Events of Project B01

11.12.2024 Lecture

Social Policy in Autocratizing Context. Inclusionary and Exclusionary Processes

Prof. Dorottya Szikra, PhD (Institute for Sociology, Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary)
Place
Unicom
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.00 pm - 4.00 pm
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
WiSe 2024/25

Illiberal parties’ grasp on power has relied on economic and social policy as much as on the demise of checks and balances and the distortion of electoral rules. Research has so far overlooked the ways in which these parties attract formerly neglected social groups with their welfarist approach. This lack of attention is not only important in scientific terms but has political consequences. Democratic forces are often blind to realize what illiberal and autocratic leaders offer in material terms to masses. This presentation summarizes a decade of comparative research into the social policies of populist, illiberal and autocratizing rulers. Utilizing examples from the procedures, content and discourses of welfare reforms in Russia, Turkey, Hungary, Poland, and India, we show how illiberal and authoritarian incumbents shape their welfare states in different geopolitical settings, and build up popularity through social policy programs.

Dorottya Szikra is Research Professor and Head of Department at the Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest, and Visiting Professor at the Department of Gender Studies, CEU Vienna. She is teaching Welfare State and Gender under Undemocratic Rule and Critical Theory on Policy and Practice in 2023/2024. She is the country-lead of the ERC project WelfareExperiences analyzing how different welfare systems can affect people's mental health and chances of returning to work.

Szikra is also associated with CEU Democracy Institute where she led a CIVICA reseach project entitled Welfare, Democracy, and Populism under the COVID-19 Crisis (WELDECO). Szikra's main research field is welfare state and family policy development in Central and Eastern Europe. Between 2016 and 2020 she acted as the co-chair of the European Social Policy Analysis Network (ESPAnet). She has acted as a member of the editorial boards of various journals, including the European Journal of Social Security, the Hungarian on-line journal socio.hu and since 2020 the Journal of European Social Policy. Since 2021 she has served as a member of the EC commissioned High-Level Group on the future of social protection and of the welfare state in the EU.

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)
Semester
SoSe 2024

PEW offers a platform to discuss early/unpublished papers that investigate the political economy, broadly construed, of social policy and inequality, with the ambition to bring together researchers at the SOCIUM and beyond, across methodological divides and with varying levels of experience.

The workshop format is as follows: Authors briefly introduce the background of the paper (1-2 minutes), a discussant shortly summarizes the paper and provides feedback (10-15 minutes), and subsequently we open to the audience. Papers are circulated one week in advance.

And most importantly, everyone is warmly welcome to attend!

You can sign up here for our mailing list.

19.06.2024 Lecture

Immigrants and the Welfare State in Latin America. Barriers for Access

Dr. Sara Niedzwiecki (University of California, Santa Cruz)
Place
Unicom-building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
noon - 2.00 pm
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
SoSe 2024

Countries in the Global South experienced a massive increase in immigration in the past decade, with more migrants ending up there than in the Global North. Within South America, over seven million Venezuelans have left their country since 2015, leading to an extraordinary scale of intraregional migration. During these same years, and due to the expansion of social programs, millions of citizens in the region accessed basic income and better-quality healthcare, many for the first time. This talk studies these dual trends and analyzes whether social policies effectively incorporate immigrants. Failing to provide newcomers with a basic standard of living produces social exclusion. It shows that immigrants have more impediments to accessing the welfare state than citizens, even for universal public health, but especially for targeted social assistance. This derives from a combination of political elites’ views around the degree to which immigrants “deserve” access to different types of policies. The research focuses on the barriers that immigrants face to accessing social policy in middle-income South American countries with high rates of immigration—Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Colombia. Barriers to access are measured through qualitative coding of social assistance, social pensions, and public healthcare that build on legal documents, information requests, and secondary literature from 1990 to 2023, and public officials’ views are measured through in-depth interviews. In analyzing barriers to accessing social policy, this study contributes to the literatures on comparative welfare states and immigration, as well as comparative social policy in middle income countries. 

Sara Niedzwiecki is Associate Professor of Politics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She studies social policy, subnational politics, and immigration in Latin America. Sara is the author of Uneven Social Policies: The Politics of Subnational Variation in Latin America (2018, Cambridge University Press), which was awarded LASA's Donna Lee Van Cott Book Award from The Political Institutions Section and the International Public Policy Association's IPPA Book Award. She also co-authored Measuring Regional Authority: A Postfunctionalist Theory of Governance (Oxford University Press, 2016). Sara has authored and co-authored articles in Comparative Political Studies, Electoral Studies, Latin American Politics and Society, Studies in Comparative International Development, Regional and Federal Studies, PS: Political Science and Politics, International Political Science Review, among other peer-reviewed journals. During 2020-2021 academic year, Sara was a fellow at the University of Notre Dame’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies where she worked on a new project on social policy and immigration in South America. Website: saraniedzwiecki.com

If you cannot attend in person, it is possible to follow the lecture via Zoom:
uni-bremen.zoom-x.de/j/63621789671?Meeting-ID: 636 2178 9671 Passcode: 452328

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.00 pm - 4.00 pm
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
SoSe 2023

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
12.30 pm - 13.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)

Discussant: Michael Windzio

The participants will discuss Friederike Römer's draft paper "What drives migration? Revisiting the welfare magnet hypothesis using new measures of immigrant welfare rights".

The event is part of the programme of the Political Economy Workshop.
PEW discusses early/unpublished papers or research plans that investigate the political economy (broadly construed) of social policy and inequality.

Sign up here for the mailing list.

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)

The participants will discuss Kerem Gabriel Öktem's, Johanna Kuhlmann's, Laura Andrea Alvárez Tobar's, Frank Nullmeier's and Delia González de Reufel's draft paper "How are groups constituted through social policy legislation? Exploring temporal sequences of inclusion into old-age protection in a global perspective".

The event is part of the programme of the Political Economy Workshop.
PEW discusses early/unpublished papers or research plans that investigate the political economy (broadly construed) of social policy and inequality.

Sign up here for the mailing list.

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1050
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.00 pm
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person

Governments all around Europe responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with massive budgetary expansions. A third wave of Euro-austerity is imminent, however – just like in the first two episodes during the 1990s and after the Great Recession of 2008. Many are already concerned the pandemic will provide a trump card for conservative governments wishing to cutback welfare programs. Does the third episode of Euro-austerity after COVID-19 represent the final nail in the coffin of Europe’s welfare states? Or is this episode yet another ordinary blow these welfare states have grown to survive? I offer comparative historical insights for these hot-button policy questions based on my recent book Euro-Austerity and Welfare States. In the talk, I trace developments in social expenditures and social rights in the first episode of Euro-austerity in the run-up to Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) during the 1990s. I then show how governments reformed welfare states in Belgium, Greece, and Italy – countries where austerity’s impact was expected to be greatest. I close by discussing key takeaways from the politics of welfare state reform during the earlier episodes of Euro-austerity for the final Episode of Euro-austerity looming large after COVID-19.

 

About the speaker:

Tolga Bolukbasi is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey. Dr. Bolukbasi’s work cuts across the fields of comparative public policy and comparative political economy. His most recent research explores questions lying at the heart of distributive politics in Turkey in a comparative European perspective.

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)

The participants will discuss Fabian Besche-Truthe's, Tobias Böger's and Johanna Fischer's draft paper "Sequence analysis of social policy adoptions".

The event is part of the programme of the Political Economy Workshop.
PEW discusses early/unpublished papers or research plans that investigate the political economy (broadly construed) of social policy and inequality.

Sign up here for the mailing list.

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)

The participants will discuss Anna Wolkenhauer's draft paper "Policymaking without technocrats: peasants, the state, and farmer input subsidy reform in Zambia".

Discussant: Hudu Banikoi

The event is part of the programme of the Political Economy Workshop.
PEW discusses early/unpublished papers or research plans that investigate the political economy (broadly construed) of social policy and inequality.

Sign up here for the mailing list.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9am - 1.30pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Dr. Kerem Gabriel Öktem
Lecture Series
Internal Events

Place
Rotunde im Cartesium

28359 Bremen
Time
10am - 5.15pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Dr. Kerem Gabriel Öktem
Lecture Series
Internal Events

Place
Unicom-building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Political Economy Workshop (PEW)

The participants will discuss Helen Seitzer's and Tobias Böger's draft paper "Pathways towards caring countries. Mapping the diffusion of early childhood education and care entitlements".

The event is part of the programme of the Political Economy Workshop.
PEW discusses early/unpublished papers or research plans that investigate the political economy (broadly construed) of social policy and inequality.

Sign up here for the mailing list.

15.02.2023 Lecture

Inclusion into old-age and unemployment protection in Iran in comparative perspective

Mehran Haji Mohammadian (Bielefeld University)
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.15 pm - 3.45 pm
Organiser
Teilprojekt B01 (2022-25): SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Contact Person

Mehran Haji Mohammadian defended his doctoral dissertation in 2022 at the Faculty of Sociology at Bielefeld University. His dissertation project "Retirement in Iran: From the Establishment of the Pension System to the Emergence of a New Life Course" was supervised by Prof. Dr. Alexandra Kaasch (Bielefeld University) and Dr. Rana Jawad (Bath University). His research interests include social policy in developing countries, informality, and the implementation of the Bismarckian social insurance system in the global south. He has published a book "Piri" (2019) an ethnographic study of older adults in Tehran. In 2016 he also published an article "Gender in a Justice-Centered Society: A Review of Abu-Hamid Ghazel's Ethical Views".

Mehran Haji Mohammadian is member of the B01 country expert network.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Commentator of the Lecture
Prof. Dr. Philipp Genschel
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

This event is part of  Political Economy Workshop series, The participants will discuss Gonzalo Arévalo Iglesias' draft paper "Labour market outsiders, downward intergenerational support through cohabitation, and social policy attitudes in Europe".

The paper is available upon request - please contact Johanna Kuhlmann or Jakob Frizell.

Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Jakob Frizell; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Roy Karadag's draft paper "FAO, the World Bank and Food Questions in North Africa".

The paper is available upon request - please contact Johanna Kuhlmann or Jakob Frizell.

Place
Gästehaus der Universität Bremen
Teerhof 8
28199 Bremen
Time
12.45 pm - 8 pm (Thursday); 10 am - 3 pm (Friday)
Organisation
Teilprojekt B11 (2022-25): SFB 1342, Universität Bremen

Deep and prolonged recessions put modern societies under immense pressure: such economic crises have the potential to make millions jobless, to produce mass poverty and thus to shake the foundations of social peace.

Consequently, economic depressions have provoked wide-ranging reactions in the field of social policy, destroying established institutions and at the same time opening up new and audacious paths for social policy development. The CRC 1342 workshop "Economic Crises and Social Policy in the Twentieth Century" sets out to explore the repercussions of economic crises on social policy from a trans- and cross-national and historical perspective.

The workshop will focus on the two most important worldwide recession phases of the twentieth century: the Great Depression of the late 1920s and 1930s and the crisis-ridden period spanning from the oil price shock of the early 1970s to the Asian financial crisis and the economic turmoil in Latin America at the end of the millennium. This allows us to examine how economic crises triggered social policy changes and how these fit into a larger context of state activities concerned with citizens’ welfare. We focus on policy shifts and long-lasting institutional breaks as well as the development of discourses and ideas and the emergence of discrete historical actors – collective and individual – who left their imprint on social policy development. The geographical scope is global and deliberately trans-cends the borders of the OECD. 

The full programme of the workshop is availabe here:
https://workshopeconomiccrisesandsocialpolicy.wordpress.com/programme/

---

"Economic Crises and Social Policy in the Twentieth Century" will take place as a hybrid event from the 1st to 2nd December 2022 in Bremen. However, we would prefer to meet in person with as many participants as possible and will cover all travel and accommodation costs. The event will start and finish around lunchtime and include presentations and panel discussions. We intend to publish the results of the workshop. 

If you would like to attend the conference, please contact Claire Rostalski (Email: claire1@uni-bremen.de) to receive an invitation.

Organised by Prof. Dr. Delia González de Reufels and Prof. Dr. Cornelius Torp.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 9.3120
Mary-Somerville-Str. 9
28359 Bremen
Time
11 am - 12.30 pm

Mitglieder der Universität Bremen und der BIGSSS an der Jacobs University sind herzlich eingeladen zur mündlichen Verteidigung von Martín Cortina Escuderos Doktorarbeit "Diverging Paths of Social Policy Development in Latin America States: A Case Study on Argentina and Mexico from the Colonial Times to the Early Post-World-War-II Period".

Die Verteidigung findet im Hybridmodus statt. Um den Link zu erhalten, wenden Sie sich bitte direkt an Martín Cortina Escudero (cortinae@uni-bremen.de).

Der Prüfungskommission gehören an:

  • Prof. Dr. Philip Manow
  • Prof. Dr. Delia González de Reufels
  • Prof. Dr. Armando Barrientos
  • Prof. Dr. Tobias ten Brink
  • Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
  • Dr. Jakob Henninger
  • Gonzalo Arevalo Iglesias
26.10.2022 Lecture

A Social Law Perspective on Social Policy

Prof. Ulrich Becker, Dr. (Max Planck Institue for Social Law and Social Policy)
Place
Unicom building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Str. 3
28359 Bremen
Time
2.15 pm - 3.45 pm
Commentator of the Lecture
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
WiSe 2022/23

Prof. Dr. Becker is a Mercator Fellow in project B01, Managing Director of the Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy in Munich, and honorary professor at the LMU. His research deals with national and European social law, including the development of social rights in the European Union, the modernization of the German social benefits systems, health law and the impact of migration for the welfare state.

25.10.2022 Workshop

How to read laws?

Prof. Ulrich Becker, Dr. (Max Planck Institue for Social Law and Social Policy)
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
1 pm - 2.30 pm
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Internal Events

In the context of the CRC different projects analyse legal texts from Labour Law and Social Law. Due to the different research questions of the projects there are differences in the exact mode of analysis. Through discussions with Prof. Becker, a leading expert for international social law, we would like to gain a better understanding of the opportunities and limitations of our approaches, as well as obtain a better grasp on the similarities and differences.

The workshop will be attended by members of projects that specifically work on the analysis of legal texts. In addition, we also invite researchers in other projects interested in the subject to join us. This promises to be a good opportunity to discuss an important subject touching upon issues of methodology and measurement from an interdisciplinary perspective with a high-profile legal scholar. We would like to apologize for the late notification. In case you would like to join the workshop please contact Kerem Gabriel Öktem (oektem@uni-bremen.de)

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
11 am - 12.30 pm
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Internal Events

Kerem Öktem will give some insights from collecting data for the CWEP project, and Nils Düpont will share notes from the CWED2 data collection as well as some tempates.

Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Friederike Römer's draft paper "What Drives Migration? Revisiting the welfare magnet hypothesis using new measures of immigrant welfare rights".
 
The paper is available upon request, as well as the link to the zoom meeting - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Fabian Besche-Truthe's draft paper "Persisting Inequality in a Period of Expansion: Re-evaluating the Global Trajectory of Higher Education Enrollments".
 
The paper is available upon request, as well as the link to the zoom meeting - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.2210
Ma 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2 pm - 4 pm
Contact Person
Organisation

24.05.2022 Workshop

The Routines of Target Group Constructions: Specifying the Operating Criteria

Sonja Blum; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Bastian Becker, PhD

The participants will discuss Sonja Blum's and Johanna Kuhlmann's draft paper "The Routines of Target Group Constructions: Specifying the Operating Criteria".
 
The paper is available upon request, as well as the link to the zoom meeting - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.2210
Mary-Somerville-Str. 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2 pm - 4 pm
Contact Person
Organisation

Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Commentator of the Lecture
Amanda Shriwise
Contact Person
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Armin Müller's and Tobias ten Brink's draft paper "Generosity and cost-control: Lesson Drawing for Cost Control in China's Urban Employees' Health Insurance".
 
The paper is available upon request, as well as the link to the zoom meeting - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Organiser
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Francesco Laruffa's draft paper "Still a useful concept? Neoliberalism and the ideal of market citizenship".
 
The paper is available upon request - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
 

Make sure to acquaint yourselves with the paper in advance as there are no author presentations.

01.02.2022 Workshop

Taxing Nazi Wealth - Historical sources of wealth and preferences over taxation

Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Nora Waitkus
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Organiser
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

The participants will discuss Bastian Becker's and Nora Waitkus' draft paper "Taxing Nazi Wealth - Historical sources of wealth and preferences over taxation".
 
The paper is available upon request - please contact Bastian Becker or Johanna Kuhlmann.
 
PEW Zoom Link (Meeting ID: 917 7840 1116 / Password: 881455)
 
Discussant: Lukas Haffert (University of Zurich)
 
The paper is a research note and the authors are particularly interested in discussing avenues for future research.

Make sure to acquaint yourselves with the paper in advance as there are no author presentations.

11.01.2022 Workshop

Comparing social policy reforms under democratic backsliding in Hungary, Poland, Russia and Turkey

Adrienn Győry; Dr. Kerem Gabriel Öktem; Prof. Dorottya Szikra, PhD (Institute for Sociology, Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary)
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm

This workshop is part of the Political Economy Workshop, orgainsed by Bastian Becker und Johanna Kuhlmann. Please get in touch with them to get access to the workshop and the readings circulated in advance.

Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Commentator of the Lecture

Amanda Shriwise (Bremen University) and Carina Schmitt (SOCIUM) discuss the paper The Warfare-Welfare Nexus in British and French West African Colonies in the Course of the First and Second World Wars.

This event is part of the Political Economy Workshop series organized by Bastian Becker and Hanna Lierse. Please subscribe to our email newsletter, and get in touch if you would like to receive this week's reading or present your own work at a future workshop.

15.12.2020 Colloquium

Emotions and the Politics of Social Policy Reform

Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Dr. Peter Starke
Place


Bremen
Time
2.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Bastian Becker, PhD; Dr. Hanna Lierse

Political Economy Workshop: The paper "Emotions and the Politics of Social Policy Reform" by Johanna Kuhlmann and Peter Starke will be discussed.

Online Meeting via Zoom.

To receive this week’s reading, please subscribe to the Political Economy Workshop email newsletter or write an email to Bastian Becker and Hanna Lierse.

08.07.2020 Internal Workshop

Author workshop

Place


online
Time
9 am - 12 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Prof. Dr. Frank Nullmeier
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The workshop discusses contributions for an edited volume on causal mechanisms and social insurance institutions.

30.06.2020 Internal Workshop

Author workshop

Place


online
Time
9 am - 12 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Prof. Dr. Frank Nullmeier
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The workshop discusses contributions for an edited volume on causal mechanisms and social insurance institutions.

Place


Bremen
Time
diverse
Organisation
Philipp Jarke
Partic. Organisation

In the week from 17 to 22 February 2020, the teaching and research institutes of the University of Bremen and Jacobs University invite you to the first Bremen Social Sciences Week! A variety of events on the topic of "Societies in Transition" will highlight current Bremen research priorities from various perspectives.

The programme is aimed at pupils, teachers, students and the general public. All events are free of charge. Listen, watch, learn, participate and discuss at the University of Bremen, in the Haus der Wissenschaft, on the Internet, in Bremen's pubs and in CITY 46. As diverse as research and teaching in Bremen are, so are the topics that await you during the course of the week: from PISA, social movements, NGOs and their means of political influence, filter bubbles, surrogate motherhood and student housing to questions of social cohesion and the digitalization of the social sciences, you will find everything you could wish for.

13.02.2020 - 14.02.2020 Internal Workshop

Author Workshop

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9 am - 1 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Prof. Dr. Tobias ten Brink
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The workshop will bring together CRC researchers in order to discuss papers for a planned Special Issue on causal mechanisms and transnational social policy dynamics.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.2210
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2 pm - 4 pm
Organiser
Contact Person
Dr. Alex Veit
Organisation
Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Universität Bremen; Institut für Interkulturelle und Internationale Studien (InIIS), Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Semester
WiSe 2019/20

In this colloquium Ricardo Bormann will discuss his paper "New Directions in Latin American Film History: The Intellectual Network of the Brazilian Film Critic Salles Gomes". Participants are expected to read Ricardo's paper in advance. Please contact Alex Veit (veit@uni-bremen.de) to get hold of the paper.

The Transnational & Area Studies-Colloquium is a new venue for interdisciplinary debate on pertinent questions of transnational scope and area studies relevance. Scholars and students meet on a monthly basis to discover new approaches and joint research interests. The colloquium is open to the interested public.

Subscribe to the mailing list for regular updates and pre-circulated readings.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.2210
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.15 pm - 3.45 pm
Organiser
Contact Person
Dr. Alex Veit
Organisation
Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Universität Bremen; Institut für Interkulturelle und Internationale Studien (InIIS), Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Semester
WiSe 2019/20

In this TASC-Colloquium, Teresa Huhle's paper "The Transnational Formation of a Healthy Nation: Travelling Reformers in Uruguay (1903-1933)" will be discussed. Participants are expected to read Teresa's paper in advance. Please contact Alex Veit (veit@uni-bremen.de) to get hold of the paper.

The Transnational & Area Studies-Colloquium is a new venue for interdisciplinary debate on pertinent questions of transnational scope and area studies relevance. Scholars and students meet on a monthly basis to discover new approaches and joint research interests. The colloquium is open to the interested public, but please sign up with tas-colloquium@mailman.zfn.uni-bremen.de.

16.12.2019 Lecture and discussion

Bremen "Politikschnack": How far is it to Scandinavia? What can we learn from the Nordic welfare state?

Aline Grünewald; Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Place
GW2
Room: B1400

Bremen
Time
6.15 pm - 7.45 pm
Organiser

The "Bremen Politikschnack" at the University of Bremen is a new format that aims to promote the exchange between students and researchers on current political topics beyond regular courses.

The 1st Politikschnack deals with socio-political questions: "How far is it to Scandinavia? What can we learn from the Nordic welfare state?" Johanna Kuhlmann (SFB 1342) & Aline Grünewald (SOCIUM) discuss with students of political science.

02.12.2019 Internal Workshop

Joint networking workshop of A03, B02, B03 and B04

Dr. Sarah Berens; Prof. Dr. Irene Dingeldey; Prof. Dr. Delia González de Reufels; Prof. Dr. Philip Manow; Prof. Dr. Ulrich Mückenberger; Prof. Dr. Susanne K. Schmidt
Place
Unicom building
Room: 9.3120
Mary-Somerville-Straße 9
28359 Bremen
Time
3.30 pm - 5.30 pm
Contact Person
Jenny Hahs
Lecture Series
Internal Events

Place
Unicom buildung
Room: 7.4500
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9 am - 5 pm
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Lecture Series
Internal Events

9.00 – 10.45: Meeting of members and guests

  • General information about the CRC
  • State of the art: 3 books in the process (Schmitt, Leisering, Martens)
  • Possible next book "A very short history of social policy" (Obinger, Nullmeier and González de Reufels)
  • how to attract books from contributors outside the CRC
  • Cover for the series
  • Foreword (First draft by González de Reufels)
  • Division of work and operational processes (Team and Palgrave)


10.45 – 11.00: Coffee break

11.00 – 12.00: Open Access
Benjamin Ahlborn (State- and University Library Bremen)

12:00: Slots for individual book projects

  • 12:20 - 12:40: B08, Ewa Kaminska
  • 12.20 – 12.40: BIGSSS (B09 affiliated), Anna Wolkenhauer


12.45 – 14.00: Lunch Atlantik Campus Restaurant

14:20: Individual book projects

  • 14.20-14.40: A03, Ulrich Mückenberger, Irene Dingeldey
  • 14.40-15.00: A05, Kerstin Martens, Fabian Besche
  • 15.00-15.20: B06, Gulnaz Isabekova
  • 15.20-15.40: A02, Nate Breznau
  • 15:50-16:10: B05, Armin Müller
  • 16:10-16:30: ERC, Lorraine Frisina (on behalf of Amanda Shriwise)
  • 16.30-16.50: BIGSSS, Silvana Lakeman
27.11.2019 Internal Workshop

Internal Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
12.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The project members will discuss the schedules B-edited volume.

07.11.2019 - 08.11.2019 Conference

Causal Mechanisms in the Analysis of Social Policy Dynamics

Teilprojekt B01: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Haus der Wissenschaft
Sandstraße 4/5
28195 Bremen
Time
8.30 am - 5.00 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Organisation

Recent theoretical and methodological developments in the social sciences converge into the approach of "mechanism-based explanation". Originating from different disciplines such as analytical sociology, political sociology, comparative historical analysis and qualitative research in political science, mechanism-based approaches stress that phenomena cannot fully be explained by correlations between variables: Causal mechanisms are the "cogs and wheels" that scholars come across when opening the "black box" of correlations.

Despite the expanding literature on this topic, two deficits have not been resolved so far:

  1. There is no convincing compilation of mechanisms that drive social and political processes. Previous proposals for a comprehensive list of mechanisms collect elements of very different scales and levels. There is no shared understanding on what level (micro, meso, macro) mechanisms should be allocated and what elements a mechanism should have to count as a mechanism.
  2. There is also a lack of systematic applications of mechanism-based approaches to an entire policy field. So far, mechanism-based approaches have primarily been used in single case studies or comparative case studies with a limited scope and range. Adopting a mechanism-based approach for studying the transnational dynamics of an entire policy field might be a decisive test for the fruitfulness of mechanism-based approaches.


This conference aims to stimulate discussion on the characteristics of causal mechanisms, and to establish a closer link between these concepts and the study of social policy dynamics.

PROGRAMME

Day 1

9.00-9.30
Registration and welcome coffee

9.30-10.30
Gary Goertz, University of Notre Dame
The veil of ignorance – causal mechanism – process tracing methodology

Coffee break

10.45-12.15
Session 1: Theorizing Mechanisms (Chair: Johanna Kuhlmann)

  1. Holger Straßheim, University of Bielefeld
    Transforming social policy (research): the mechanisms of micro-focusing (Discussant: Hubert Heinelt)
  2. Johannes Schmitt, Martin Noltze, German Institute for Development Evaluation Causal mechanisms in evaluation: conceptual confusion, practical application and the way forward (Discussant: Heinz Rothgang)
  3. Sebastian Haunss, University of Bremen
    Network mechanism driving the development of social policies (Discussant: Sarah Berens)


Lunch

13.30-14.30
Renate Mayntz, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
Promise and limits of mechanism-based explanation

Coffee break

14.45-16.15
Session 2: Mechanisms of Social Policy Dynamics – Single Case Studies (Chair: Heiko Pleines)

  1. Olivier Burtin, LMU München/Princeton University
    Mechanisms of veterans’ policy in the United States: A comparative overview (Discussant: Teresa Huhle)
  2. Ellen van Reuler, Leiden University
    English hospices and palliative care policies as a model for the Netherlands? (Discussant: Anna Safuta)
  3. Tobias ten Brink1, Armin Müller1, Tao Liu2, 1Jacobs University Bremen, 2University Duisburg-Essen
    Policy experimentation and elite cooperation: Causal mechanisms in the making of China’s social insurance system (Discussant: Osmany Porto de Oliveira)
  4. Sarah Berens, Franziska Deeg, University of Cologne
    Moving North and coming back. Migration and social policy preferences in Mexico (Discussant: Cecilia Rossel/Florencia Antía)


Coffee break

16.45-17.45
James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Causal mechanisms and theories of causality: Three approaches

Coffee break

18.00-19.30
Session 3: Mechanisms of Social Policy Dynamics – Comparative Approaches (Chair: Klaus Schlichte)

  1. Traute Meyer, University of Southampton
    Industrialism revisited - Changing kinship systems and pension reform in China and Europe (Discussant: Tao Liu)
  2. Robert van Niekerk1, Reynaldo Jiménez Guethón2, 1University of Witwatersrand, 2University de La Habana
    Cultures of social solidarity and the public good: A reflection on South Africa and Cuba (Discussant: Armin Müller)
  3. Heinz Rothgang, Karin Gottschall, Anna Safuta, Kristin Noack, Marlene Seiffarth, Greta-Marleen Storath, University of Bremen
    Migrantization of long-term care in Europe. On search of causal mechanisms (Discussant: Friederike Römer)


Conference Dinner at Ratskeller

Day 2
9.30-11.00
Session 4: Mechanisms of Social Policy Dynamics – Transnational Interdependencies (Chair: Frank Nullmeier)

  1. Andreas Heinrich1, Gulnaz Isabekova1, Armin Müller2, Heiko Pleines1, Tobias ten Brink2, 1University of Bremen, 2Jacobs University Bremen
    Types of international policy-related knowledge transfer. From conditionality to elaborated autonomous policy learning (Discussant: Lutz Leisering)
  2. Monika Ewa Kaminska, Ertila Druga, Ante Malinar, Liva Stupele, University of Bremen
    Reforms from within or reforms from without? Defying international organizations’ agenda in healthcare reforms in Central Eastern Europe: in search of causal mechanisms (Discussant: Andreas Heinrich)
  3. Friederike Römer, Jakob Henninger, University of Bremen
    Democracy and immigrant rights - Conflicting mechanisms at play (Discussant: Sebastian Haunss)


Coffee break

11.15-12.30
Plenary Session: Could we hope to compile a list of basic causal mechanisms? (Chair: Karin Gottschall)

Peter Starke, University of Southern Denmark
Delia González de Reufels, Johanna Kuhlmann, Frank Nullmeier, Klaus Schlichte, University of Bremen

Lunch

13.45-15.15
Session 5: Mechanisms of Social Policy Dynamics in Latin America (Chair: Delia González de Reufels)

  1. Osmany Porto de Oliveira, Federal University of São Paulo
    Mechanisms for social policy diffusion: theory and evidences from the Brazilian case (Discussant: Tobias ten Brink)
  2. Cecilia Rossel1, Florencia Antía2, 1Universidad Católica del Uruguay, 2Universidad de la República
    The politics of sanctioning the poor: Revealing causal mechanisms in Uruguay’s CCT programs (Discussant: Reynaldo Jiménez Guethón)
  3. Sebastian Sirén, Stockholm University
    The Struggle over universalisation. Actors and institutions in the process towards health care reform in Bolivia (Discussant: Monika Ewa Kaminska)


Coffee break

15.30-16.30
Armando Barrientos, University of Manchester
The rise and fall of Bismarckian social policy in Latin America

Download Programmme

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2.15 pm - 3.45 pm
Organiser
Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS); SOCIUM Forschungszentrum Ungleichheit und Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
WiSe 2019/20

Place
Unicom building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 5
28359 Bremen
Time
2.15 pm - 3.45 pm
Organiser
Organisation
Partic. Organisation
Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS); Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
WiSe 2019/20

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) pro-claimed the equality of all human beings in dignity and rights. The right to social security, however, has been tak-en more seriously only since the 2000s, through calls for "Social Security for All" and "Leaving no-one behind". The book investigates a major response, social cash transfers to the poor. The idea of simply giving money to the poor had been rejected by all major development organisations, but since the early 2000s, social cash transfers have mushroomed in the global South and on agendas of international organisations. How come? What programmes have emerged in which countries? How inclusive are the programmes? What models have international organiza-tions devised? Based on unique quantitative and qualitative data and on newly created concepts and indicators, the book takes stock of all identifiable cash transfers in all Southern countries and of the views of all major international organisations.

The volume argues that cash transfers reflect broader changes: new understandings of development, of human rights, of global risks, of the social responsibility of governments, and of universalism. Social cash transfers have turned the poor from objects of charity into rights-holders and agents of their own lives and of development. A repertoire of cash transfers has evolved that has enhanced social citizenship, but is limited by weak political commitments.The book also contributes to a general theory of social policy in development contexts, through a constructivist sociological approach that complements the dominant approaches from welfare economics and political economy and includes a theory of social assistance.

Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.2210
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2 pm - 4 pm
Organiser
Contact Person
Dr. Alex Veit
Organisation
Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Universität Bremen; Institut für Interkulturelle und Internationale Studien (InIIS), Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Semester
WiSe 2019/20

The Transnational & Area Studies-Colloquium is a new venue for interdisciplinary debate on pertinent questions of transnational scope and area studies relevance. Scholars and students meet on a monthly basis to discover new approaches and joint research interests. The colloquium is open to the interested public.

Subscribe to the mailing list for regular updates and pre-circulated readings: https://mailman.zfn.uni-bremen.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tas-colloquium

17.10.2019 - 18.10.2019 Internal Workshop

Author Workshop

Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom building
Room: 7.1020

Bremen
Time
9 am - 1 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann; Prof. Dr. Tobias ten Brink
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The workshop will bring together CRC researchers in order to discuss papers for a planned Special Issue on causal mechanisms and transnational social policy dynamics.

14.08.2019 - 16.08.2019 Internal Workshop

Developments in health and long-term care systems in the Americas

Teilprojekt A04: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.350, 3.380, 3.390
Mary-Somerville-Straße 3
28359 Bremen
Time
tba
Contact Person
Lecture Series
Internal Events

The aim of the workshop is to bring together leading experts working on Northern, Central, and South America to discuss historical and contemporary developments in health and long term care. In line with the research program of CRC 1342, we are especially interested in discussing the potential role of transnational linkages or interdependencies that contributed to the introduction and any subsequent reforms of health and/or long term care systems within the region. As this also necessitates an understanding of what systems actually looked like at the time of their establishment - however embryonic - another aim of the workshop is to address the challenges of identifying and/or generating reliable data, particularly for Central and South America, as well as for a period of observation that may date back to as early as the turn of the 20th Century.

Attendance by invitation only.

The aim of the workshop is to bring together leading experts working on Northern, Central, and South America to discuss historical and contemporary developments in health and long term care. In line with the research programme of CRC 1342, we are especially interested in discussing the potential role of transnational linkages or interdependencies that contributed to the introduction and any subsequent reforms of health and/or long term care systems within the region. As this also necessitates an understanding of what systems actually looked like at the time of their establishment - however embryonic - another aim of the workshop is to address the challenges of identifying and/or generating reliable data, particularly for Central and South America, as well as for a period of observation that may date back to as early as the turn of the 20th Century.

Attendance by invitation only.

PROGRAM

Day 1 Workshop, Room 3.3380

10:00-10:30
Introductory remarks & welcome
by Prof. Dr. Heinz Rothgang

10:30-11:15
Introduction to A04 Project "Global developments in health care systems and long
term care as a new social risk"
by Dr. Lorraine Frisina-Doetter and Prof. Dr. Sebastian Haunss

11:15-11:30
Coffee break, Room 3.3390

11:30-12:30
Healthcare system developments in the Caribbean
Presentation by Dr. Elsada Diana Cassels

12:30-13:45
Lunch break, Room 3.3390

13:45-16:15
Healthcare system developments in Brazil
Presentations by Dr. Dick Salvatierra, Dr. José Carvalho de Noronha and Dr. Beatriz Nascimento

16:15-16:45
Welcome drink

Day 2 Workshop, Room 3.3380

9:00-11:00
Health care and long-term care system developments in the United States
Presentations by Dr. Ben Veghte and Dr. Pamela Doty

11:00-11:15
Coffee break, Room 3.3390

11:15-12:00
Introduction to B02 Project "Emergence, Expansion, and Transformation of the
Welfare State in the Cono Sur in Exchange with (Southern) Europe (1850–1990)"
by Prof. Dr. Delia Gonzalez de Reufels

12:00-13:15
Lunch break, Room 3.3390

13:30-15:45
Health and long-term care system developments in Chile
Presentations by Prof. Dr. Alejandra Zúñiga Fajuri, Dr. Mauricio Matus-Lopez and Dr. Pablo Villalobos Dintrans

15:45-16:00: Coffee break, Room 3.3390

16:00-17:45
Roundtable discussion (topic tba)
led by Prof. Dr. Delia Gonzalez de Reufels

19:00
Dinner at Ratskeller Restaurant, Address: Am Markt, 28195 Bremen

Day 3 Workshop, Room 3.3380

9:30-10:30
The significance of LTC as a new field of analysis and presentation of A04 typology of long-term care systems
Presentation by Prof. Dr. Heinz Rothgang and Johanna Fischer

10:30-10:45
Coffee break, Room 3.3390

10:45-12:45
Long-term care system developments in Costa Rica and Uruguay
Presentations by Dr. Mauricio Matus-Lopez and Alexander Chaverri-Carvajal

12:45-14:00
Lunch Break, Room 3.3390

14:00-15:45
Healthcare system developments in Nicaragua, El Salvador and Cuba
Presentation by Dr. Pol de Vos

15:45-16:15
Coffee break, Room 3.3390

16:15-16:45
Presentation of A04 healthcare systems typology by Dr. Achim Schmid and Gabriela de Carvalho

16:45-17:45
Final roundtable discussion on the challenges of researching and classifying systems of the Global South
led by Dr. Lorraine Frisina-Doetter and Prof. Dr. Sebastian Haunss

17:45-18:15
Closing remarks by Prof. Dr. Delia Gonzalez de Reufels

19:00-21:00
Sightseeing tour/group activity, tba

02.07.2019 Internal Workshop

Informed Consent for Data Storing/Sharing with Qualiservice

Dr. Jan-Ocko Heuer
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
10 am - 12 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

Informed consent is usually an ethical and legal requirement for social research, and researchers are expected to obtain consent from people to participate in research and for the use of the information collected. Yet, with the new EU General Data Protection Regulation, the legal framework for informed consent has changed considerably. In this workshop, Jan-Ocko Heuer from Qualiservice will deal with key issues regarding informed consent for research and data storing/sharing with Qualiservice (the Research Data Centre for qualitative data from social research currently implemented at the SOCIUM). Topics include: legal framework; core principles of consent; formats for consent; when to seek consent; informing participants; consent in special cases; consent forms; withdrawing consent. It is recommended that from each (qualitative) research project that plans to archive data at Qualiservice, one researcher should attend the workshop. Registration is not required.

26.06.2019 Lecture

Labour Policy, Germanness, and Nazi Influence in Brazil

Prof. Ursula Prutsch, Dr. (Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
2 pm - 4 pm
Organiser
Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS); SOCIUM Forschungszentrum Ungleichheit und Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Organisation
Lecture Series
Jour Fixe
Semester
SoSe 2019

19.06.2019 Internal Workshop

Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
12.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

This internal workshop of project area B serves to ensure the exchange of information between the case study centred projects and to apply and further develop the theoretical concepts of causal chains and causal mechanisms.

Place
GW2
Room: B2770
Universitäts-Boulevard 13
28359 Bremen
Time
12.30 pm - 1.30 p.m.
Organiser
Partic. Organisation
Teilprojekt B02: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen

29.05.2019 Internal Workshop

Causal Mechanisms in Social Sciences

Prof. Derek Beach, PhD (Aarhus BSS)
Place
Unicom Buidling
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9 am - 5 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann

For attending the workshop, it is necessary to read Derek Beach's latest book "Process-Tracing Methods: Foundations and Guidelines" (2nd edition), which he co-edited with Rasmus Brun Pedersen, and to shortly present a causal mechanism that is relevant to the participant's project.

08.05.2019 Internal Workshop

Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
1.30 pm - 3.30 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

This internal workshop of project area B serves to ensure the exchange of information between the case study centred projects and to apply and further develop the theoretical concepts of causal chains and causal mechanisms.

06.03.2019 Internal Workshop

Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9 am - 12 pm
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

 

This internal workshop of project area B serves to ensure the exchange of information between the case study centred projects and to apply and further develop the theoretical concepts of causal chains and causal mechanisms.

16.01.2019 Internal Workshop

Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
12.30 p.m. - 3.30 p.m.
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

This internal workshop of project area B serves to ensure the exchange of information between the case study centred projects and to apply and further develop the theoretical concepts of causal chains and causal mechanisms.

Place
Unicom Building
Room: 7.1020
Mary-Somerville-Straße 7
28359 Bremen
Time
9:15 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Organisation

SocialPoliciesandtheMedia.jpg (2.61 MB)

09:15-09:30 Welcome
Delia González de Reufels

09:30-09:50 Promoting the ‚Model Country‘: The Visualization of Uruguayan Public Assistance Policies in the República Batllista (1903-1932)
Teresa Huhle
09:50-10:15 Discussion

10:15-10:35 Working for a Healthy and Modern Nation: The Chilean Instituto de Higiene and the Official Photo Book of 1910
Delia González de Reufels
10:35-11:00 Discussion

11:00-11:20 Coffee Break

11:20-11:40 Social Policy for Productivity. The Figure of the Worker in the Visual Propaganda of Fascist Italy and Peronist Argentina (1922-1955)
Katharina Schembs
11:40-12:05 Discussion

12:05-12:25 For a Healthy and Hygienic Post-Revolutionary Citizen. Cinema and Hygienic Education in Mexico from the 1920s to 1940s
María Rosa Gudiño Cejudo
12:25-12:50 Discussion

13:00-14:30 Lunch Break and Coffee

14:30-14:50 Film as Instrument of Social Enquiry. The British Documentary Film Movement in the Late 1930s
Christine Rüffert
14:50-15:15 Discussion

15:15-15:35 "In Any Case, the Fees Are the Same for All": Physicians and the Welfare State in Early French TV Broadcasts
Joël Danet
15:35-16:00 Discussion

16:00-16:15 Coffee Break

16:15-17:00 Concluding Remarks and Final Discussion
Delia González de Reufels

21.11.2018 Internal Workshop

Workshop Project Area B

Projektbereich B: SFB 1342, Universität Bremen
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 3
28359 Bremen
Time
2 p.m. until 5 p.m.
Contact Person
Dr. Johanna Kuhlmann
Lecture Series
Internal Events

This internal workshop of project area B serves to ensure the exchange of information between the case study centred projects and to apply and further develop the theoretical concepts of causal chains and causal mechanisms.

14.11.2018 Workshop

The Global History of the New Deal

Prof. Dr. Kiran Klaus Patel (Maastricht University)
Place
Unicom Building
Room: 3.3380
Mary-Somerville-Straße 3
28359 Bremen
Time
2 p.m. until 4 p.m.
Organiser
Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Organisation
Cooperation

The historian Kiran Klaus Patel from the University of Maastricht presents his current book "The New Deal. A Global History". In preparation, the participants read parts of the book to discuss them with Kiran Klaus Patel in the workshop. The passages to be discussed and the guiding questions will be communicated in advance.

Registration: The number of places in this workshop are restricted. Please register by sending a short email to Prof. Dr. Delia González de Reufels at dgr@uni-bremen.de.

05.07.2018 Lecture and Discussion

Learning from global history! "King Cotton" as a Model - New Approaches to Social Policy Research

Prof. Dr. Frank Nullmeier; Dr. Dieter Wolf (SOCIUM Research Center on Inequality and Social Policy, University of Bremen)
Place
SOCIUM Research Center on Inequality and Social Policy
Room: 3.3390
Mary-Somerville-Straße 5
28359 Bremen
Time
10:15 - 11:45 a.m.
Organiser
SOCIUM Forschungszentrum Ungleichheit und Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen; Sonderforschungsbereich 1342 "Globale Entwicklungsdynamiken von Sozialpolitik", Universität Bremen
Contact Person
Dr. Dieter Wolf (SOCIUM Research Center on Inequality and Social Policy, University of Bremen)

"King Cotton" is a gripping narrative of the history of the global marketing and industrialisation of cotton and an alternative explanation for the phenomenon of global capitalism. But the book offers possibilities to think beyond the narrow focus of the topic.

Some of these possibilities with regard to the "other side" of capitalism, the (often missing or inadequate) social policy and the welfare state will be presented and discussed in this event.