A Graduate student conference at Johns hopkins university
Recent years have witnessed renewed attention on the part of historians to questions concerning capital accumulation, market formation, and labor regimes. Bringing together scholars from a wide range of geographic, temporal, and thematic sub-fields, the new history of capitalism has revisited long-held assumptions about economic development and capital accumulation with an eye towards understanding the ways culture, politics, and markets have intersected to form the basis of a dynamic and highly complex capitalism(s).
Travel Grants Available
The conference organizers can offer a limited number of grants to assist graduate students with travel and accommodation. When submitting an abstract please indicate if you would like to apply.
SponsorsJohns Hopkins Department of History
Johns Hopkins Department of Political Science Program in Latin American Studies Center for Africana Studies Racism, Immigration, and Citizenship Program The Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise The Arrighi Center for Global Studies The Office of the Vice Dean for Humanities and Social Sciences |