escenario\, cada vez más territorios son desplazados por las nuevas industrias tecnológicas\, que generan emporios empresariales con nuevos magnates que pretenden dirigir la economía mundial.  \nSe propone se presenten trabajos que aborden: \n\nLas estrategias empresariales actuales que despliegan distintos tipos de capital (productivo\, financiero\, tecnológico)\nEstudios de caso\nEl impacto de las nuevas tecnologías y las redes sociales en las asimetrías mundiales\nCasos que profundizen en las estrategias empresarial que profundizan las desigualdades y la precariedad laboral (gig economy\, platform economies\, entre otros)\n\nCronograma: \n12:30 – 14:30  – Panel \n14:30 – 16:00  – Almuerzo \n16:00 – 18:00 – Mesa de trabajo 1: Impacto de la acumulación capitalista sobre las condiciones materiales de vida \n18:00 18:30 – Coffee \n18:30 – 20:30 – Mesa de trabajo 2: Dinámica competitiva en la economía mundial actual  \n** ENGLISH** \nIn-person event: Contradictions of Capitalist Accumulation and the impoverishment of life conditions. \nA day session of papers presentation and panel will be held in the Complutense University on 18th February\, 2026.   The event will be mostly in Spanish. \nThe program will follow the next structure:  \nPanel: Capitalist Competition and International Migration: A Structural Connection \nSpeaker: Cecilia Escobar \nChair: Phd Javier Murillo \nThe panel on the contradictions of capitalist accumulation examines how the dynamics of capital expansion systematically generate economic\, social\, and ecological tensions. Drawing on classical political economy and critical theory\, capitalist accumulation is understood as a process driven by the pursuit of profit through exploitation\, commodification\, and continuous growth\, which simultaneously undermines its own conditions of possibility. These contradictions manifest in recurrent crises\, growing inequality\, financial instability\, and the erosion of social reproduction\, as capital increasingly relies on dispossession\, debt\, and austerity to sustain accumulation in contexts of declining profitability. \nFrom a contemporary perspective\, these contradictions are intensified by financialization\, globalization\, and the ecological limits of growth. The expansion of markets into spheres previously organized by social norms or public provision—such as care\, nature\, and knowledge—deepens social fragmentation and environmental degradation. Feminist and critical political economy approaches highlight how capitalist accumulation externalizes costs onto households\, communities\, and ecosystems\, producing a structural conflict between capital and life. This panel therefore emphasizes the need to analyze accumulation not only as an economic process\, but as a political and social project sustained by power relations\, institutional arrangements\, and forms of coercion that shape inequality and constrain democratic alternatives. Possibilities to build emancipation paths will be explored in order to provide some responses to these actual issues. \nCecilia Escobar holds a PhD in economics from the National University of Athens. She has worked as a professor at the Central American University of El Salvador and as an independent researcher and consultant. Her latest publication is *The Political Economy of Dissent: A Research Companion* (Routledge\, 2026)\, which she co-authored and edited with Peter Blunt and Vlassis Missos. \nFirst session: \nSession 1 addresses the impact of capitalist accumulation on material living conditions\, focusing on how contemporary accumulation processes shape income distribution\, access to basic goods and services\, and the reproduction of everyday life. Capitalist accumulation\, particularly under neoliberal and financialized regimes\, has been associated with persistent inequality\, labor precarization\, and the deterioration of public provision. Wage stagnation\, informality\, and unemployment coexist with rising profits and wealth concentration\, producing uneven living conditions both within and across countries. These dynamics disproportionately affect women\, racialized groups\, and populations in the Global South\, reinforcing structural asymmetries rooted in historical patterns of dependency and uneven development. \nWe wait works that proposed: \n\nGlobal North-South comparisons\nStudies that delve into current structural inequalities\, both qualitatively and quantitatively\nStudies that focus on structural racism and immigration\nOther studies that connect the contradictions of capitalist accumulation with the increasing precarity of the global working classes\n\nSecond session: \nThe competitive dynamics of the contemporary global economy are marked by an intensification of competition among firms\, capitals\, and states\, within a context of unequal globalization\, financialization\, and increasing economic concentration. Competitiveness strategies increasingly rely on labor cost reductions\, productive flexibilization\, exclusionary technological innovation\, and control over global value chains\, deepening asymmetries between core and peripheral countries. In this setting\, Global South economies face structural constraints in improving their international insertion\, becoming locked into regressive specializations\, technological dependence\, and external vulnerability\, while power relations are reinforced that subordinate material living conditions and social rights to the imperatives of global competition. \nWe wait works that proposed: \n\nCurrent business strategies that deploy different types of capital (productive\, financial\, technological)\nCase studies\nThe impact of new technologies and social networks on global asymmetries\nOther cases in business strategies that reflect in-deepen inequalities and job insecurity (gig economy\, platform economics\, among others)\n\nSchedule: \n12:30 – 14:30 – Panel \n14:30 – 16:00 – Lunch \n16:00 – 18:00 – First session: Impact of Capitalist Accumulation on the Material Conditions of Life \n18:00 – 18:30 – Coffee Break \n18:30 – 20:30 – Second session: Competitive Dynamics in the Current Global Economy \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/global-crisis-and-the-rising-in-precarity/
LOCATION:Departamento de Economía Aplicada\, Estructura e Historia – Universidad Complutense de Madrid\, Campus de Somosaguas 28223 Pozuelo de Alarcón\, Madrid\, Spain
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Manila:20260220T203000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Manila:20260220T220000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251208T133813Z
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SUMMARY:Book Club on The Econocracy: The Perils of Leaving Economics to the Experts
DESCRIPTION:This project is a two-part holiday book club centered on The Econocracy: On the Perils of Leaving Economics to the Experts\, organized by the YSI East Asia Working Group in collaboration with Ekonsepto (Rethinking Economics Philippines)\, a Philippine-based economic literacy initiative. The book club aims to create a public\, accessible space for critical discussion on the role of economic expertise\, technocracy\, and public engagement in shaping policy across East and Southeast Asia. \nThe project consists of two online sessions: \n\n\nDecember 20 — Introduction Session: An open conversation on why economics has become increasingly “expert-owned\,” and how this affects democratic participation in the East Asian context. \n\n\nFebruary 20 (postponed from January 10) — Book Discussion: A collective reflection on The Econocracy\, focusing on how its arguments resonate with issues of transparency\, economic communication\, and public literacy in the region. Our guest speaker is Dr. Cahal Moran\, one of the book’s co-authors. \n\n\nDr Cahal Moran is a behavioural economist who is interested in understanding the impact that behavioural heuristics and biases have on our decisions in the real world. In practice\, this means looking at household datasets to try and tease out the various nuances and asymmetries created by the quirks of our behaviour. \nCahal is especially interested in the economic effects of these behavioural quirks\, such as their consequences for earnings and savings. For example\, his PhD thesis measured the causes and consequences of reference points for household behaviour with the aim of contributing to the field literature on prospect theory. One of Cahal’s papers looks at asymmetries in savings behaviour and whether or not these can be attributed to loss aversion. \nSince his PhD\, Cahal has expanded his research to look at the impact of different biases on the behaviour of different groups. For example\, he is currently working on a project which investigates the impact of choice overload on charitable giving among committed philanthropists\, and preliminary results suggest that more choice actually encourages donations\, which is contrary to choice overload. Joint work with Dr Ganga Shreedhar from PBS shows that the UK Government’s much-vaunted High Speed Rail 2 policy likely resulted from overly optimistic cost-benefit analysis. \nCahal is also a passionate advocate of economic pluralism and has long been a member of the student-led campaign Rethinking Economics. His book The Econocracy summarises their argument for pluralism and the importance of economic ideas in contemporary society. Cahal’s latest book\, Why We’re Getting Poorer\, analyses and explains issues such as inequality and cost of living crisis from a pluralist perspective. Finally\, Cahal’s YouTube channel Unlearning Economics provides similar commentary on things that interest him. \nRegistration bit.ly/ekonsepto-theeconocracy \nParticipants sign up through the form above or join directly in our Telegram group chat.  The event is open to the public\, conducted in English\, and designed to welcome participants with diverse backgrounds\, not only those trained in economics. \nThe project is aligned with ongoing research and advocacy for more inclusive economic dialogue in East Asia\, where rapid development\, inequality\, and institutional complexity make public understanding of economics especially vital. By grounding the discussions in both lived experience and emerging scholarship\, the book club offers an entry point into themes such as institutional trust\, governance quality\, and democratizing economic knowledge. \nThis initiative also strengthens the YSI East Asia Working Group by expanding outreach\, fostering cross-country exchange\, and building a sustained community of young scholars and practitioners interested in pluralist\, accessible economic thought. The collaboration with Ekonsepto amplifies visibility through an established public-facing platform\, creating a bridge between academic inquiry and community-based education. \nThrough this project\, we aim to cultivate a more participatory economic culture\, one where young people across East Asia and globally can confidently engage in conversations that shape their societies.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/book-club-on-the-econocracy-the-perils-of-leaving-economics-to-the-experts/2026-02-20/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/book-club-on-the-econocracy-the-perils-of-leaving-economics-to-the-experts/2026-02-20/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Lagos:20260221T160000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Lagos:20260221T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260108T192244Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260129T174413Z
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SUMMARY:Cooperative working 2026 mandate meeting
DESCRIPTION:The mandate meeting will bring YSI members and stakeholders together at the start of 2026 to agree on the group’s purpose\, priorities\, ways of working\, and next steps for the year ahead.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/cooperative-working-2026-mandate-meeting/
CATEGORIES:A one-time zoom
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/cooperative-working-2026-mandate-meeting/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260223T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260223T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251106T104437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251106T105224Z
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SUMMARY:Macroeconomic Implications of Climate-Related Risks: Challenges and Opportunities for the Low-Carbon Transition
DESCRIPTION:We are pleased to announce a Workshop on “Macroeconomic Implications of Physical and Transition Risks: Challenges and Opportunities for the Low-Carbon Transition\,” jointly organized by Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna\, IUSS Pavia\, and the University of Bologna\, and sponsored by the PRIN research projects: \n  \n–          “Evaluating Climate Physical and Transition Risks in Italy” (ECliPTIc); \n–          “SteeriNg financE toWards green technologieS: a hybrid experimental-computational macro approach” (NEWS) \n  \nThe event will take place on 23-25 February 2026 at Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna\, Pisa\, Italy. \nThe program will feature presentations by senior experts and young scholars\, fostering dialogue between established research leaders and emerging voices in the climate macroeconomics and finance research. Moreover\, the workshop includes a Keynote Lecture by Jean-Francois Mercure (University of Exeter) and a Roundtable with Jean-Francois Mercure\, Francesca Diluiso (Bank of England) and Andrea Roventini (Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna). \n  \nOverview \n  \nThe workshop will focus on understanding how climate-related physical and transition risks shape macroeconomic dynamics and the path towards a low-carbon economy. Modern economies are increasingly exposed to the growing frequency and magnitude of physical risks\, as well as the uncertainty surrounding transition risks. This workshop gathers researchers working at the intersection of macroeconomics\, environmental economics\, and climate science to quantify the near- to medium-run macroeconomic consequences of climate change and their implications for the low-carbon transition. The aim is to analyze interactions between environmental and economic systems and to uncover the mechanisms influencing the timing\, pace\, and feasibility of the green transition. This workshop gathers researchers working at the intersection of macroeconomics\, environmental economics and climate science to quantify the near- to medium-run macroeconomic consequences of climate change risks and their implications for the low-carbon transition. The aim is to analyze the complex interactions between environmental and economic systems to unveil the mechanisms that may affect the timing\, pace and the likelihood of the green transition. \n  \nWe welcome contributions addressing\, among others\, the following themes: \n  \n–          Computational modeling of climate-economy interactions: agent-based models (ABMs)\, behavioral macroeconomic models\, stock-flow consistent (SFC) models\, system dynamics\, input-output analysis\, network-based approaches. \n–          Systemic risks in the climate-macro-finance nexus: regional\, sectoral\, and macroeconomic implications of physical and transition risks. \n–          Quantitative impact assessments of climate-related shocks: supply chain disruptions\, direct and indirect network amplifications\, financial instability\, capital reallocation. \n–          Modeling of the financial system’s role in climate transitions: from green and sustainable finance and investment policies to mitigate financial stability concerns. \n–          Political economy and behavioral perspectives on climate policy adoption and effectiveness. \n–          Policy and prudential frameworks for climate mitigation and adaptation: evaluating market-based\, non-market-based policies and stress-test frameworks. \n  \nWe particularly welcome interdisciplinary contributions that integrate macroeconomics\, finance\, and climate science to enhance the understanding of the complex climate-economic interactions. \n  \nPractical Information \n  \nYSI will cover the accommodation and travel expenses for a selected number of Young Scholar
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/macroeconomic-implications-of-physical-and-transition-risks-challenges-and-opportunities-for-the-low-carbon-transition/
LOCATION:Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna\, Piazza Martiri della Libertà 33\, Pisa\, Tuscany\, Pisa\, Toscana\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260223T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260223T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251205T143257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T135416Z
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SUMMARY:YSI @ Agent-Based Models in Economics Seasonal School 2026 UFRJ
DESCRIPTION:The economy is a complex evolving system\, thus its analysis requires tools that can take into account all dimensions relevant to such a complex world. As young researchers\, we often question how to take into account heterogeneity\, interactions\, non-linearities\, path-dependency\, and tipping points\, to name a few. In this project\, we will learn and discuss together a powerful and growing tool that can address the complexity of the economy: agent-based models. We will investigate what the frontiers in macro ABM are and discuss how this tool can help answer the key economic questions of our times. \nThe project is a partnership with the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna (Italy). In addition to engaging in the discussions organized by the YSI side event\, selected participants will also attend lectures presenting ABM techniques\, develop and design a model through software laboratories\, and learn how to analyze statistically the data produced by ABMs. The workshop provides students with both the technical and methodological skills required to successfully develop and analyze simulation models in a research project\, allowing them to use these tools in their research as part of their Ph.D. or a research paper. \nThe school is aimed at Master’s and Ph.D. students enrolled in Economics curricula\, while applicants from other disciplines are also welcome. Selected participants will be offered partial travel stipends by the YSI. Please note that\, to be considered for the YSI travel stipend\, it is required to apply BOTH to the Seasonal School and the YSI selection.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-agent-based-models-in-economics-seasonal-school-2026-ufrj/
LOCATION:Instituto de Economia da UFRJ\, Avenida Pasteur 250\, Rio de Janeiro\, Rio de Janeiro\, 22290-250\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260224T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260224T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
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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/2026-02-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-02-24/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260225T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260227T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251104T183755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251218T161558Z
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SUMMARY:III Paper Development Workshop
DESCRIPTION:The Urban and Regional Economics WG welcomes abstracts from Young Scholars to its activities during the  RSA KIRDSA “III INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AMERICA”\, to be held at the Universidad de San Martin (Buenos Aires)\, Argentina. \nThis will mark the third collaboration with RSA – KIRDSA Network (Regional Studies Association Research Network “Knowledge\, Innovation and Regional Development in South America”)\, following the successful engagement during their conference in Montevideo and Campinas.  KIRDSA Conference “aims to bring together researchers studying the creation and dissemination of knowledge in the South American context and development processes with a territorial approach in the region’s countries“. \nWorkshop Structure: \nOnline Seminar (before the conference\, open to YSI community): \n\nEffective Writing and Publishing for Young Scholars\n\nActivities during the conference:  \n\nWorkshop: Applications of Innovation Capability Indicators and Datasets\nYoung Scholars Special Sessions: Throughout the conference\, we will host the “Young Scholars Special Session\,” where participants will present their research to a broader audience. During these sessions\, mentors will provide targeted feedback connected to the content of the initial workshop. This continuity ensures that the advice given during the workshop is reinforced and applied in the context of actual presentations.\n\nWe welcome contributions from Masters Students\, PhD Students and Early Career that are related\, but not exclusively\, to the following topics: \n\nInnovation and development in territories specializing in extractive industries.\nInteraction and collaboration networks in innovation processes of South America\nRelatedness\, productive specialization and technological diversification in South American regions\nLocal development\, clusters and industrial districts in the context of South American\ncountries\nEnvironmental challenges and green transitions in South American regions\nMigration\, brain drain and brain circulation in South America\nCities as poles of development\, innovation and inequality in South America\nGlobal Value Chains\, knowledge flows and diversification opportunities in South America cities.\nGender gaps in science\, technology and innovation\, causal factors at the regional level.\n\nWe welcome contributions with theoretical focus\, methodological innovations and/ or with implications for the design of public policies for innovation and regional development in South American countries. \n\nAbstract: max 500 words. References\, figures and/or tables that are not\nconsidered in the word count.\nExtended abstracts (optional): max 2500 words. References\, figures and/or tables that are not\nconsidered in the word count.\nFull papers (optional): max 8000 words\n\nThe workshop and conference are free of charge\, ensuring accessibility for all selected young scholars. \nParticipants based in South America are eligible for partial travel support\, kindly provided by YSI. \nInternational participants are welcome to apply. If you have the possibility of receiving financial support from your university or another institution\, we kindly ask you to consider this as your funding source. \nAll participants are encouraged to attend the entire conference. Please note that accommodation costs should be covered individually by each participant. \nObjectives: \n\nTo equip young scholars with the skills and knowledge necessary to enhance their research papers.\nTo foster an environment of academic excellence and collaboration among young researchers in the field of regional development in South America.\nTo facilitate meaningful interactions between young scholars and experienced mentors\, promoting the exchange of ideas and fostering professional growth.\n\nExpected Outcomes: \n\nImproved quality of research papers presented by young scholars at the conference.\nEnhanced presentation skills and academic writing capabilities among participants.\nStrengthened network and collaboration opportunities within the South American research community.\n\nImportant Dates \n\nNovember 4th: Submission for abstracts (and papers) Start\nNovember 11th:: Submission for abstracts (and papers) End\nNovember 30th: Notification of acceptance
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/iii-paper-development-workshop/
LOCATION:UNSAM Campus Miguelete\, Francia\, San Martín\, General San Martín\, B1650\, Argentina
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260226T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260226T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251120T232918Z
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SUMMARY:The Political Economy of Growth and Distribution III: The Role of the State in the Age of Geopolitical Transformations
DESCRIPTION:The Keynesian Working Group is pleased to announce a call for papers for the Third Edition of the YSI Workshop on The Political Economy of Growth and Distribution: The Role of the State in the Age of Geopolitical Transformations.\n\nWe invite young scholars to submit abstracts of up to 500 words and\, subsequently\, articles or drafts showcasing their current research for this workshop\, which will be hosted by the University of Siena\, Italy\, on February 26–27. \nBuilding on the success of previous editions\, this Workshop will focus on the changing role of the state in contemporary capitalism\, amid ongoing processes of deglobalization and within a context of geopolitical transformation. The state’s renewed prominence in the global economy has become increasingly evident—illustrated by the proliferation of trade restrictions\, tariffs\, financial sanctions\, and other measures that limit the cross-border movement of capital and labor. These developments revive key debates on fiscal and monetary policy\, financial governance\, trade strategies\, and their implications for global inequalities. \nBy engaging with these issues\, the event aims to highlight how state action interacts with global economic transformations to shape growth models\, distributional outcomes\, and macroeconomic stability. The interdisciplinary scope invites contributions that address both advanced and developing economies\, as well as historical and comparative perspectives. We particularly encourage approaches that bridge disciplines\, bringing together insights from political economy\, macroeconomics\, economic history\, political science\, and the broader social sciences. \nThe Workshop The Political Economy of Growth and Distribution III: The Role of the State in the Age of Geopolitical Transformations will offer a valuable opportunity for graduate students and early-career researchers to present their work and receive constructive feedback from colleagues and experts. It will also provide a space for participants to exchange ideas\, discuss current research\, and explore potential collaborations. \n  \nTopics \nWe welcome theoretical and empirical papers on themes related (but not limited) to the following: \n\nPower relations and the political economy of the state;\nFiscal and monetary policy\, financial governance\, trade strategies\, and their impacts on global inequalities;\nHistorical perspectives and analysis in political economy;\nGrowth and distribution models\, demand regimes\, and growth drivers;\nInternational monetary systems\, currency hierarchies\, financialization\, and instability;\nGlobal imbalances\, core–periphery divides\, recent trends in the Global South\, and regional inequalities;\nComparative and international political economy\, trade and industrial imbalances\, and development strategies;\nClass conflict\, social blocs\, power\, and growth coalitions.\n\n  \nConfirmed keynote speakers: \n  \nRobert A. Blecker. Professor Emeritus of Economics\, American University\, Washington\, DC\, USA\, and Fellow\, Forum for Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Policy (FMM). His research has covered post-Keynesian theory\, international trade\, open economy macroeconomics\, alternative models of growth and distribution\, global trade imbalances\, export-led growth\, US trade policy\, the Mexican economy and economic integration in North America. He has published in leading journals including Cambridge Journal of Economics\, Economica\, Journal of Development Studies\, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics\, Metroeconomica\, Structural Change and Economic Dynamics and World Development. \n  \nAnnina Kaltenbrunner. Professor of Global Economics at Leeds University Business School. Her research focuses on the hierarchical structure of the international monetary and financial system and its implications for external vulnerability\, macroeconomic policy\, financial development\, and structural change in developing and emerging economies. She is currently working on barriers to local currency lending to developing countries. \n  \nErik Bengtsson. Associate Professor of Economic History at Lund University\, Sweden\, and a WID Fellow of the World Inequality Lab\, Paris. His research focuses on economic inequality and historical and comparative political economy and he has published on these themes in journals such as Past & Present\, Comparative Political Studies\, Journal of Economic History and the Economic History Review. \n  \nMarco Veronese Passarella.  Professor of Economics at the University of L’Aquila\, and Senior Visiting Research Fellow in Economics at Leeds University Business School. His research focuses primarily on macroeconomic models\, economic dynamics\, monetary economics\, international economics\, and theories of prices and distribution. \n  \nRiccardo Pariboni.  Associate Professor at the University of Siena\, Italy. After three years as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Economics of Roma Tre University\, he was appointed Visiting Professor at the Freie Universität in Berlin and then joined the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies as a Postdoctoral Fellow. His research interests are growth theory\, income distribution and Post-Keynesian Economics\, also covering environmental issues and labour market dynamics. \n  \nFurther speakers are still to be confirmed. \n  \nImportant dates\nAbstract submission by December 15.\nAcceptance notification by December 20.\nIII Workshop on the Political Economy of Growth and Distribution: February 26-27\, 2026. \n  \nHow to Apply\nYoung scholars can apply to the call for abstracts here:https://forms.gle/r91SY5UxpjnwEjm36. If selected\, you will be invited to present your work. Selections will be made based on merit. Selected students can expect to receive accommodation and participation in the social dinner. \n  \n*Young scholars are welcome to attend the event as listeners. Please register using the following form: https://forms.gle/fpGEgR87keYsDfs8A  \n  \nContact us for any further queries: \nCinthia de Souza – cinthiands@gmail.com \nFrancesca Giammorcaro – f.giammorcaro@student.unisi.it \nVinícius Centeno – vinicenteno@gmail.com \nEdoardo Rappa – edoardorappa@gmail.com \n  \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/the-political-economy-of-growth-and-distribution-iii/
LOCATION:University of Siena\, Piazza San Francesco\, 7\, Siena\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260227
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260301
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260104T103659Z
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SUMMARY:Money View Symposium - 6th edition
DESCRIPTION:Money View Symposium 6\nWelcome to the 6th annual Money View Symposium. This year’s edition of the Money View Symposium will take place on 27-28 February 2026. \nSubmit your paper | Register here | Program \nKey speakers: Perry Mehrling\, Katharina Pistor\, Ulrich Bindseil\, Iñaki Aldasoro\, Izabella Kaminska\, Brendan Greeley\, Steffen Murau\, Mark Swilling\, Sven Beckert \nAbout the Money View\nOver the past decades\, Perry Mehrling has built on the British and American central banking schools to developed what he calls the ‘money view’. While economics and finance have oddly abstracted from the concept of money in order to focus on other problems\, this minority view focuses on money and credit for what it is: a set of interlocking promises to pay and how these promises get settled. The money view therefore is in a unique position to restart a conversation between economics and finance\, as well as theory and practice. \nYou can view our discussions from previous years on the YSI Youtube Channel.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-symposium-6/
LOCATION:Zoom\, virtual
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260302
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260303
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251213T103016Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251213T105419Z
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SUMMARY:2nd Workshop on Choice and Welfare
DESCRIPTION:Submissions\nPlease submit your paper using this form (https://forms.gle/UNkRgS3yxMHtkK7x6). \nSubmission deadline: 26 January 2026 \nAcceptance notification: 2 February 2026 \nRegistration deadline: 2 March 2026 \n  \n  \nAbout the workshop\nA substantial body of empirical evidence shows that human behaviour consistently goes beyond the homo oeconomicus model of a rational agent. Behaviour is shaped by a wide range of additional factors such as cognitive limitations\, fairness concerns\, reciprocity\, social norms\, identities\, altruism\, and spite. Although significant progress has been made in integrating these findings into economic theory\, there remain many open questions. \n  \nWe invite submissions from PhD and early career researchers for a one-day workshop on Choice and Welfare to be held on the 2nd of March at Queen Mary University of London. \n  \nThe workshop will feature six selected speakers across three sessions\, with a keynote speech given by Professor Robert Sugden (University of East Anglia). There will be no parallel sessions. \n  \nShared accommodation\, as well as partial travel stipends\, will be provided for all speakers\, if needed. \n  \nWe welcome theoretical and empirical contributions seeking to incorporate insights from behavioural and experimental economics into economic theory. Submissions from the fields of choice and decision theory\, behavioural and experimental economics\, social choice and welfare theory\, and behavioural game theory are especially encouraged. Potential topics might include\, but are not limited to: \n\nInfluence of AI and digital technologies on economic behaviour\, as well as the economy more broadly.\nImplications of boundedly rational consumers for market competition.\nInfluence of social networks on strategic behaviour.\nWelfare analysis when agents are boundedly rational.\nEconomic consequences of changing preferences.\nUnawareness in decision making.\n\n  \nThis workshop is organised by PhD students in the School of Economics and Finance at Queen Mary University of London with support from the Young Scholars Initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/2nd-workshop-on-choice-and-welfare/
LOCATION:Graduate Centre\, Queen Mary University of London\, Mile End Road\, London\, E1 4NS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260303T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260303T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008173-1772546400-1772551800@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/2026-03-03/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-03-03/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260305T103000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260206T113849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260206T113849Z
UID:10008444-1772701200-1772706600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Rethinking Capitalism and Economic Order V
DESCRIPTION:The History of Economic Thought Working Group and East Asia Working Group of the Young Scholars Initiative is launching a webinar series that brings critical attention to the idea\, practice\, and evolution of capitalism. This project aims to reconnect the history of economic ideas with the world they sought to describe\, reform\, or transform. Capitalism is not just an economic system; it is a lived experience\, a political project\, and an ideological battleground. \n  \nWe seek to open a conversation about capitalism as it has been theorised\, imagined\, and contested across historical periods and geographies. From early critiques of enclosures and slavery\, to colonial accumulation and contemporary platform economies\, capitalism’s forms have shifted\, but its underlying logics—commodification\, accumulation\, exclusion—continue to shape our worlds. \n  \nThis series will invite senior scholars who work across traditions—Marxist\, classical\, feminist\, ecological\, decolonial—to speak to these shifting realities. Our goal is not to arrive at a unified definition of capitalism\, but to stay with its plurality. What is the nature of capitalism in our time? What kind of capitalism is being debated in different contexts? What kind of resistance does it provoke? How do economic theories shape their justification or critique? \n  \nOur approach to history foregrounds tension\, silence\, and the politics of knowledge. The HET WG places special emphasis on themes like decolonisation\, pluralism\, epistemic difference\, and the often under-acknowledged intellectual contributions from the Global South. We invite our participants to think about histories of caste\, race\, gender\, and land\, alongside more familiar categories such as markets\, property\, and the state. \nKey areas of focus include: \n\nHistories of capitalism across continents: not just as diffusion from Europe\, but as co-productions and frictions and histories of capitalism have their centres spreading across the globe\, not only in the WEST but in the EAST too\, from Malacca\, Hugli\, Calicut\, Macao\, Nagasaki\, Pegu to Batavia\, to name a few.\nCapitalism’s relationship with colonialism\, racialisation\, and dispossession\nProperty regimes\, financial architectures\, and state-market entanglements\nTrade\, Tariffs and Wars\nDebates on crisis: inflation\, debt\, austerity\, climate collapse\nIntellectual genealogies: from Marx and Gandhi to Du Bois\, Luxemburg\, Fanon\, and Polanyi\nThe metabolism of capital and planetary boundaries\nThe role of economics as a discipline in naturalising or resisting capitalist logics\n\nThis series is not an attempt to replace critique with nostalgia or celebration. Instead\, we want to create a space where histories of capitalism can inform strategies for its transformation or transcendence. Theories of capitalism are not just descriptions; they are interventions. We hope to create a space where critique and imagination work in tandem. \n  \nProf. Louis-Philippe Rochon\, Full Professor of Economics\, Laurentian University\n  \nMonetary Policy During and After the Trump Era\, Thursday\, 5 March 2026\, 9:00 AM EST\n  \nLouis-Philippe Rochon is Full Professor of Economics at Laurentian University\, Canada\, where he has been teaching since 2004. Before that\, he taught at Kalamazoo College\, in Michigan. He obtained his doctorate from the New School for Social Research\, in 1998\, earning him the ‘Frieda Wunderlich Award for Outstanding Dissertation’\, for his dissertation on endogenous money and post-Keynesian economics. \n  \nIn January 2019\, he became the co-editor of the Review of Political Economy\, and its Editor-in-Chief in 2021. Before that\, he created the Review of Keynesian Economics\, and was its editor from 2011 to 2018\, and is now Founding Editor Emeritus. He is a Consulting Editor for the newly-created Advances in Economics Education\, and the Associate Editor of the Journal of Business and Economic Studies. He is the co-director of the Monetary Policy Institute\, and the editor of the @Monetaryblog. \n  \nHe has been guest-editor for the Journal of Post Keynesian Economics\, the International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education\, the European Journal of Economic and Social Systems\, the International Journal of Political Economy\, and the Journal of Banking Finance and Sustainable Development. He has published on monetary theory and policy\, post-Keynesian economics\, and fiscal policy. \n  \nHe is on the editorial board of Ola Financiera\, International Journal of Political Economy\, the European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention\, Problemas del Desarrollo\, Cuestiones Económicas (Central Bank of Ecuador)\, and Bank & Credit (Central Bank of Poland)\, Bulletin of Political Economy\, Advances in Economics Education\, Il Pensiero Economico Moderno\, Journal of Banking\, Finance and Sustainable Development\, Research Papers in Economics and Finance\, and the Associate Editor of Journal of Business and Economic Studies. \n  \nHe is the Editor-in-Chief of the Elgar Series of Central Banking and Monetary Policy\, and co-editor of New Directions in Post-Keynesian Economics. \n  \nHe has been a Visiting Professor or Visiting Scholar in Australia\, Brazil\, France\, Italy\, Mexico\, Poland\, South Africa\, and the United States\, and has further lectured in Chile\, China\, Colombia\, Denmark\, Ecuador\, Germany\, Italy\, Japan\, Kyrgyzstan\, Morroco\, Peru\, Spain\, South Africa\, Switzerland\, the United States\, and the UK. \n  \nHe is the author of some 180 articles in peer-reviewed journals and books\, and has written or edited close to 60 books. His Encyclopaedia of Post-Keynesian Economics and A Brief History of Economic Thought\, were just published. Both books are with Elgar. He is currently editing the second edition of the Encyclopedia of Central Banking. \n  \nHe has received grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council in Canada (SSHRC)\, the Ford Foundation\, and the Mott Foundation\, among other places.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-capitalism-and-economic-order-v/
CATEGORIES:A one-time zoom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Gemini_Generated_Image_ni4bceni4bceni4b.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-capitalism-and-economic-order-v/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260306T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260306T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20240117T145948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T170413Z
UID:10008440-1772820000-1772825400@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/2026-03-06/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Largent.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2026-03-06/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008174-1773151200-1773156600@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/2026-03-10/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2026-03-10/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260311T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20240112T203210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T153433Z
UID:10005647-1773223200-1773226800@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/2026-03-11/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Screen-Shot-2024-01-12-at-3.18.14-PM.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2026-03-11/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260312T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20251124T185304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T131337Z
UID:10007957-1773302400-1773334800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Workshop on Postcapitalist Perspectives: Present Realities and Future Possibilities
DESCRIPTION:Decades of rising inequality\, precarious work\, and ecological destruction—worsened by recurring crises that disproportionately impact marginalized groups—have fueled growing skepticism about our economic system. While capitalism is widely critiqued\, fewer efforts focus on constructing alternatives that serve the many rather than the privileged few. Reform attempts often address only symptoms\, leaving structural flaws intact. Building on a year-long\, self-organized reading group on postcapitalist economics involving PhD students from Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa\, University of Pisa and University of Siena\, we aim to expand that collaborative space by fostering a pluralistic and international in-person exchange on contemporary realities and postcapitalist perspectives. Our goal is to empower early-career scholars committed to transformative economic theories\, moving beyond capitalism critiques and actively engaging with alternative socio-economic frameworks and models that transcend existing paradigms.\nThe workshop will span two days and be structured around three key thematic streams: \n1. The Future of AI and Big Data: From Surveillance Capitalism to Cooperative and Human-Centered Visions \n\nOwnership and control in Big Data Capitalism\nPlatform labor and digital work\nCooperative platforms and decentralized AI\nHuman-centered technological change\n\n 2. Contemporary Ecological Crises and a New Politics of Life \n\nScrutinizing green capitalism\nDegrowth\, post-extractive economies\, and regenerative models\nSocial and ecological processes sustaining and regenerating life\n\n3. Postcapitalist Pathways for Transitioning Economies \n\nAlternatives beyond market and state\nHistorical case studies\nCentralized and decentralized planning theory and praxis
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/workshop-on-postcapitalist-perspectives-present-realities-and-future-possibilities/
LOCATION:Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies\, Piazza Martiri della Libertà 33\, Pisa\, Pisa\, 56127\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20260313T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20260315T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260112T074704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T074704Z
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SUMMARY:Permaculture x Complex Adaptive Systems
DESCRIPTION:This is a workshop where the end goal is to create new knowledge. Particularly\, the goal is to place two different lineages of systems thinking in dialogue and observe what emerges for new economic thinking. The first method is Complex Adaptive Systems\, which is highly stylised\, model-driven\, and data-based\, emphasising abstraction\, feedback loops\, and prediction. The other is permaculture\, which is grounded\, ecological\, and practice-led\, emphasising observation\, relationships\, and design in real landscapes. Bringing these two approaches together allows tensions to surface between representation and lived systems\, optimisation and care\, control and responsiveness. Rather than privileging one over the other\, the workshop treats their interaction as generative. The aim is not synthesis in advance\, but the possibility that new economic insights arise precisely from holding these methods side by side and allowing participants to think across scales\, disciplines\, and forms of knowing. \nThe event spans from 13th March to 16th March\, 2026. Please note that is might take you extra days to travel\, since the location is remote. \nThree-Day Workshop: Systems Thinking for New Economic Imagination\nDay 1: Seeing Living Systems (Permaculture Grounding)\n\n\n\n\n\nTime\nSession\nDescription\nFacilitator\n\n\n\n\n6:30–7:30\nMorning Walk & Observation\nSlow walk to observe land\, water\, vegetation\, labour rhythms\nNarsanna & Sneha\n\n\n7:30–9:00\nBreakfast & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n9:00–10:30\nPermaculture as Systems Thinking\nEthics\, principles\, economy as a living system\nNarsanna & Sneha\n\n\n10:30–10:45\nBreak\n—\n—\n\n\n10:45–12:30\nReading the System\nObserving soil\, water\, energy\, and social relations\nNarsanna & Sneha\n\n\n12:30–2:00\nLunch & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n2:00–4:00\nSystems in Practice\nCase studies and mapping flows of energy\, labour\, nutrients\nNarsanna & Sneha\n\n\n4:15–5:30\nReflection Circle\nWhat the land reveals beyond theory\nNarsanna & Sneha\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDay 2: Abstraction\, Modelling\, and Policy Systems\n\n\n\n\n\nTime\nSession\nDescription\nFacilitator\n\n\n\n\n6:30–7:30\nMorning Walk & Pattern Recognition\nIdentifying recurring patterns across scales\nDr. D.N. Gupta\n\n\n7:30–9:00\nBreakfast & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n9:00–10:30\nComplexity Theory & Economics\nComplex Adaptive Systems\, emergence\, institutions\nDr. D.N. Gupta\n\n\n10:30–10:45\nBreak\n—\n—\n\n\n10:45–12:30\nSystem Dynamics & Policy Design\nModels\, causal loops\, policy case studies\nDr. D.N. Gupta\n\n\n12:30–2:00\nLunch & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n2:00–4:00\nModelling Exercise\nTranslating lived systems into simplified models\nDr. D.N. Gupta\n\n\n4:15–5:30\nReflection Session\nWhat abstraction hides or distorts\nDr. D.N. Gupta\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDay 3: Holding the Tension — What Emerges?\n\n\n\n\n\nTime\nSession\nDescription\nFacilitator\n\n\n\n\n6:30–7:30\nMorning Walk & Integration\nSilent walk to integrate and sense tensions\nAll\n\n\n7:30–9:00\nBreakfast & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n9:00–10:30\nDialogue Between Lineages\nPermaculture and complexity economics in conversation\nAll\n\n\n10:30–10:45\nBreak\n—\n—\n\n\n10:45–12:30\nRethinking Economic Concepts\nValue\, productivity\, efficiency\, growth\nAll\n\n\n12:30–2:00\nLunch & Rest\n—\n—\n\n\n2:00–4:00\nDesign & Imagination Lab\nDesigning new economic questions or interventions\nAll\n\n\n4:15–5:30\nClosing Circle\nWhat emerged\, what remains unresolved\nAll
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/permaculture-x-complex-adaptive-systems/
LOCATION:Aranya Agricultural Alternatives\, No 13\, ARANYA House-6-88\, New housing Colony\,Pastapur Village\, Zaheerabad\, Telangana 502246\, Zahee\, Telangaga\, 502246\, India
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260318T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260318T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260209T190720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260209T190720Z
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SUMMARY:Public Research cafes exploring issues of equity and diversity in Economic studies.
DESCRIPTION:This is a series of Research Café sessions with the intent to share\, learn and connect. \nMonthly in-person exchanges between February and May 2026\, organised the third Wednesday each month and running for half a day. \nThe ambition is to create the space and enable local early career researchers : \n\nTo present  research to peers and receive optional feedback/presentation tips.\nTo meet and connect with others from beyond your discipline/subject-area.\nTo enjoy a networking lunch.\nTo engage in and learn from a facilitated discussion on a topic relevant to the life\, cultures and experiences of PhD education.\n\nResearch cafés will run according to the following format: \n\nDelivery of up to three research presentations of no more than 12 minutes each delivered by early career researchers on their work.\nOptional feedback on presentation style and skill to presenters (it will always be at the presenter’s discretion if they wish to receive this).\nBreak for networking lunch provided by the organiser\nDiscussion around the pre-set topics (equity and diversity in research).\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/public-research-cafes-exploring-issues-of-equity-and-diversity-in-economic-studies/2026-03-18/
LOCATION:community center\, Athens\, Greece
CATEGORIES:A series of in-person events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260320T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260320T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260311T143500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T143500Z
UID:10008056-1774000800-1774022400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Young Scholars Workshop on STI Policy and Windows of Opportunity
DESCRIPTION:This is a one-day workshop on science\, technology and innovation (STI) policy and windows of opportunity\, to be held at the Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC)\, with the support of the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). The workshop aims to discuss local and national scenarios in STI policy analysis by connecting conceptual developments in innovation policy with contemporary debates on technological change and development trajectories\, particularly for Santa Catarina and Brazil.\nPlease note that this event will be in Portuguese and Spanish (Carlota Perez’s session). \nThe workshop is designed primarily for early-career researchers\, graduate students\, and young policy-oriented scholars based in the South of Brazil\, particularly in UFSC. Its central objective is to provide students and participants with a structured overview of the evolution of STI policy frameworks while fostering dialogue on how the current socio-economic scenarios opens a window of opportunity for latecomer regions and countries. \nThe first part of the workshop will offer a conceptual and historical grounding in STI policy. This session aims to establish a shared analytical language among participants\, many of whom may be encountering STI policy as a field for the first time or from adjacent disciplines. \nYSI Economics of Innovation Group coordinator Dr Arthur Moreira will introduce students to the fundamental structure of the innovation policy scholarship.  The discussion then enters the current debates on the theme\, particularly missions and transformative innovation policy (TIP). Dr Carolina Haddad (OECD) will present the TIP framework and discuss its applications. \nBuilding on this foundation\, the second half of the workshop will feature a keynote lecture by Prof Carlota Perez\, focusing on windows of opportunity\, technological revolutions and the role of the state in structural change and development strategies. \nLocal speaker Prof Pablo Bittencourt\, chief-economist of the Industry Federation of SC and UFSC Associate Professor\, will conclude the day by providing an overview of the discussion and contrast it to the policy experiences and institutional challenges related to STI policy in Brazil and Santa Catarina. \nThese sessions are intended to stimulate reflexive discussion on how the most recent developments in innovation studies can be applied and adapted to specific regional contexts. \nMore information and links at UFSC’s webpage (Portuguese only). \nUFSC Photo by Airtonjordani\, CC BY-SA 4.0
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/young-scholars-workshop-on-sti-policy-and-windows-of-opportunity/
LOCATION:Federal University of Santa Catarina\, PPGEco\, Rua Roberto Sampaio Gonzaga - Centro Socioeconômico\, Bloco G\, 2º andar\, Florianópolis\, Santa Catarina\, 88040-900\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260324
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260326
DTSTAMP:20260403T173039
CREATED:20260113T161642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T161642Z
UID:10007949-1774310400-1774483199@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:19th Workshop on the Organisation\, Economics and Policy of Scientific Research
DESCRIPTION:In a world where scientific and technological advancements propel social and economic development\, comprehending the intricacies of scientific organization becomes indispensable for a better understanding of our society. The 19th edition of the Workshop on the Organisation\, Economics\, and Policy of Scientific Research (WOEPS)\, hosted by The Department of Management\, Economics and Industrial Engineering of Politecnico di Milano\, stands as a unique platform. It seeks to foster a vibrant community for scholars in economics\, sociology\, management\, and related fields who are dedicated to unraveling the intricate processes behind scientific organization. \nWe aim to attract contributions from both junior and senior scholars on topics related to the organisation\, economics and policy of scientific research. A minimum number of slots are reserved for junior researchers (PhD students or postdoc scholars who obtained their PhD in 2021 or later). \nContributions are invited on (but not limited to) one or more of the following topics: \n\nOrganisation of research activities in universities\, PROs and private R&D labs\nThe evaluation of science policy\nScience in the private sector and spillovers from scientific research\nRole of individual researcher characteristics in scientific research\nScience research networks and collaboration\nScientific careers and mobility\n\nHow to apply\nPlease submit previously unpublished papers or extended abstracts (min 3 pages) by 7th January 2026 here. We strive to notify authors by 15th February 2026. \nUp to 18 contributions will be selected by the scientific committee based on novelty\, academic quality and relevance. No review or comments will be offered to the authors to supplement the decision. All presentations will have a discussant. Accepted authors are asked to submit full papers by 6th March 2026. \nPlease refer to our website for additional information. \nParticipation\, travel and accommodation expenses\nParticipation in the workshop is free for authors of selected papers. \nWe are offering a limited number of travel and accommodation support grants to junior scholars (PhD students or scholars\, who obtained their PhD in 2020 or later) without local funds. To be considered for such grants please state your intention and your eligibility by writing to danielfernando.desouza@polimi.it. \nBest Junior Scholar Paper\nDuring the Workshop\, a Special Mention in honor of Paul A. David will be awarded to the Best Junior Scholar Paper. Eligible papers are works of one or more junior scholars (PhD students or those who received their PhD in 2021 or later) as primary (either first or corresponding) author. Authors wishing to participate in the competition for the Best Young Scholar Paper\, please indicate your intention and confirm your eligibility during the application process. \nScientific Committee\nCatherine Beaudry (Polytechnique Montréal) ▪ Guido Buenstorf (University Kassel) ▪ Nicolas Carayol (Université de Bordeaux\, GREThA) ▪ Michele Cincera (Université Libre de Bruxelles) ▪ Aldo Geuna (Università di Torino) ▪ Hanna Hottenrott (TUM) ▪ Stijn Kelchtermans (KU Leuven) ▪ Cornelia Lawson (University of Manchester) ▪Patrick Llerena (Université de Strasbourg\, BETA) ▪Jacques Mairesse (UNU-MERIT\, Maastricht University) ▪ Fabio Montobbio (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore) ▪ Michele Pezzoni (Université Côte d’Azur) ▪ Henry Sauermann (ESMT Berlin) ▪Sotaro Shibayama (University of Tokyo) ▪ Paula Stephan (Georgia State University; NBER) ▪ Valentina Tartari (Stockholm School of Economics) ▪ Reinhilde Veugelers (KU Leuven) ▪ Fabiana Visentin (UNU-MERIT\, Maastricht University) ▪ John Walsh (Politecnico di Milano; Georgia Institute of Technology) \nLocal Organising Committee\nChiara Franzoni (Politecnico di Milano) ▪ Daniel Souza (Politecnico di Milano) ▪ John Walsh (Politecnico di Milano) ▪ Stefano Baruffaldi (Politecnico di Milano)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/19th-workshop-on-the-organisation-economics-and-policy-of-scientific-research/
LOCATION:Politecnico di Milano\, Via Raffaele Lambruschini\, 4b\, Milan\, MI\, 20156\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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