9-11 July 2022
University of Amsterdam – Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2022 – Amsterdam

Fractious Connections: Anarchy, Activism, Coordination, and Control

Annual meeting 9-11 July 2022 at the University of Amsterdam (this meeting is physical, *not* virtual)

Registration deadline: 1 June 2022

(Network R meeting 18-20 July – virtual)

Conference Theme Overview

Being “well connected” has traditionally been associated with having influential friends or relatives in “high places”. Privileged levels of social and economic capital differentiate them from the “poorly connected” in diverse, economically poor, but potentially socially rich communities. In the digital age, the implicitly positive association of being “well connected” implies being “plugged in”, “on the scene”, informed and involved with “what’s happening”.

However, a growing critique of being “over connected” or “disconnected” from mainstream economic and political life is forcefully apparent in the recent Ken Loach films: I, Daniel Blake and Sorry We Missed You. We are increasingly becoming aware of public, policy and academic debates about the “right to disconnect” or movements to increase “connectivity” for dislocated communities. But a closer examination of the concept of “connectedness” is needed to understand how strong and weak connections unfold at different levels and across different societies for disparate communities.

In “The Strength of Weak Ties” Granovetter wrote, “the personal experience of individuals is closely bound up with larger-scale aspects of social structure, well beyond the purview or control of particular individuals. Linkage of micro and macro levels is thus no luxury but of central importance to the development of sociological theory. Such linkages generate paradoxes: weak ties, often denounced as generative of alienation are here seen as indispensable to individuals’ opportunities and to their integration into communities; strong ties, breeding local cohesion, lead to overall fragmentation. Paradoxes are a welcome antidote to theories which explain everything all too neatly.” (1973:1377-8).

The paradoxical experience of connectedness has been poignantly evident on political stages around the world. The heated, and deadly, debates surrounding Brexit, Black Lives Matters and the storming of the US Capitol in 2021 illustrate the very fractious climate where these connections are being vociferously, and sometimes violently, contested.

The overarching theme of the SASE 2022 conference will be to explore the paradox of Fractious Connections. This will be done through the lens of four key concepts that have received varying degrees of attention in comparative political economy: Anarchism, Activism, Coordination, and Control.

The concept of Coordination in comparative political economy has received considerable attention in relation to debates around the Varieties of Capitalism. But has digital disruption undermined this coordination?

The concept of Control has been used to understand the labor process; but how is this evolving in relation to digital surveillance at work and in politics?

The concepts of Anarchy and Activism have, relatively speaking, received much less attention within the SASE community.

Activism is frequently discussed within an Industrial Relations framework. While traditional male, manufacturing union membership has declined; a plethora of new forms of organizing for an emergent “gig” workforce has included the voices of younger, female, and ethnically diverse communities. We need to know more about these developments evolving outside established organizations.

Anarchy is not often discussed in comparative political economy, although there is a vibrant discourse in international relations (Hedley Bull 1977), and in the work of Chomsky (1994). Understanding how disruptive digital practices have emerged anarchically exposes new structures and organization of power, opportunity, and oppression.

Re-examining these concepts and developments relates back to the work of Granovetter in connecting the individual experiences with global societal structures to understand the paradoxical way fractious connections are evolving.

While these concepts will inform the overall theme of the 34th SASE annual conference, a wide range of contributions are encouraged to participate in one of the 18 vibrant networks, or submit proposals to host a mini-conference.

SASE provides a platform for creative empirical and theoretical research on key social problems. We are committed to supporting a diverse international membership encouraging lively intellectual and interdisciplinary debates. So whether you are new to SASE, or a seasoned aficionado, we look forward to seeing you in Amsterdam!

President: Jacqueline O’Reilly

Call for Papers PDF Download

 

Image by Jean-Philippe Berger, “Pop Art Fiction, Revolution !” 2018

Mini-conferences consist of 3 to 5 panels, which will be featured as a separate stream in the program. Submissions are open to all scholars on the basis of an extended abstract. If your abstract is accepted, the following mini-conferences require accepted participants to submit full papers by 15 June 2022: TH01 (max 9,000 words), TH02, TH03, TH06, TH10, TH11, TH12, TH13, and TH14. THO8 encourages but does not require a full paper submission (6,000 words). If a paper proposal cannot be accommodated within a mini-conference, organizers will forward it to the most appropriate research network as a regular submission.

Please note that TH07 is no longer included in the list of mini-conferences because it has joined with TH14.

TH01 - Connecting the Dots between Global Capitalism and National Capitalisms
detailed info
Organizers
Fulya Apaydin
Arie Krampf
Andreas Nölke
Merve Sancak
TH02 - Contested Spaces and Disrupted Markets: Controversies in the Struggle for Innovation and Control of Health and Medicines
detailed info
Organizers
Larry Au
Kathryn Ibata-Arens
Wan-Zi Lu
Etienne Nouguez
TH03 - Decolonizing Development
detailed info
Organizers
Zophia Edwards
Julian Go
Alexandre White
TH04 - Economic Racism, Ethnic Chauvinism, Racial Capitalism: Foregrounding Race, Ethnicity and Immigration in a Fractious Economy
detailed info
Organizers
Nina Bandelj
Heba Gowayed
Daniel Hirschman
Jordanna Matlon
John N. Robinson III
TH05 - Examining the Theory and Practice of (Systemic) Transformation: Dimensions, Dynamics, and Challenges
detailed info
Organizers
Manuel Nicklich
Sabine Pfeiffer
Stefan Sauer
Jasmin Schreyer
TH06 - Financial Infrastructures: From Colonial Trajectories to Global Digital Transformations
detailed info
Organizers
Barbara Brandl
Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn
Carola Westermeier
TH08 - Gender and Wealth Accumulation
detailed info
Organizers
Céline Bessière
Maude Pugliese
TH09 - Labor and Collective Action in Transformation
detailed info
Organizers
Donatella Della Porta
Irene Dingeldey
Heiner Heiland
Jeremias Herberg
Franziska Laudenbach
Martin Seeliger
TH10 - Possible Worlds: Next Emergencies, Global Capabilities, and Potential Inequalities
detailed info
Organizers
Gary Herrigel Gary Herrigel
Adriana Mica
Ann Mische
TH11 - Racial Capitalism and the Global Carceral Empire of Control
detailed info
Organizers
Sabrina Axster
Ida Danewid
TH12 - Spatial Competition as a Mean for Coordination or Control? Discourses, Institutions, and Everyday Practices
detailed info
Organizers
Carina Altreiter
Claudius Gräbner-Radkowitsch
Stephan Puehringer
Ana Rogojanu
Georg Wolfmayr
TH13 - The Day After: Coping with the Long-term Consequences of Deindustrialization
detailed info
Organizers
Franco Bonomi Bezzo
Anne-Marie Jeannet
Gábor Scheiring
TH14 - The Political Economy of Climate Change
detailed info
Organizers
Daniel Aldana Cohen
Neil Fligstein
Simone Pulver
Caleb Scoville
Stéphanie Barral
Ritwick Ghosh
Ian Gray
TH15 - The Political Economy of Financial Subordination
detailed info
Organizers
Bruno Bonizzi
Annina Kaltenbrunner
Kai Koddenbrock
Ingrid Harvold Kvangraven
Jeff Powell
TH16 - Vegan Activism and Animal Production: Towards Abolition or Transformation?
detailed info
Organizers
Gary Lawrence Francione
Harald Grethe
Stefan Mann
Mona Seymour
Achim Spiller

Featured Events

Featured events will be livestreamed during the conference.

Tools of Climate Mobilization and Resistance

Alice Mah
Read more
Joana Setzer
Read more

National citizenship and the Institutionalization of Postcolonial Racisms

Nandita Sharma
Read more

Platform Labor Unrest in a Global Context

Mark Stuart
Read more
Vera Trappmann
Read more

Activist Room: Making Space for Black Women Writers

Sharon Dodua Otoo
Read more
Chelsea Kwakye
Read more
Ore Ogunbiyi
Read more

Presidential Address: Fractious Connections in a Disruptive Age

Jacqueline O’Reilly
Read more

Brexit

Hussein Kassim
Read more
Catherine Barnard
Read more
Alan Finlayson
Read more
Brigid Laffan
Read more

A Tribute to David Marsden

Chair: Karen Shire

Karen Shire
Read more

The Life and Work of Alice Amsden

Amy C. Offner
Read more
Jason Jackson
Read more
Henry Yeung
Read more
Isabella Weber
Read more

Book Reading – “Ada’s Realm”

Sharon Dodua Otoo
Read more
Jacqueline O’Reilly
Read more

SASE Salons - Pre-Conference Events

SASE Salons are open live exclusively to paid members of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE). To join, visit https://sase.org/join-sase/.

The webinar series presents cutting-edge research from leading thinkers in anticipation of the 2022 annual SASE conference at the University of Amsterdam, “Fractious Connections: Anarchy, Activism, Coordination, and Control” – 9-11 July 2022.

Our aim is to spark debate, challenge assumptions, and become an essential resource for anyone interested in socio-economics and political economy.


Fragmented work boundaries and digital (dis)connections

Speaker: Tony Dundon [chair], Caroline Murphy, Michelle O’Sullivan, and Aida Ponce Del Castillo
28 April at 1pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE



Anarchism in the Business School

Speaker: Martin Parker 
12 May at 1pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE



Fractious Feminisms and Feminist Solidarities – Women and Gender Forum event

Speakers: Elaine Coburn [chair], Marjorie Griffin Cohen, Jayati  Ghosh, Martha Gimenez, Rauna Kuokkanen, Julie Nelson, and Busi Sibeko
17 May at 3pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE



Society and Economy

Speakers: Mark Granovetter, Elaine Coburn, Michel Grossetti
24 May at 5pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE



The War in Ukraine

Speakers: Yuliya Bidenko, Alexander Rodnyansky, and Mariia Shuvelova
Moderator: Alya Guseva
2 June at 3pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE




The Rise of the Right in the US

Speaker: Arlie Hochschild
Chair: Glenn Morgan
9 June at 5pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE



How Digital Media Facilitated and Curtailed the Pro-Democracy Movement in Hong Kong

Speakers: Joseph Chan and Francis Lee
14 June at 9am UTC (find your timezone here)
TO BE RESCHEDULED




Histories of Racial Capitalism

Speakers: Destin Jenkins and Justin Leroy
23 June at 5pm UTC (find your timezone here)
REGISTER HERE
Please note that this event is open live to non-SASE members.


 

Author Meets Critics

A great selection of ‘Author meets Critics’ sessions have been organized for SASE 2022, see the list of books and discussants below.

FEATURED AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS SESSION

Business and Populism: The Odd Couple – Magnus Feldmann and Glenn Morgan (eds.)
Forthcoming

Moderator:  Gerhard Schnyder
Discussants: Valentina Ausserladscheider / Jennifer Bair / Christopher Hartwell

 

 

NETWORK AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS SESSIONS

Network B: Globalization and Socio-Economic Development &
Network O: Global Value Chains

Interconnected Worlds: Global Electronics and Production Networks in East Asia – Henry Wai-Chung Yeung

Stanford University Press, 2022

Discussants: Douglas Fuller / Gary Gereffi/ Gale Raj-Reichert

 

Network C: Gender, Work and Family

Research Handbook on Work-Life Balance. Emerging Issues and Methodological Changes – Sonia Bertolini and Barbara Poggio (eds.)

Edward Elgar, 2022

Moderator: Bernard Fusulier

Discussant: Diane-Gabrielle Tremblay

 

Network E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States

Recoding Power: Tactics for Mobilizing Tech Workers – Sidney Rothstein

Oxford University Press, 2022

Moderator: Kurt Vandaele

Discussants: Virginia Doellgast / Anke Hassel / Jane Holgate / J. Nicholas Ziegler

 

Network E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States

Diminishing Returns: The New Politics of Growth and Stagnation – Lucio Baccaro, Mark Blyth, and Jonas Pontusson (eds.)

Oxford University Press, 2022

Discussants: Alexandre Afonso / Manuela Moschella / Waltraud Schelkle

 

Network E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States

Book Discussion 

Mediterranean Capitalism Revisited: One Model Different TrajectoriesLuigi Burroni, Emmanuele Pavolini, and Marino Regini (eds.)

Cornell University Press, 2022

 

Network E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States

Author-Meets-Author Panel: Two Books about Marketization in Europe

Marketization: How Capitalist Exchange Disciplines Workers and Subverts Democracy – Ian Greer and Charles Umney
Bloomsbury Academic, 2022

The State As a ‘Model Buyer’? Public Procurement between Marketization and De-Marketization – Karen Jaehrling
Forthcoming

 

Network F: KITE: Knowledge, Innovation, Technology and Entrepreneurship

Artificial Communication: How Algorithms Produce Social Intelligence – Elena Esposito

MIT Press, 2022

Discussants: Noortje MarresAkos Rona-Tas

 

Network G: Labor Markets, Education, and Human Resources

Social Exclusion of Youth in Europe: The Multifaceted Consequences of Labour Market Insecurity – Sonia Bertolini, Vassiliki Deliyanni-Kouimtzi, Dirk Hofäcker, Michael Gebel, and Marge Unt (eds.)

Policy Press, forthcoming 2023

Moderator: Karen Shire

 

Network H: Markets, Firms and Institutions

Labor in the Age of Finance: Pensions, Politics, and Corporations from Deindustrialization to Dodd-Frank – Sanford M. Jacoby

Princeton University Press, 2021

Discussants: Virginia Doellgast / Gregory Jackson / Natascha van der Zwan

 

Network H: Markets, Firms and Institutions

Global Production, National Institutions, and Skill Formation: The Political Economy of Training and Employment in Auto Parts Suppliers from Mexico and Turkey – Merve Sancak

Oxford University Press, 2022

Moderator: Gerhard Schnyder

Discussants: Fulya Apaydin / Aldo Madariaga / Geoffrey Wood / Jingqi Zhu

 

Network I: Alternatives to Capitalism

Beyond Money: A Postcapitalist Strategy – Anitra Nelson

Pluto Press, 2022

Discussants: Torsten Geelan / Lara Monticelli

 

Network J: Digital Economy

The Diffusion and Social Implications of MOOCs: A Comparative Study of the USA and Europe – Valentina Goglio

Routledge, 2022

Discussants: Davide Luca Arcidiacono / Laura Sartori

 

Network J: Digital Economy

The Data Imperative: How Digitalization is Reshaping Management, Organizing, and Work – Henri Schildt

Oxford University Press, 2020

Moderator: Jean-Samuel Beuscart

Discussants: Jean-Samuel Beuscart / Maximilian Heimstädt / Christina Strobel

 

Network K: Institutional Experimentation in the Regulation of Work and Employment

Democratize Work: The Case for Reorganizing the Economy – Isabelle Ferreras, Julie Battilana, and Dominique Méda

University of Chicago Press, 2022

Moderator: Gregor Murray

Discussants: Virginia Doellgast / Dalia Gesualdi-Fecteau / Anke Hassel / Lukas Lehner / David Peetz

 

Network K: Institutional Experimentation in the Regulation of Work and Employment

Revaluing Work(ers): Toward a Democratic and Sustainable Future – Tobias Schulze-Cleven and Todd E. Vachon (eds.)

Cornell University Press, 2021

Moderator: Chiara Benassi

Discussants: Marco Hauptmeier / Karen Shire / Peter Turnbull

 

Network N: Finance and Society

Speculative Communities: Living with Uncertainty in a Financialized World – Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou

Chicago University Press, 2022

Moderator: Daniel Maman

Discussants: Linsey McGoey / Juan Pablo Pardo-Guerra / Leon Wansleben

 

Network P: Accounting, Economics, and Law

Political Economy of Financialization in the United States: A Historical-Institutional Balance-Sheet Approach – Olivier Butzbach and Kurt Mettenheim

Routledge, 2021

Discussants: Luca Fantacci / Mindy Peden / Annina Kaltenbrunner

 

Network Q: Asian Capitalisms

How China Escaped Shock Therapy: the Market Reform Debate – Isabella M. Weber

Routledge, 2021

Moderator: Tobias ten Brink

Discussants: Cédric Durand / Daniela Gabor / Imogen Liu / Gábor Scheiring

 

Mini-Conference TH04: Economic Racism, Ethnic Chauvinism, Racial Capitalism: Foregrounding Race, Ethnicity and Immigration in a Fractious Economy

Refuge: How the State Shapes Human Potential – Heba Gowayed

Princeton University Press, 2022

Discussants: Swethaa BallakrishnenFrederick Wherry

 

Mini-Conference TH04: Economic Racism, Ethnic Chauvinism, Racial Capitalism: Foregrounding Race, Ethnicity and Immigration in a Fractious Economy

A Man among Other Men: The Crisis of Black Masculinity in Racial Capitalism – Jordanna Matlon

Cornell University Press, 2022

Discussants: Ida Danewid / Isabel Pike / Alexandre White

 

Mini-Conference TH09: Labor and Collective Action in Transformation

Technopolitik von unten – Simon Schaupp

Matthes & Seitz Berlin, 2021

Moderator: Heiner Heiland

Discussants: Timur Ergen / Sandra Sieron / Philipp Staab

 

Mini-Conference TH14 – The Political Economy of Climate Change

Underwater: Loss, Flood Insurance, and the Moral Economy of Climate Change in the United States – Rebecca Elliott

Columbia University Press, 2021

Moderator: Amy Knight

Discussants: Stéphanie Barral/ Max BesbrisCaleb Scoville

 

 

 

Early Career Workshop

SASE will host its seventh Early Career Workshop at its 2022 Conference in partnership with the Digital Futures at Work Research Centre (Digit).  

View the 2022 SASE/Digit Early Career Workshop page for more information

Supported by
        

Conference Fees

Category

Rate

Non-student registration, no catering¹

$285*

Non-student registration, full conference²

$350*

Non-student early bird (before 31 March), no catering¹

$235*

Non-student early bird (before 31 March), full conference²

$300*

 

 

Emeritus registration, no catering¹

$225*

Emeritus registration, full conference²

 $265*

Emeritus early bird (before 31 March), no catering¹

$180*

Emeritus early bird (before 31 March), full conference²

$220*

 

 

Student registration, no catering¹

$165*

Student registration, full conference²

$205*

Student early bird (before 31 March), no catering¹

$140*

Student early bird (before 31 March), full conference²

$180*

 

 

Non-OECD Non-Student Flat Fee, no catering¹

$160 (includes membership and registration)

Non-OECD Non-Student Flat Fee, full conference²

$200 (includes membership and registration)

 

 

Non-OECD Emeritus Flat Fee, no catering¹

$120 (includes membership and registration)

Non-OECD Emeritus Flat Fee, full conference²

$160 (includes membership and registration)

 

 

Non-OECD Student Flat Fee, no catering¹

$80 (includes membership and registration)

Non-OECD Student Flat Fee, full conference²

$120 (includes membership and registration)

 

 

Community-Subsidized Hardship Fee, no catering¹

$50 (membership not required)

Community-Subsidized Hardship Fee, full conference²

$90 (membership not required)



Membership:  

OECD non-student membership

$130

OECD Emeritus membership

$100

OECD student membership

$65

   
Catering:  
Lunch Saturday $8
Lunch Sunday free
Lunch Monday $8
Welcome reception (Saturday evening) free
Conference dinner (Sunday evening) $50 (reduced rate for non-OECD, emeritus, and students: $25)

 

* Note that these registration categories require payment of membership fees in addition. 

¹ The welcome reception on Saturday and lunch on Sunday are free and open to all. 

² Full conference rate includes the welcome reception on Saturday, lunches on all three days of the conference, and the conference dinner on Sunday. 

Practical Information

The online program is available to be consulted, here

OVERVIEW SCHEDULE

 

CONFERENCE LOCATION
University of Amsterdam
Roeterseilandcampus Building A/B/C
Nieuwe Achtergracht 166
1018WV Amsterdam
AND
Hotel Casa Amsterdam
Eerste Ringdijkstraat 4
1097 BC Amsterdam

Hotel CASA is close by the Roeterseiland campus. It’s a 2 km (25 mins) walk, and you can almost not go wrong: walk from the campus to Weesperplein and take a left over the bridge. From there, just go straight ahead on the Wibautstraat until you go underneath a viaduct. After the viaduct, take a left on the Ringdijk, when you’re over the water. You can already see CASA on your right hand.
DIRECTIONS via Google Maps

CONFERENCE DINNER
Start time: 7:30pm
Location: Tolhuistuin
Tolhuisweg 3
1031 CL Amsterdam
Directions: Go to Central Station, in the back there are ferries (follow signs in the station). Take a ferry to “Buiksloterweg” (they go 24hrs/day every 6 minutes and are free of charge). It’s then a 2 minute walk. SASE staff will be at the ferry to direct you. 
DIRECTIONS from UvA via Google Maps
DIRECTIONS from Hotel CASA via Google Maps

CONFERENCE HOURS (excluding special events)
July 9: 8:30am – 6:15pm
July 10: 8:30am – 6:15pm
July 11: 8:30am – 4:15pm

PUBLIC TRANSPORT
Both the Roeterseiland campus and CASA are located to the metro lines 51, 53 and 54.
From Roeterseiland campus, walk to metro station Weesperplein (5 mins) and take any metro that is not going to Central Station.
Get out at Amstel Station (2nd stop) and from there it’s another 5 minutes walk.
Want to go from CASA to Roeterseiland campus? Take any metro from Amstel Station to Central Station, get out at Weesperplein (2nd stop), and walk 5 minutes to the campus.
DIRECTIONS via Google Maps

COVID-RELATED TRAVEL REGULATIONS (inbound to the Netherlands, updated regularly)

UvA COVID REGULATIONS (updated regularly)

HOTELS NEARBY
Hotel Casa
VolksHotel
Hotel Arena
Hyatt Regency
Zoku

CHILDCARE
Holiday Sitters
Napp
Sitly
24Nannies
Charly Cares
CompaNannies
High End Nanny Service

REGISTRATION
Registration will be in the hallway of Building A on the Roeterseiland campus of the UvA (a map to find us is here – follow the green arrow on the meeting areas map – follow the signs and you’ll find us). Address: Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, Amsterdam.

Registration will open on the day before the conference, Friday July 8, from 2-7pm.

On Saturday July 9th we will be there starting at 7:30am (with coffee!), and then for the duration of the conference.

At registration, you will receive a reusable water bottle – there are water bottle filling stations all over the UvA campus.

Please note: there will be an information desk at Hotel CASA, but you will not be able to pick up your badge there. For those who are starting on Saturday morning at Hotel CASA (this applies to Networks B, D, F, H, N; Mini-conferences TH01, TH02, TH10, TH11), we’d recommend you come see us on Friday.

If you don’t manage to pick up your badge before your first session, don’t worry! Come see us when you can. 

PRESENTATIONS
Generally speaking, if you have 4 presenters in your session, aim for a presentation of 12-15 minutes to leave time for discussion; with 5 presenters, aim for 8-10 minutes. For more specific instructions, best is to contact the organizers of your network/mini-conference, and/or the moderator of your session.

 

TECH & A/V

  • If you have a mac, bring an adapter.
  • At the UvA, there will be desktop computers available in every room. You can therefore use your own laptop to connect to the projector (VGA and HDMI cables), or bring your presentation on a USB and use the desktop.
  • At Hotel Casa, desktop computers are not available. You’ll need a laptop or a smartphone to connect with the projector (VGA and HDMI cables).

WiFi

  • At the UvA, Eduroam is available, as is the wireless network UvA Open. Connect and go to your browser, a page will open where you will have to agree with the UvA Terms. Then you’ll be connected.
  • At Hotel Casa, the WiFi is free. You can connect to Casa Hotel WiFi and no password is needed.

LUNCHES
If you purchased lunch for Saturday and Monday, please note that this will be served near the registration table in the atrium at the UvA. Your name badge will have an ‘L’ on it if you purchased lunch (you cannot purchase lunch from the caterer on site – but there are plenty of restaurants around the campus). Unclaimed lunches will be left out at the afternoon break and anyone can have them at that point!

Lunch on Sunday is free and open to all conference participants. If your sessions are at the Hotel CASA on Sunday morning, please also have lunch at the Hotel CASA. If your sessions are at the UvA Sunday morning, please stay there for your lunch – served in the atrium near registration.

There will be 3 spaces set aside for organized lunches on Sunday: Network G’s lunches will be available at their lunch location, and TH4 and TH11 will have a joint lunch – those lunches will be available at their lunch location, and the Women and Gender Forum will pick up their lunches at their lunch location – see the program for these locations.

Lunches are brown bag – with 2 sandwiches and a piece of fruit, everything vegan. All packaging is biodegradable – trash should go unsorted into the bins provided.

WELCOME RECEPTION
The welcome reception is on Saturday 9 July from 18:15 to 19:15, and will be in both conference locations – we would ask that if your sessions are in the Hotel CASA, you stay there for the welcome reception; if sessions are at the UvA, please attend the welcome reception there. 

SOCIAL MEDIA
Feel free to tag #SASE2022 if you want to tweet about the conference! 

COVID
Amsterdam currently has no Covid restrictions in place. You are encouraged to socialize outdoors (during breaks and the welcome reception), and you may of course wear a mask during sessions. Your choice will be respected. Don’t assume that people will want to shake hands – default will be the elbow/fist bump.

HELP
For technical help in the rooms at the UvA, a number will be available and posted – call that number and someone will come help you. You can always come to registration if you need something, or to the information desk at the Hotel CASA. And if you want to send us an email, you can write to help@sase.org.

LUGGAGE STORAGE
We will not have luggage storage available on campus, nor at the conference dinner location (they converted the coatroom into a bar for us!). All hotels provide luggage storage services, including Hotel CASA, and you will have time before the conference dinner to go back to your hotel.

 

CONFERENCE DINNER
The conference dinner location is an outdoor space, and we will have a bouncy castle there – it’s intended for kids (they are very welcome at the dinner!), but anyone who needs some jump time after a long day of conferencing is welcome to have a go. 😉

If you purchased a ticket to the dinner, you will have a ‘D’ on your badge. We are at capacity at the venue, and unfortunately cannot sell further tickets for the dinner.

There will be SASE volunteers to help guide you to the dinner location, the address and instructions to get there can be found here. The dinner menu is primarily vegan/vegetarian, with limited meat options.

SCHIPHOL AIRPORT
Things have been very busy at Schiphol recently (staff shortages).
There is special guidance from the airport, including that people should be there early, but not too early. See here: https://www.schiphol.nl/en/messages/flying-soon-come-to-the-airport-max-4-hours-before-your
That also includes indications about when things might be particularly busy (including our last conference day).

Online Program

The online program is available to be consulted, here.

While you are on this page, please take note of the important information below:

Hybrid sessions

Please note: The link to the Zoom meeting will not become available on the registration page until 30 minutes prior to the session start time. Please do not share the Zoom links publicly.

Saturday, July 9

10:30am-12:00pm CET: The Political Economy of Debt and Financial Dependencies
TH15: The Political Economy of Financial Subordination
Register here

2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Research Handbook on Work-Life Balance. Emerging Issues and Methodological Changes” edited by Sonia Bertolini and Barbara Poggio (Edward Elgar, 2022)
C: Gender, Work, and Family
Register here

4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Markets in the Grey Zone
J: Digital Economy
Register here

4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Diminishing Returns: The New Politics of Growth and Stagflation” edited by Lucio Baccaro, Mark Blyth and Jonas Pontusson (OUP, 2022)
Zoom & University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States
Register here

7:15pm-8:45pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “A Man among Other Men: The Crisis of Black Masculinity in Racial Capitalism” by Jordanna Matlon (Cornell University Press, 2022)
TH04: Economic Racism, Ethnic Chauvinism, Racial Capitalism: Foregrounding Race, Ethnicity and Immigration in a Fractious Economy
Register here


Sunday, July 10

8:30am-10:00am CET: Author Meets Critics: “Recoding Power: Tactics for Mobilizing Tech Workers” By Sidney Rothstein (OUP 2022)
E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States
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10:30am-12:00pm CET: Failure & Crises: New Models
TH10: Possible Worlds: Next Emergencies, Global Capabilities, and Potential InequalitiesTH10: Possible Worlds: Next Emergencies, Global Capabilities, and Potential Inequalities
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: The Experience of Platform Work
J: Digital Economy
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6:15pm-7:45pm CET: Climate Change and the Future of Capitalism
TH14: The Political Economy of Climate Change
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Monday, July 11

8:30am-10:00am CET: Digitizing Financial Infrastructures in and across National Spaces
TH06: Financial Infrastructures: From Colonial Trajectories to Global Digital Transformations
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2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Digital Currency: Sovereign Monopoly or Private Competition
P: Accounting, Economics, and Law
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*Onsite location for all hybrid sessions (except E-10) will be held at the University of Amsterdam – B Building – B1.03 Hybrid Learning Theatre

Livestream Events

Saturday, July 9

8:30am-10:00am CET: Author Meets Critics: “Social Exclusion of Youth in Europe: The Multifaceted Consequences of Labour Market Insecurity” (Bristol Univ Press, 2023)
G: Labor Markets, Education, and Human Resources
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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8:30am-10:00am CET: An Author-Meets-Author Panel: Two Books about Marketization in Europe
E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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10:30am-12:00pm CET: Discussion on the Book: “Mediterranean Capitalism Revisited. One Model Different Trajectories” (Cornell University Press, 2021)
E: Political Economy of Industrial Relations and Welfare States
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: Platform Labor Unrest in a Global Context
Featured Speakers: Mark Stuart (University of Leeds) and Vera Trappmann (University of Leeds)
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A0.01
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: The Life and Work of Alice Amsden
Featured Panel
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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2:45pm-3:45pm CET: Fractious Connections in a Disruptive Age
Presidential Address
: Jacqueline O’Reilly (University of Sussex), followed by Awards Ceremony
Special Event
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A0.01
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3:45pm-4:15pm CET: Award Ceremony
SASE will honor participants in the Early Career Workshop, as well as the winners of the SER best paper award, the Alice Amsden book award, and the David Marsden prize. In addition, we will induct new honorary members, and recognize the tremendous contribution of the retiring chief editor of Socio-Economic Review, Gregory Jackson.
Special Event
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A0.01
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author-Meets-Critics: “How China Escaped Shock Therapy: the Market Reform Debate” by Isabella M. Weber (Routledge, 2021)
Q: Asian Capitalisms
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Speculative Communities: Living with Uncertainty in a Financialized World” by Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou (Chicago University Press, 2022)
N: Finance and Society
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.11
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Sunday, July 10

10:30am-12:00pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “In Search of the Global Labor Market” Edited By Ursula Mense-Petermann, Thomas Welskopp, and Anna Zaharieva (Brill, 2022)
G: Labor Markets, Education, and Human Resources
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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10:30am-12:00pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Global Production, National Institutions, and Skill Formation the Political Economy of Training and Employment in Auto Parts Suppliers from Mexico and Turkey” by Merve Sancak (OUP, 2022)
H: Markets, Firms and Institutions
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.11
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: National citizenship and the Institutionalization of Postcolonial Racisms
Featured Speaker: Nandita Sharma (University of Hawaii at Mānoa)
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A0.01
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: Brexit
Featured Panel
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: Activist Room: Making Space for Black Women Writers
Featured Panel
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Interconnected Worlds: Global Electronics and Production Networks in East Asia” by Henry Yeung (Stanford University Press, 2022)
B: Globalization and Socio-Economic Development
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Business and Populism: the Odd Couple” Ed. Magnus Feldmann and Glenn Morgan (Oxford University Press, 2022)
H: Markets, Firms and Institutions
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Revaluing Work(ers): Toward a Democratic and Sustainable Future” by Tobias Schulze-Cleven and Todd E. Vachon (Cornell Press, 2021)
K: Institutional Experimentation in the Regulation of Work and Employment
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.11
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “The Diffusion and Social Implications of MOOCs: A Comparative Study of the USA and Europe” by Valentina Goglio (Routledge, 2022)
J: Digital Economy
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A1.03
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Beyond Money: A Postcapitalist Strategy” by Dr. Anitra Nelsen (Pluto, 2022)
I: Alternatives to Capitalism
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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4:45pm-6:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Democratize Work: The Case for Reorganizing the Economy” by Isabelle Ferreras, Julie Battilana, and Dominique Méda (Univ of Chicago Press, 2022)
K: Institutional Experimentation in the Regulation of Work and Employment
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.11
Tune in here


Monday, July 11

8:30am-10:00am CET: Author Meets Critics: “Underwater: Loss, Flood Insurance, and the Moral Economy of Climate Change in the United States” by Rebecca Elliott (Columbia Univ Press, 2021)
TH14: The Political Economy of Climate Change
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
Tune in here

8:30am-10:00am CET: Author Meets Critics: “Political Economy of Financialization in the United States: A historical-institutional balance-sheet approach” by Kurt Mettenheim (Routledge, 2022)
P: Accounting, Economics, and Law
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.11
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10:30am-12:00pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Technopolitik von unten” by Simon Schaupp (Matthes & Seitz Berlin, 2021)
TH09: Labor and Collective Action in Transformation
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
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10:30am-12:00pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “The Data Imperative: How Digitalization is Reshaping Management, Organizing, and Work” by Henri Schildt (Oxford University Press, 2020)
J: Digital Economy
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: Tools of Climate Mobilization and Resistance
Featured Speakers: Alice Mah (University of Warwick) and Joana Setzer (Grantham Research Institute, London School of Socio-Economics)
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A0.01
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1:15pm-2:15pm CET: The Life and Work of David Marsden
Featured Panel
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
Tune in here

2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Labor in the Age of Finance – Pensions, Politics, and Corporations from Deindustrialization to Dodd-Frank” by Sandy Jacoby (Princeton University Press, 2021)
H: Markets, Firms and Institutions
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.07
Tune in here

2:45pm-4:15pm CET: Author Meets Critics: “Artificial Communication. How Algorithms Produce Social Intelligence” by Elena Esposito (MIT Press, 2022)
F: KITE: Knowledge, Innovation, Technology and Entrepreneurship
University of Amsterdam – A Building – A2.09
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Network R - Virtual Meeting - July 18-20

Islamic Moral Economy and Finance – Network R – Virtual meeting, 18-20 July 2022

Full Network R pdf program here.

Please do not share the Zoom links publicly.

Monday, July 18

9:00am-10:30am CET: Session 1.1
Register here

11:00am-12:30pm CET: Session 1.2
Register here

2:00pm-3:30pm CET: Session 1.3
Register here

4:00pm-6:00pm CET: Session 1.4
Register here


Tuesday, July 19

9:00am-10:30am CET: Session 2.1
Register here

11:00am-12:30pm CET: Session 2.2
Register here

2:00pm-3:30pm CET: Session 2.3
Register here

4:00pm-6:00pm CET: Session 2.4
Register here


Wednesday, July 20

9:00am-10:30am CET: Session 3.1
Register here

11:00am-12:30pm CET: Session 3.2
Register here

2:00pm-3:30pm CET: Session 3.3
Register here

4:00pm-6:00pm CET: Session 3.4
Register here

This article is taken from
SASE Winter Newsletter 18/19
Go to Contents

This article is taken from
SASE Winter Newsletter 17/18
Go to Contents