Who Pays for Socioeconomic Rights? The Politics of Financial and Moral Obligation
Workshop organized by Charles Walton, Paris IAS fellow, Nicolas Delalande (Sciences Po), and Paul-André Rosental (Sciences Po), with the support of Paris IAS, Centre d'Études européennes de Sciences Po, Centre d'Histoire de Sciences Po, Université Sorbonne Paris Cité, The Leverhulme Trust and the Warwick University Global History & Culture Centre.
Presentation
This two-day workshop will explore the financial, moral and religious dimensions of socioeconomic rights in history. The question of ‘who pays’ for these rights and on what moral or religious basis will be the central focus of discussions.
Program
Thursday, 19 May
Institut d’Études avancées de Paris
9h30 Meet at IEA
9h45 Opening comments
10h Julia Moses (University of Sheffield): Compensation as a Social Right
10h45 Alexandre Boza (Sciences Po): Defining social rights in the name of humanity: A New Deal for rights in the interwar period
11h30 Coffee Break
11h45 Romain Huret (EHESS): The same rights for singles? Unmarried people and tax policy in the United States
12h30 Keynote: Laurence Fontaine (CNRS-EHESS): Imaginer un monde sans pauvreté au siècle des Lumières
13h Lunch
14h Christian Christiansen (Aahus University): The rise of fall of social and economic rights in the works of Gunnar Myrdal
14h45 Simon Jackson (University of Birmingham): Performing Charity, Relieving Famine: the Syrian Mount Lebanon Ladies Relief Society of Boston and Humanitarian Philanthropy, 1915-26
15h30 Break
15h45 Valentine Zuber (École pratique des hautes études): The claim for economic and social rights in 19th century France: Political and religious convergences?
16h30 Alessandro Santagata (GSRL): Thinking the Commons. The Discussion about Private Property in the French Catholic Theology after Vatican II
Friday, 20 May
Sciences Po
9h45 Meet at Sciences Po
10h Maguelone Nouvel-Kirschleger (University of Montpellier III): L’économie sociale leplaysienne, ou la loi morale comme substitut au(x) droit(s)
10h45 Alessandro Ferrari (University of Insubria): Religious freedom and market economy
11h30 Coffee Break
11h45 Marie-Emmanuelle Chessel (Sciences Po): Social Catholics in France in the 20th Century: From Duties to Rights?
12h30 Keynote: Olivier Zunz (University of Virginia): Tocqueville peut-il servir de guide pour comprendre la charité publique aux Etats-Unis, en Grande Bretagne et en France au milieu du XIXe siècle?
13h Lunch
14h Michèle Grenot (ATD Quart Monde): Le droit d'être considéré comme un homme à part entière: un combat pour l'accès des plus pauvres aux droits civils et politiques pendant la Révolution française
14h45 Martin Lengwiler (University of Basel): Welfare through Taxation: Socio-political aspects of the Swiss tax system (19th/20th century)
15h30 Break
15h45 Edward Castleton (University of Franche-Comté): Who should pay the Leviathan? Taxation and French Anti-Statist Social and Economic Thought, 1848-1861
16h30 Bernard Thomann (INALCO): The Emergence of a « Right to Live » in Imperial Japan
Discutants :
Stépanie Roza (University Pierre Mendès France)
Claudia Stein (University of Warwick)
Steven Jensen (Danish Institute for Human Rights)
Nicolas Delalande (Sciences Po)
Paul-André Rosental (Sciences Po)
Charles Walton (University of Warwick)
Mark Goodale (University of Lausanne)
Christoph Conrad (University of Geneva)
While those workshops are not closed to the public, space is limited. Strongly interested individuals may contact Charles Walton: Charles.Walton@warwick.ac.uk
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