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USBIG
CONGRESS, February 27th to March 1st 2009
Proposal
deadline reminder
The
deadline for proposals for the USBIG Congress is October
31, 2008. Some people might need until after the US election.
If you need until November 8th, please send an email to
the conference organizer (Karl@Widerquist.com)
by the original deadline saying that you will have a proposal
together by that time.
ABOUT THE EIGHTH USBIG CONGRESS
The
conference will take place February 27 March 1, 2009
at Sheraton New York Hotel on 811 Seventh Avenue at 53rd
Street, New York, NY. The congress will bring together academics,
students, activists, policy analysts, and others interested
to explore the pros and cons of the basic income proposal.
Participants
include Mathias Risse, of the Carr Center for Human Rights
Policy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
His articles have appeared in journals such as Ethics; Philosophy
and Public Affairs; Nous; the Journal of Political Philosophy;
and Social Choice and Welfare. Steve Pressman, of Monmouth
University, is an economist with interest in poverty, public
finance, and macroeconomics. He is co-editor of The Ethics
and Economics of the Basic Income Guarantee and author of
Fifty Major Economists. Brian Steensland, of Indiana University,
is a sociologist and author of The Failed Welfare Revolution.
Jeff Manza, of New York University, is a professor of sociology
and author of Why Welfare States Persist: Public Opinion
and the Future of Social Provision. Pablo Yannes is the
head of the Mexican affiliate of the Basic Income Earth
Network. Brazilian Senator Eduardo Suplicy is a third-term
Senator representing the state of Sao Paolo in the Brazilian
Federal Senate and one of the founding members of Brazils
ruling Workers Party. We have tentative interest from
and hope soon to confirm participation by Canadian Senator
Hugh Segal and Member of the Canadian House of Commons Tony
Martin.
Scholars,
activists, and others are invited to propose papers, and
organize panel discussions. Proposals and panel discussions
are welcome on BIG or topics related to the distribution
of wealth and income. Proposals from any discipline and
with any point of view are welcome. Anyone interested in
making a presenting or organizing a panel should contact
the chair of the organizing committee: Karl Widerquist:
Karl@Widerquist.com.
More
information about the conference is available at the USBIG
website: www.usbig.net.
Social
Security, Poverty and Social Exclusion in Rich and Poor
Countries
Call for Papers
The
16th annual International Research Seminar on Issues in
Social Security organised by FISS will take place at the
Sigtunahöjden Conference Centre in Sigtuna, near Stockholm,
Sweden, on 16 -18 June 2009.
The
OECD, European Union, ILO and World Bank have all recently
published reports on income inequality. Although their findings
vary, it seems that many developed economies have experienced
growing income inequality and increasing relative poverty
in recent decades. Overall, the risk of poverty has shifted
from the elderly towards youth. The extent to which social
security lowers poverty rates varies significantly between
countries. But lower social transfers to households at the
bottom of the income distribution have been one important
factor behind the increase in poverty rates in many countries,
a development that has particularly affected the unemployed,
the sick and the disabled. Meanwhile, income inequality
has also been increasing rapidly in many developing economies.
Keynote
speakers:
- Bea
Cantillon (University of Antwerp)
- Jonathan
Bradshaw (University of York)
- Michael
Förster (OECD)
- Peter
Saunders (University of New South Wales)
- Timothy
Smeeding (University of Wisconsin - Madison)
- Peter
Townsend (London School of Economics)
The
seminar will examine the relationship between recent trends
in poverty and social security in advanced economies as
well as in developing countries. The role of income transfers
in preventing, or providing protection against, growing
poverty and exclusion will be examined. The seminar will
also assess the role of paid employment in helping to lift
households out of poverty and in preventing social exclusion.
Papers
are invited on any aspect of the general theme of the seminar.
They should be based on research or scholarship and written
with an international audience in mind. Papers that are
international in perspective or based on comparative research
are especially welcome.
It
is anticipated that a selection of the papers will be included
in an edited volume within the FISS book series International
Studies on Social Security.
Those
wishing to present a paper should submit by email attachment
a title and an abstract (less than 500 words) in English
before 12 January 2009 to the FISS Secretariat at: teena.stabler@socres.ox.ac.uk.
The file should have the lead authors surname in the
title (e.g. Kemp_FISS_2009).
Those
who have submitted an abstract will be informed by 30 January
2009 whether their paper has been accepted and be given
detailed formatting instructions. The full papers, which
should be written in English, should be submitted to the
FISS Secretariat at the University of Oxford no later than
15 May 2009, for distribution to the discussants and participants.
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