Invitation
An International Conference on
Countercurrents in the History of Development
between 1850 and Today
The Center for the History of Global Development, the David F. Musto Center for Security & Drug Policies, and the Center for Latin-American Studies, all from the Shanghai University, are inviting submissions for a conference on countercurrents in the history of development.
The conventional understanding of the history of development has emphasized how different periods have been characterized by specific dominant themes, e.g. community development in the 1950s or technologycentered approaches in the 1960s. However, development is rarely as coherent and monodirectional as master narratives and historical interpretations suggest. Frequently, real life discourses and practices have been marked by conceptual incoherencies, competing approaches, and apparent dead ends. However, ideas that never got off the ground or appeared to lose currency in some cases re-emerged in different form, in different places, or years later. By the same token, even during times of seeming consensus about the best developmental approach there have always been dissenting voices and alternative practices, evolving in interaction with the mainstream approach or independently from it. While these tensions have on some occasions gone
unnoticed, they have sometimes produced unexpected, potentially fruitful new ideas.
Seeking to arrive at a more nuanced understanding of the history of development, this conference aims at exploring the multifaceted character of relevant concepts and practices. To do so, we aim at recovering and re-assessing some of the counter-currents drowned out or overwritten by dominant narratives.
We explicitly welcome contributions on all parts of the world, on the understanding that similar dynamics have been at work within as well across all regions.
While other aspects are welcome as well, we particularly encourage proposals on the following themes: - Marginal (ized) voices; - Contradictory and competing approaches within movements or organizations; - Actors neglected by mainstream scholarship; - Temporal ‘jumps’ in development discourses; - Neglected strands in South-South, North-South and North-North cooperation
The conference is organized in cooperation with the European University Institute (Florence) and the University of Geneva. It is scheduled to take place on 9/10 July, 2020. All local costs in Shanghai will be covered by the organizers. Some travel assistance will also be available.
Please, send abstracts to
Zhang Yong-an zhangyongan@shu.edu.cn,
Jiang Shixue jiangshixue@126.com
Iris Borowyborowyiris@i.shu.edu.cn
by 25 February, 2020.