9-12 July 2025
Palais des Congrès, Montréal, Québec

2025 – Montréal

Inclusive Solidarities: Reimagining Boundaries in Divided Times

Registration deadline: May 9, 2024 (early bird discount: March 17, 2025).

Conference dates: 1-3 July 2025 (virtual); 9-12 July 2025 (in Montréal)

Inclusive Solidarities: Reimagining Boundaries in Divided Times

 

Solidarity is a central value practiced across social and labor movements and a key principle underpinning social democracies. It is also a term with many meanings, referring to the cohesion of groups, the development of social policy and welfare states, or the goals and tactics of labor and social movement organizations. Solidarity in all its forms involves an act of political and social imagination – to identify who one is willing to act in solidarity with, or who are the members of one’s ‘imagined community’ (Anderson 1983). How community is defined, and how the boundaries around that community are drawn or imagined, have implications for who is included and excluded in collective action to redistribute power and resources, to demand rights, and to fight oppression. 

The theme of this year’s SASE meeting recognizes the importance of reimagining the boundaries that define commitments to and practices of inclusive solidarity, at a time when the most visible trends are toward intensified divisions. Tens of thousands of lives have been lost in wars, invasions, and violent conflicts over the past year alone. Climate change is fueling displacement and famine, while attempts to mitigate carbon emissions encourage organizing for and against policies to reform farming, manufacturing, and energy production. Far right political parties have experienced growing support, with recent major election wins in Europe and Latin America – and a rising share of the popular vote in many countries world-wide. And multinational companies and their investors continue to adapt to a post-COVID global economy through pursuing particularistic interests within and across national boundaries, from opposing proposed regulation of AI and platform work to challenging the right to strike as a critical dimension of the ILO’s fundamental right to freedom of association. 

While there are many examples of developments that are driving up inequality, precarity, and exclusion, these are also contested by creative movements that seek to build worker and citizen power based on more inclusive and participatory forms of solidarity. These take different forms, from a recent wave of labor organizing and strikes in the US to global racial and gender justice movements to international campaigns to improve labor and environmental practices across global supply chains. 

The task of both identifying the challenges to solidarity and studying its changing forms, practices, and impact raises a number of questions for researchers and practitioners. How do individuals, organizations, and states confront divisive ideologies and political movements? What role do foundational social, political, and economic stratifications and established institutions play in exacerbating these divisions? And which institutions (old or new) serve as resources for bridging them? In what ways do multinational companies and financial actors benefit from these trends, and how do they adapt their own strategies in response to the changing scale and scope of regulation? In what ways are labor and social movements responding? How do they overcome or transform potential identity-based fragmentation to build more inclusive, intersectional forms of solidarity? And under what conditions do they succeed – in reembedding capital in ways that tie it to more solidaristic social commitments or in transforming capitalist ownership and power relations? What role do nation-states and political parties play in fostering inclusion or exacerbating divisions – and in encouraging alternative strategic choices by different stakeholder groups? 

The location of our meeting in Montréal, Canada, is ideal for investigating these questions. Québec’s history is marked by frequent reimaginings of the boundaries defining solidarity and the practices that underpin it – from European colonization, the displacement of Indigenous Peoples, and centuries of religious or cultural and nationalist conflict; to the ‘Quiet Revolution’ of the 1960s that established a more inclusive welfare state and industrial relations institutions. Québec is known for its progressive policies supporting women’s rights, migrant integration, and Indigenous self-government; for the strength and creativity of its labor movement; for efforts to embed capital through worker investment funds and public investment; and for ongoing conflicts over citizenship rights and political self-determination. In short, it is both a model for reimagining more inclusive approaches to solidarity, while also typifying the many contradictions that mark the path to drawing and redrawing boundaries around different imagined communities. 

The 2025 SASE Annual Meeting welcomes submissions that engage with and beyond these themes — in our association’s tradition of multi-scalar, multi-disciplinary research that subjects a broad range of socio-economic developments and paradigms to critical analysis. We look forward to bringing together a diverse community of international scholars to join our SASE community in Montréal. 

President: Virginia Doellgast




 

Mini-conferences consist of a minimum of 3 panels which are featured as a separate stream in the program.

MC01: Elites and Power Structures
detailed info
Organizers
Christoph Houman Ellersgaard
Elisa Reis
Thierry Rossier
Elisa Klüger
Robyn Klingler-Vidra
Bruno Cousin
André Vereta-Nahoum
Kevin Young
MC02: Extending the Debate on Craft: Work, Precarity, and Organising in Artisanal Industries
detailed info
Organizers
Benjamin Anderson
Alessandro Gerosa
MC03: Global and Local Formations of Race and Capital
detailed info
Organizers
Nabila Islam
Tess Wise
MC04: Navigating Insecurities: Precarity, Crisis, and Paths to Solidarity
detailed info
Organizers
Lorenza Antonucci
Elena Ayala-Hurtado
David Joseph-Goteiner
Joaquín Prieto
Hequn Wang
MC05: Reimagining the Boundaries of the Agrifood Systems: Disciplinary Divides and Contemporary Challenges
detailed info
Organizers
Arturo Ezquerro-Cañete
Mariana Levy
Gustavo Setrini
MC06: Re-imaging Solidarity through Meaningful Work: Obstacles, Challenges and Opportunities
detailed info
Organizers
Shoba Arun
Knut Laaser
Valeria Pulignano
MC07: Social Ecologies of the Economic Process: Capitalist Metabolism, Materialities and Frontiers
detailed info
Organizers
Nelo Magalhães
Éric Pineault
MC08: The Socio-economics of Asset Stranding
detailed info
Organizers
Valentina Ausserladscheider
Timur Ergen
Philipp Golka
MC09: Unpacking the Dynamics of Exclusion and Inclusion in Illegal Markets
detailed info
Organizers
Matías Dewey
Gabriel Feltran
MC10 with Network B: Socio-economic roots of international inequality and marginalization: theory, comparison and case studies of dependency in neoliberal capitalism
detailed info
Organizers
Samantha Ashman
Pedro Paulo Zahluth Bastos
Aline Miglioli
Alfredo Saad Filho
MC11: Inclusive Solidarities in Geoeconomic Times? Connecting Global and National Capitalisms
detailed info
Organizers
Fulya Apaydin
Milan Babic
Arie Krampf
Andreas Nölke
Judit Ricz
Merve Sancak
MC12 with Network I: First INDEP conference: Democratic Economic Planning for the Real World
detailed info
Organizers
Sophie Elias-Pinsonnault
Christoph Sorg
Simon Tremblay-Pepin
Leone Castar
Julia Witte Zimmerman
MC13: Working time reduction: Rethinking work for a more balanced, just and sustainable socio- economic life
detailed info
Organizers
Wen Fan
Lonnie Golden
Juliet Schor
Julie Yen

Featured Events

Featured Speakers

Joseph Wong
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Michelle Holder
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Featured speaker sponsored by the SASE Women and Gender Forum:

Erin A. Cech
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Featured Panels

Reimagining Solidarity in Israel/Palestine: Employment Relations, Political-Economy and Boundary-Making

Assaf Bondy
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Jonathan Preminger
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Walid Habbas
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Ibrahim Shikaki
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Arees Bishara
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AI Value Chains – from Exploitation to Organizing

Virginia Doellgast
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Mark Graham
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Uma Rani Amara
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Martin Krzywdzinski
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Polanyi after Globalism: Democracy and Threats to Democracy in New Counter-Movements

Marguerite Mendell
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Sofia Donoso
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Dorothee Bohle
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Andreas Novy
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Margaret Somers
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Patients, or ‘Profit Centers’? Financialization of Health, Medicines, and Healthcare

 

Kathryn Ibata-Arens
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Rosemary Batt
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Eileen Appelbaum
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Steve Casper
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Ken Shadlen
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Social and solidarity economy: Quebecois and international perspectives

 

Marguerite Mendell
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Diane-Gabrielle Tremblay
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Practicing Sociology: Bringing Tacit Knowledge out of the Shadows

Throughout their careers, social scientists must come up with compelling research topics, revise their manuscripts for publication, and decide when and where to publish. Despite the importance of these skills, they are left in the shadows – seldom if ever addressed in the course of graduate training. For this panel, leading sociologists including several Past Presidents of SASE reflect on their work and demystify this tacit knowledge. 

Virginia Doellgast
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Bruce Carruthers
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David Stark
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Akos Rona-Tas
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The social organization of ideas: Translating research into labor policy in North America and Europe

 

Isabelle Ferreras
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Thorsten Schulten
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Featured Book Salons

Yuen Yuen Ang

China’s Gilded Age: The Paradox of Economic Boom and Vast Corruption

2022 Alice Amsden Award Winner

Yuen Yuen Ang
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Antonio Botelho
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Charles Sabel
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Roselyn Hsueh
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Basar Kus
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2024 Alice Amsden Award Winners Panel

Kimberly Kay HoangSpiderweb Capitalism: How Global Elites Exploit Frontier Markets 

Smitha RadhakrishnanMaking Women Pay: Microfinance in Urban India

Victor RoyCapitalizing a Cure: How Finance Controls the Price and Value of Medicines

Kimberly Kay Hoang
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Victor Roy
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Nina Bandelj
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Alya Guseva
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Megan Tobias Neely
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Important dates

  • Sep 16 2024 – Mini-conference theme submission deadline
  • Mid-October 2024 – Submissions for the 2025 conference open 
  • Dec 16 2024 – Hard deadline for submissions
  • 5 February 2025 – decisions communicated
  • 3 March 2025 – Preliminary program published
  • 17 March 2025 – Early bird registration deadline 
  • 9 May 2025 – Program Registration deadline – registration fees must be paid before this date in order to appear in the program (or you need to be in touch with us to indicate that payment will come later). 
  • 1-3 July 2025 – SASE Virtual Conference
  • 8 July 2025 – Early career workshop 
  • 9-12 July 2025 – Conference

2025 SASE Early Career Workshop

2025 SASE Early Career Workshop

7-8 July 2025

Submissions are now closed.

The SASE Early Career Workshop (ECW) is a one-day workshop that provides an opportunity for a longer and deeper discussion of applicants’ conference papers. It takes place the day before the start of the annual conference (8 July 2025). The 2025 Early Career Workshop will be hosted in partnership with McGill University, with senior SASE and McGill professors.

The SASE Early Career Workshop will be held on the 7-8 July 2025, at the University of McGill campus in Montréal. The workshop begins with dinner on the 7th, then runs all day on the 8th. 15-20 competitively allocated spots are available for early career researchers – travel and accommodations, as well as SASE registration and membership, are paid for participants in the Workshop. Please see below for instructions on how to apply (hard deadline: 16 December 2024).


Applicants to the Workshop must be PhD students or researchers having obtained their PhD within 3 years of the annual SASE meeting. Independent scholars are also welcome to apply. In order to apply for the Workshop, your paper abstract must be submitted and accepted to the main conference through the normal process.

Applicants must also submit the following materials in English before the deadline of 16 December 2024:

  • full paper

  • two-page CV

  • one-page case for support – a letter detailing why you wish to attend the workshop and what financial support you require from SASE (approximate cost of travel, whether you need housing during the conference, and what support you have from your home institution)

All of this must be submitted via the submissions system before the submissions deadline passes (Dec. 16, 2024)Any application without all of these elements will not be considered for inclusion in the Workshop.

While two papers may be submitted to the SASE conference, applicants may submit only one paper to be considered for the ECW. Only those papers accepted to the main conference will be considered for inclusion in the Workshop.

Conference registration and membership fees are waived for ECW participants. Full conference accommodations (7-12 July 2025) and most meals will also be provided. Travel costs will be covered based on need and available funds. Participants not requiring support for travel or accommodations should state this in their one-page letter.

Participants will receive a certificate of participation. In the case of co-authored papers, please note that only one author may participate in the Workshop for a given paper.

There will be approximately 15-20 competitively allocated spots in the Workshop. Notification of acceptance will be made in February 2025. These spots will be awarded on the basis of the quality of the paper submitted to the SASE main conference, as assessed by the ECW Committee and Faculty. Additional criteria for ranking papers receiving the same quality assessment include PhD status, academic status, and co-authorship. In particular, priority will be given to:

  1. PhD students closer to their defense

  2. Researchers who have just received their PhD

  3. Applicants without a tenured position

  4. Single-author papers

  5. Applicants without tenured co-authors

  6. Unpublished papers

Throughout the selection process, the ECW Committee and Faculty are committed to ensuring gender and geographical balance at equal paper quality levels.

Previous Workshop participants are not eligible to participate a second time.

2025 Early Career Workshop Committee members:

Timur Ergen, Chair

Chiara Benassi

Rosie Collington

Joshua Cova

Tine Hanrieder

Julian Jürgenmeyer

Hyunji Kwon

Daniel Muegge

Elena Obukhova

Paola Perez-Aleman

Megan Tobias Neely

other members TBC

Local organizing committee

2025 – Montréal

Diane-Gabrielle Tremblay, Université TÉLUQ (Chair)
Barry Eidlin, McGill
Lorenzo Frangi, UQAM 
Christian Lévesque, HEC Montreal
Marguerite Mendell, Concordia
Gregor Murray, Université de Montréal
Paola Perez-Aleman, McGill
Eric Pineault, UQAM
Maude Pugliese, INRS

 

 

Virtual conference days

 

Virtual sessions for the 2025 conference will be held the week before the on-site conference in Montréal, on July 1-3, time slots (in CET): 10-11:30, 14:00-15:30, 16:00-17:30, and 18:00-19:30.

Networks A, B, F, G, H, I, L, M, O, P, R, S, T, and U will organize 2 virtual sessions each. All mini-conferences will organize 1 virtual session each. When you make your submission, you must indicate if you plan to present virtually (note that you cannot change presentation modes once the submission deadline of Dec. 16 2024 has passed). 

Some theme tracks will also offer a limited number of hybrid sessions during the on-site conference in Montreal (9-12 July 2025). This is the case for all mini-conferences, as well as networks B, D, F, G, K, L, P, Q, R, S, and U. Note that the hybrid sessions will not be held at the Palais des Congrès, but at a university approximately 10 minutes away by foot – more details to follow.

Virtual sessions will be open to the public free of charge; participants presenting virtually will be asked to pay membership dues (but not conference registration) in order to be included on the program.

Practical information

CONFERENCE DATES

Virtual: 1-3 July 2025

On-site: 9-12 July 2025

CONFERENCE LOCATION

Palais des Congrès, Montréal, Québec
1001 Pl. Jean-Paul-Riopelle, Montréal, QC H2Z 1H5, Canada
 
REGISTRATION
 
The final registration deadline is May 9th, 2025. The early bird (10% discount) deadline is March 17th, 2025. 
Please note that SASE Membership is required to participate in the annual conference.
Details on fees and access to the payment portal are here: Registration
 
ACCOMODATIONS
 
Please see the “Hotels” tab above.  
 
CHILDREN
 
Children are welcome at the conference venue, and are the responsibility of their caretakers at all times. Caretakers can also access the venue, and if needed, a badge can be printed for them (contact sasestaff@sase.org for this). There will be a privacy room available, for breastfeeding or pumping (a fridge is in the room). Caregivers can also take children to this room (although no specific amenities for children will be there). 
 
RESTAURANTS
 
Click through for a map of restaurant options near the Palais des Congrès:
 
INFORMATION ABOUT MONTREAL
 

Hotels

SASE has arranged group rates at the hotels below. Please note that rates do not include taxes, which are currently: Municipal Occupancy Tax (3.5% per room/per night), Federal sales tax (5%), and Provincial
sales tax (9.975%).

Hôtel le Dauphin: 0.5km from conference venue. Single or double rooms available at a rate of $233 CAD + taxes for up to 2 guests. Each room has either a king or a queen bed, and includes an iMac workstation. Breakfast is included, as is Wifi. You can make a reservation by phone (+1 514.788.3888 / +1.888.784.3888) or by email (mtl@hoteldauphin.ca), and mention the group name: SASE2025. Last day to book: 8 May 2025. 

Delta Hotel: Best option if you are traveling with family, 1.3km from the conference venue. Rooms are large and rate includes 2 double beds, option to add an additional crib. $255 CAD + taxes per night, WIFI included, up to 4 guests per room, does not include breakfast. To book, go here: Book your group rate for SASE. Last day to book: 17 June 2025.

Hampton Inn by Hilton, Montreal Downtown: 0.6km from the conference venue. Two queen room or room with 1 king-sized bed, $295 CAD + taxes, additional fee of $20 + taxes/night for additional third or fourth person (no additional charge for children up to age 18). Breakfast and WIFI included. To book the group rate, go here. Last day to book: 1 May 2025.

Hôtel St. Laurent: 1km from the conference venue. These rooms can easily be shared, and this is a great budget option. All rooms have a fully-equipped kitchen. The SASE rate is $209 CAD + taxes for single or double occupancy ($219 for triple, $229 for quadruple occupancy). WIFI is included, breakfast is not included. To book the group rate, call +1 514-667-5002 and state that you want to make a
reservation for the SASE conference. Last day to book: June 9, 2025.

Student Housing

The student rates listed below require a valid student ID. Standard rates also available for non-students. Rates are subject to change, and prices listed below are in CAD.

  • The Royal Victoria College – 3425 University Street
    • 1.7km from conference venue 
    • Single room:$79+taxes (student)/$89+taxes (standard)
    • Double room: $109+taxes (student)/$119+taxes (standard)
    • Single room with private washroom: $159+taxes (student)/$169+taxes (standard) 
    • Reservations: https://www.mcgill.ca/accommodations/summer/rvc

The RVC offers traditional residence accommodations. Each room is equipped with a single bed, small fridge, access to shared bathrooms (multiple private toilets and shower stalls) and a common kitchen. All rooms are supplied with fresh linen, towels and soap. A/C not available, fans can be rented for a fee. In the study room on the main floor, we provide computers, as well in-room free WI-FI available. Limited on-site parking is $20/day.

  • Carrefour Sherbrooke – 475 Sherbrooke Street West

Carrefour Sherbrooke offers hotel type accommodations. Each room is equipped with a private washroom, A/C, cable television, standard amenities, free local calls and WI-FI; plus daily housekeeping and a Fitness Center available free of charge. Off-site parking is $25/day.

  • La Citadelle – 410 Sherbrooke West Street

La Citadelle is the newest hotel type accommodation. Each room is equipped with a private washroom, A/C, cable television, free local calls and WI-FI; plus daily housekeeping and both Fitness and Business Center available free of charge. Off-site parking is $25/day.