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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
Paul Pierson
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