La Conferencia Max Weber, una iniciativa conjunta del Departamento de Ciencias Sociales, el Instituto Carlos III-Juan March y el Instituto Figuerola de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, alberga presentaciones de científicos sociales de talla mundial cuya investigación se dirige a una audiencia multidisciplinar.
26 de Septiembre - 17 hs - 18.0.A.10
Jean Laurent Rosenthal (CalTech)
“Capital’s Capital: Wealth and Inequality in Paris 1807-2023”
14 de Noviembre - 17 hs
Margaret Levi (Stanford University)
“Expanding the Community of Fate”
20 de Junio
Steven Levitsky (Harvard University)
"Democracy's Surprising Resilience"
19 de Octubre - 17 hs
Adrian Favell - University College Cork
Social Polarisation, red walls and bat signals: how social science helped make Brexit and Boris Johnson
15 de Febrero - 17 hs - 17.2.75
Akos Rona-Tas - University of California, San Diego
Predicting the Future: Art, Algorithms and the New Iron Cage
10 de noviembre 17hs - 17.2.75
Kathleen Thelen M.I.T.
Attention Shoppers: American Retail Capitalism and the Rise of the Amazon Economy
25 de mayo
Aula 18.0.A13
Aula 18.0.A13
Paul Pierson
University of California, Berkeley
University of California, Berkeley
The New American Exceptionalism: Democratic Backsliding in an Affluent Society
31 octubre | Aula 18.1.A09
Stathis Kalyvas / All Souls College, Oxford
Populism and Democracy
19 diciembre | Aula 18.1.A09
Bishnupriya Gupta / University of Warwick
Industralization in a Colonial Economy: Evidence from India
14 mayo · CANCELADO
Cormac Ó Gráda / University College Dublin
Migration and Human Betterment: Lessons from Ireland and from History
13 Diciembre | Aula 18.1.A08
Sascha Becker / Universidad de Warwick y CAGE
Reformation and Counter-Reformation
31 Enero | Aula 18.1.A09
Jeremy Adelman (Princeton University)
Does Global Integration Undermine Democracy?
29 Mayo | Aula 18.1.A09
Andreas Wimmer (Columbia University)
Domains of Diffusion. How Culture and Institutions Travel Around the World and With What Consequences.
15/3/2018 - 17:30h aula 18.1.A08
Michael Biggs / St Cross College, University of Oxford
Collective Protest and Elite Colleges: The U.S. Anti-War Movement in the 1960s
31/5/2018 - 17:30h aula 18.1.A08
Adam Przeworski / New York University
Crises of Democracy
30/11/2017 - 17:30h aula 18.1.A02
Timothy J. Hatton / University of Essex and Australian National University
Public Opinion on Immigration in Europe: Preference versus Salience
5/10/2017 - 17:00h aula 18.1.A02
Peter H. Lindbert / University of California, Davis
The Rise and Future of Progressive Redistribution
26/9/2017 - 17:00h aula 18.1.A08
Diego Gambetta / University of Oxford
Engineers of Jihad. The Curious Connection between Education and Extremism
1/6/2017 - 17:00h aula 18.0.A04
David Stasavage / New York University
The Rise of Western Democracy: Why it Happened in Europe and Not China or the Middle East
18/5/2017 - 17:30h aula 18.0.A04
John Joseph Wallis / University of Maryland
What Institutions Are
21/4/2017
Delia Baldasarri / New York University
Interethnic Relationships in Contemporary Communities: How does Diversity Affect Solidarity and Cooperation?
19712/2016
Branko Milanovic / Stone Center on Socio-Economic Inequality, Graduate Center, CUNY
Inequality in the Age of Globalization
5/10/2016
Nicholas Crafts / University of Warwick and CAGE
A Vision of the Growth Process in a Technologically Progressive Economy: the United States, 1899-1941