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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Eindhoven History Lab
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TZID:UTC
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DTSTART:20220101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20251009T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20251011T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20240924T160126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240924T160126Z
UID:5806-1759996800-1760202000@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:SHOT 2025 Conference
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 SHOT Annual Meeting takes place at the Belval Campus of the University of Luxembourg in the second week of September. Meeting dates are 9-11 October 2025. \nThe meeting will be hosted by the Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH).
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/shot-2025-conference/
LOCATION:Luxembourg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250629
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250706
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20231220T105101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231220T105520Z
UID:5629-1751155200-1751759999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:PEOPLES\, PLACES\, EXCHANGES\, CIRCULATION: 27th International Congress of History of Science and Technology
DESCRIPTION:From June 29 to July 5\, the ICHST will host its 27th congress in Ōtepoti Dunedin\, New Zealand. \nThe theme of the 27th ICHST is “Peoples\, Places\, Exchanges\, and Circulation.” \nFor more information\, key dates and to download your symposia proposal template\, please visit the congress website
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/27th-international-congress-of-history-of-science-and-technology/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20250115T124000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20250115T132000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20241001T081837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241001T081837Z
UID:5826-1736944800-1736947200@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:STUDIUM GENERALE HoT lectures: Daniel Barber on AFTER COMFORT
DESCRIPTION:Daniel Barber\, the new TUE professor of architectural history and theory\, has kindly accepted to give an SG lecture on AFTER COMFORT. DESIGN BEFORE AIRCONDITIONING (link 1; link2). The event is scheduled for 15 January 2025.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/studium-generale-hot-lectures-daniel-barber-on-after-comfort/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20241206
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20241207
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20241029T105339Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241111T092354Z
UID:5854-1733443200-1733529599@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Kick-off Dutch interuniversity History of Technology Center
DESCRIPTION:We hereby cordially invite you to the kick-off event of the new 4TU Centre History of Technology on Friday 6 December 2024 in the old main post-office (currently Neude Public Library) in Utrecht. \nThe theme of the event is Environmental Histories of Technology in a Digital Age. We aim to identify and explore resonances\, joint concerns\, possible synergies and identify opportunities to collaborate in research\, teaching and engagement; and to discuss how the new interuniversity centre can stimulate and facilitate these. \nInterested in participating in the event? Then please register for the event here. \n\nKick-off event ‘Environmental Histories of Technology in a Digital Age’\nVenue\nNeude Library – Neude 11\, 3512 AE Utrecht \nTentative program\n10:00-10:15:\nWelcome coffee/tea \n10:15– 10:45:\nIntroduction & Opening \n10:45 – 12:00:\nSession 1: Building the Centre with PhDs and Postdocs\nDuring this session\, PhDs and postdocs will pitch their work\, followed by a discussion on the themes and questions that should be(come) part of the Centre’s agenda.  \n12:00 – 13:00:\nLunch \n13:00 – 14:15:\nSession 2: Building the Centre within and beyond Academia: next steps for the Global Sustainability Pasts—Presents—Futures agenda\nRoundtable. Confirmed panelists: Carola Hein (TU-Delft)\, Andreas Weber (University of Twente)\, Harro Maat (Wageningen University & Research)\, Carianne van Dorst (Nederlands Openluchtmuseum)\, Abel Streefland (TU-Delft)\, Vincent Lagendijk (Rathenau Institute. Maastricht University). \n14:15 – 14:45:\nCoffee break \n14:45 – 16:15:\nSession 3: Building the Centre together with everyone in the room: research\, education and engagement\nWorld café setup with 5-8 themes\, 2 rounds. \n16:15-16:30\nClosing words \n16:30-17:00\nDrinks \nBecome part of this evolving new scientific community and join us 6 December 2024! \nREGISTER NOW \n  \nErik van der Vleuten (Scientific Director) \nJan Korsten (Managing Director)
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/kick-off-4tu-center-environmental-histories-of-technology-in-a-digital-age/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241105T105401
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241105T105401
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20241105T105401Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241105T105401Z
UID:5865-1730804041-1730804041@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Tensions of Europe 12th biennial conference in NL!
DESCRIPTION:During the 11th biennial Tensions of Europe Conference in Frankfurt O. last September\, we could announce with pleasure that we will host the next conference in the Netherlands. \nMore info will follow.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/tensions-of-europe-12th-biennial-conference-in-nl/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241016T124000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241016T132000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20241001T080435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241001T080646Z
UID:5818-1729082400-1729084800@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:STUDIUM GENERALE HoT lectures: Ruth Oldenziel on CYCLING CITIES
DESCRIPTION:At October 16\, Ruth Oldenziel will give a lecture at Studium Generale\, TUE. \nMore info: \n Link \n\n\n\nFrom the SG website:\nCycling Cities\n\nProf. dr. Ruth Oldenziel\nWoensdag 16 oktober \, 12:40 – 13:20\nBlauwe Zaal\, Auditorium\nPrijs: Gratis (Student)Gratis (Anderen)\n\nBestellen\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCycling is second nature to everyone who grew up in the Netherlands. But a cycling culture is not unique to our country! From Africa to North America\, this lecture will take you on a global journey to explore what makes cycling thrive in some cities and not in others. \n\n\nWith more than 35\,000 kilometers of fully segregated bicycle lanes\, the Netherlands is renowned for its bicycle-friendly infrastructure and culture. There are more bicycles than people in the country. This mode of transportation has a significant impact on our economy\, health and environment. \nIt wasn’t always like this\, and many factors have contributed to the success of Dutch cycling. The research project Cycling Cities looks at 100 years of cycling policy and practice around the world. Why have some cities become true cycling cities and others not? It traces how policymakers\, engineers\, cyclists\, and community groups have made a difference since the early twentieth century. Innovation in non-motorized mobility is key\, and in some cities it is abundant. Ruth Oldenziel discusses how smart cycling innovations in different parts of the world are leading to improved urban mobility and more resilient and livable urban regions. \nProf. dr. Ruth Oldenziel is a Professor for The History of Technology at TU/e and is particularly interested in the relationship between Europe and the United States. Her research focuses on the mutual shaping and exchanging of technological knowledge and practices between Europe and the United States in a transnational context. She has extensively researched the integration of cycling into urban planning and its societal impacts. She directs a research program on Sustainable Urban Mobility since the 1850s (SUM) and is program leader of Cycling Cities: The Global Experience (CC) research project – involving 50 cities in 25 countries. In 2025\, a new publication Cycling Cities: The African Experience will be released. \nTicket reservation recommended\nTo be assured of a seat\, we recommend reserving a ticket (black “order” button). \nSG & USE/ITEC registration \nPlease register for SG & USE/ITEC by scanning your student ID at the venue prior to the start of the program. \nMore information about SG & USE/ITEC can be found here.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/sg-lecture-ruth-oldenziel-cycling-cities/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240924
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240925
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20240924T155745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240924T155745Z
UID:5802-1727136000-1727222399@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:ToE12 biennial conference
DESCRIPTION:The 2026 conference of the European interdisciplinary history of technology network Tensions of Europe will be organized by us. More info will follow.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/toe12-biennial-conference/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240921
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240924
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220705T132539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231107T110036Z
UID:5313-1726876800-1727135999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:TRANSFORMATIONS 11th Tensions of Europe Conference (Frankfurt Oder/ Poznan\, 19-21 September 2024)
DESCRIPTION:CfP \nConference website \nWe live in a world of constant change. There are periods\, however\, of accelerated change in the political\, economic\, social or technological sphere. Usually\, these spheres are closely interrelated and entangled. If this change is of fundamental character\, scientists usually speak of ´transformations´. Common examples are the political and economic system changes\, i.e. transformations\, in Latin America\, Southern Europe or Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) in the past decades. \nThe aim of the conference is to shed light on technological\, but also political\, societal and environmental sides of these transformations in Europe and other regions in past and present. Technology can be a major factor to enhance\, slow down or ease such transformations. Processes of circulation and appropriation of knowledge\, ideas and artefacts provide a broad field of research to better understand aspects of political\, societal or environmental transformations in connection with technology. Special attention can be paid to the following themes: (1) technologies as a driver of political\, societal or environmental changes or as an obstacle\, (2) technological “revolutions”\, transitions and “transformations” and their impact on politics\, societies and environment\, (3) discourses on (technological) changes\, especially with regard to sustainability. \nAs a part of the conference\, there will be held a summer school for early career scholars in the days before the conference. Besides of discussing texts relevant for the current topic\, meetings with established researchers as well as an excursion is planned. \nWe welcome contributions on topics related to these themes as well as on general themes in the history of technology and neighbouring fields of interest to the Tensions of Europe network such as trans-border flows\, common resources\, conflicting interests\, hidden integration and cultural practices. \nThe format of proposals should be as follows: \n\nProposals for whole panels in traditional or alternative formats (panel title\, theme description with max. 300 words\, abstracts of papers with max. 150 words each\, name\, affiliation\, short biography of participants) (pdf-format)\nProposals for individual papers (title\, abstract\, affiliation\, short biography of applicant)\nProposals for contributions to a “My PhD in 10 minutes” session (abstract\, affiliation\, short biography)\n\nPlease name your file with your surname. Beside of traditional panel-sessions with a number of papers and a commentator\, we also encourage different formats and new ideas. The programme committee will not prioritize between formats if the suggestions promise constructive\, stimulating and engaging discussion. \nThe organisers invite applicants to submit proposals by the end of November 2023 to toe24@europa-uni.de. We will inform applicants by 1 March 2024 whether their contribution has been accepted. There will be available a limited number of reduced participation fees. \nThe Tensions of Europe Conference is organised biennially by an interdisciplinary community of scholars who study the historical shaping of Europe through the lens of technology and material culture. We encourage constructive interactions between historians of technology and scholars from all other fields of the humanities and social sciences. \nThe 11th Tensions of Europe Conference will be organized by the Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies (https://www.zip.europa-uni.de/en/index.html) and the European New School of Digital Studies (https://europeannewschool.eu/). Both are part of the European University Viadrina\, which is located in Frankfurt/Oder – a town and region marked by fundamental political\, economic and social changes in previous decades and centuries. \nWelcome to Frankfurt (Oder) in September 2024! \nThe programme committee (Dagmara Jajeśniak-Quast\, Jan-Hendrik Passoth\, Susanne Orth\, Falk Flade) \nCfP ToE24
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/11th-tensions-of-europe-conference-transformations-frankfurt-oder-poznan-2024/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240913
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240914
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20240630T163538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240630T163555Z
UID:5744-1726185600-1726271999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Inaugural lecture prof. dr. Anique Hommels (Maastricht University)
DESCRIPTION:On September 13 2024\, Anique Hommels will accept the Foundation SHT special chair in “Sociohistorical Technology Studies with a focus on Urban Sustainable Sociotechnical Transformations” at the Faculteit der Cultuur- en Maatschappijwetenschappen (FASoS) of Maastricht University.  \nThe title of the lecture: “Transforming Cities in Times of Turmoil – Obduracy\, Sustainability and Experimentation”.   \nWatch online     
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/inaugural-lecture-prof-dr-anique-hommels-maastricht-university/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240819
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240824
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20240630T152634Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240630T152658Z
UID:5735-1724025600-1724457599@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:World Congress of Environmental History 2024 in Oulu
DESCRIPTION:From 19 to 23 August\, the World Congress of Environmental History will be held at the University of Oulu. The conference theme is “Transitions\, Transformations and Transdisciplinarity: Histories beyond History”\, emphasizing both the arc of time and the importance of bringing diverse approaches to bear on contemporary problems. WCEH2024 will illuminate the value of historical understandings that go far beyond the discipline of history in treating environmental scholarship as an evolving practice\, one that is created in conversation across multiple fields\, concerns\, and communities – and one that can help strategize the core challenges of transitions that lie ahead. \nSeveral EHL staff will participate (Veraart\, van der Staeten\, da Silva\, van der Vleuten\, Kreysel). \nConference website: https://wceh2024.com/
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/world-congress-of-environmental-history-2024-in-oulu/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240716
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240720
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20231031T091138Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231031T091138Z
UID:5601-1721088000-1721433599@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Joint meeting EASST-4S 2024
DESCRIPTION:The 11th quadrennial joint meeting of the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST) and the Society for Social Studies of Science (4S) takes place in the Netherlands. It is  is hosted by the Athena Institute at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU)\, with witch the EHL collaborates e.g. in the Soy Stories project.  STS research at Athena aims to contribute to transformative change through involvements in addressing complex societal challenges and by studying and designing science-society interfaces. \nConference website
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/joint-meeting-easst-4s-2024/
LOCATION:Amsterdam
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240704
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240719
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20230903T161807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231107T105621Z
UID:5584-1720051200-1721347199@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:REPARANDO: Joint SHOT/ ICOHTEC annual conference in Santiago de Chile
DESCRIPTION:EHL and SHT will participate in and co-organize the joint annual conference of the Society for History of Technology SHOT and The International Committee for the History of Technology ICOHTEC in Viña del Mar (near Santiago de Chile) on July 8-14\, 2024. This will the first time that either society meets on the South American continent. \nRead the CfP \nMore info: \nReparando / Repair in the History of Technology\nThe technological environments we inhabit require continual repair and maintenance in order to function. Yet the people on whom such repairs rely—along with their knowledge and labor—too often remain unseen and undervalued\, becoming visible only in cases of infrastructural breakdown or spectacular disaster. The routine invisibility of repair facilitates grand proclamations of technological solutionism\, distracting from the requirements for living equitably in an increasingly fragmented and fragile world. \nHow does our understanding of the history of technology change when we center repair and maintenance?  Such a shift involves highlighting users and experiential knowledge. It opens up conceptions of what counts as technological knowledge and who counts as technological actors. Such themes have lurked in our field for some time\, mounting in scale and significance over the last decade. Repair is now part of our vocabulary\, here to stay. The time has come to make it the thematic core of our annual meeting. The first joint conference between ICOHTEC and SHOT in three decades\, to be held bilingually in Viña del Mar\, Chile\, provides the ideal place for doing so. \nReparando—the gerund of repair in Spanish—holds a special place in the history of Chile\, a nation at the intersection of several tectonic plates. Chileans accept seismic activity as part of everyday life\, remaining unfazed by mild earthquakes. Of course\, the stronger earthquakes are deeply disruptive\, destroying cities and communities. In 1960\, the deadliest earthquake registered in human history (magnitude 9.5) struck the southern region of Valdivia. Accompanied by a tsunami\, the Great Chilean Earthquake destroyed livelihoods and property\, and took thousands of lives. This destruction required not just concrete infrastructural repair\, but also social and emotional repair for traumatized victims. The Chilean experience highlights the need to approach repair as a practice of human and technological resilience\, in which cooperation and compassion are as essential as material rebuilding and fixing. \nThis is the context in which we invite a critical appraisal of the concept\, strategies\, and philosophies of repair. How does repair/reparando sustain our built environment and our daily lives? How can we think through brokenness\, restoration\, and care? What and who counts as “normal\,” and how does that affect our infrastructures? How do people excluded from infrastructural benefits use rebuilding\, repurposing\, adjusting\, and reparando as navigational strategies? How do discussions about repair and repurposing reflect social\, political\, and cultural dynamics? What does reparando look like at different scales\, from the individual to the planetary? And how can focusing on these themes open a discussion of what requires repair in our own field of the history of technology – and what methodologies and approaches are needed to enact that repair? \nTopics and themes of special interest to the program committee include (but are not limited to): \n\nThe ethics\, aesthetics\, and politics of repair\nAdjusting\, tinkering\, hacking – tactics for times of scarcity\nInvisible labor in science and technology\nGeographies of repair and care\, from the local to the planetary\nThe role of technology in environmental and climate (in)justice\nAbleism\, disability\, and crip epistemologies in technology studies\nIndigenous lands\, indigenous knowledge\nQueering the history of technology\nTechnologies of care and healing\nLocal cultures of repair\, repurposing\, and recycling\nIntersections of repair\, design\, and engineering\nNormies and Others in technological history\nThe technological dimensions and aftermaths of disasters\, emergencies\, and crises\nReckoning with colonial pasts and imagining decolonial futures\nRepairing the history of technology: methodological and epistemic strategies for the future of the discipline\nThe role of conservation\, preservation\, and archives in understanding the past and repairing the field
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/joint-shot-icohtec-annual-conference-in-santiago-de-chile/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240623
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20230905T132435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230905T132445Z
UID:5586-1718928000-1719100799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:10th GEWINA Woudschoten conference
DESCRIPTION:The 10th Gewina’s Woudschoten conference will be organized 21-22 June 2024 from Rotterdam (medical history group from Erasmus MC and historians of the EUR). Conference theme: ‘Ecology & Economy: History of Knowledge during the Unequal Anthropocene’.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/10th-gewina-woudschoten-conference/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231025
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231030
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20230302T132729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230302T132843Z
UID:5509-1698192000-1698623999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:CONFERENCE SHOT Annual Meeting (Long Beach CA\, 25-29 October 2023)
DESCRIPTION:This year\, our SHOT secretariat will again co-organize the annual meeting of the Society for the History Of Technology. \nCfP: \nFor the 2023 Annual Meeting\, the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT) will convene at the historic meeting place of land\, sea\, wetlands\, and built worlds that is Long Beach\, California. Shaped by histories of dispossession\, extraction\, and pollution\, as well as by innovation\, connection\, and resistance\, the multicultural city of Long Beach offers an ideal site to explore technological pasts\, presents\, and futures from local\, regional\, and thematic perspectives. \nOur Society invites participants to explore any theme related to histories of technology around the world. As it aims to foster more diverse and inclusive communities\, the Society has decided not to propose a specific conference theme but rather invites submissions of panels and papers that explore anew what has traditionally been centered or overlooked in discussions about the relationship between technology and power. This includes any disciplinary approach to technological pasts\, presents\, and futures. \nAs SHOT continues to explore the future of annual meetings for a society with a widely international membership and commitment to accessibility\, the conference will include hybrid participation options for both panelists and audiences. The proposal submission form includes the option to designate proposals as hybrid sessions\, which might include pre-recorded presentations or a combination of both in-person and virtual presentations as supported by available facilities. \nSpecifically\, the program committee invites works that revolve around themes such as: \n\nRace\, including racial bias and racial equity\nMigration\, refugees\, circulation\, and movement\nInternationalization and de-globalization tendencies\nDisability and Accessibility\nNon-Western Cosmographies and Periodizations\nEmpire\, Sovereignty\, and Decolonization\nLabor (formal and informal)\, and women and minorities in the workplace\nUrban and rural economies and their corresponding transformations\nHumble\, Non-Hyped Technologies\nEnvironment\, Sustainability\, and the Blue Humanities – including materialities of growth and de-growth\nIntersections of Gender\, Sexuality\, and Technology\nEnergy and Waste\nGlocal Long Beach – connections between the Southwest U.S. and Latin America (especially Santiago\, Chile\, site of SHOT 2024) and the Trans-Pacific\nTechnological tensions and conflicts\nCommerce\, Infrastructure\, and Development\n\nWe warmly invite scholars with diverse disciplinary backgrounds to join our conversations (including those from Anthropology\, American Studies\, Black/African-American Studies\, Communication\, Gender Studies\, Indigenous Studies\, Latin Studies\, Literary Criticism\, Media Studies\, Philosophy\, Political Science\, and Sociology).  We especially encourage scholarship in African\, Asian\, and Latin American Studies. \nSHOT’s program practice consists of prioritizing: a) all underrepresented scholars\, whether based on race\, class\, ethnicity\, religion\, gender identity\, age\, neurodivergence\, disability\, or geographic location; b) junior scholars hoping to enter into or learn from the history of technology. \nThe program committee especially welcomes the submission of non-traditional sessions including work-in-progress sessions\, roundtables\, flash-talks\, unconference sessions\, and interactive workshops. \nIndividuals and groups interested in finding others to join an organized session may propose an open session proposal that will be posted on the SHOT-website. Scholars interested in joining one of these sessions are encouraged to contact the organizers as soon as possible. The earlier an open session proposal is sent to SHOT\, the earlier it will be posted on the website. Please make sure to leave sufficient time to enable interested scholars to respond\, and for the organizers to prepare and submit a fully formed session proposal. \nParticipation is generally limited to one paper presentation and two additional roles\, except by invitation of the SHOT program committee and/or SHOT officers. \nSHOT Program Committee\nJethron Akallah (Chair)\, Josh Grace (Associate Chair)\, Bess Williamson\, Diana Montaño\, Itty Abraham \n 
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/shot-annual-meeting-long-beach-ca-25-29-october-2023/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230928
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230930
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20230908T145650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230908T145804Z
UID:5588-1695859200-1696031999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:CONFERENCE: Les historiographies nationales des techniques. Au cœur de l’épistémologie en histoire globale des techniques
DESCRIPTION:EHV’s Erik van der Vleuten will present the opening keynote. \nConference program link
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/conference-les-historiographies-nationales-des-techniques-au-coeur-de-lepistemologie-en-histoire-globale-des-techniques/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230822T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230826T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20221017T104920Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221017T104958Z
UID:5404-1692691200-1693069200@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:CONFERENCE 12th Biennial European Society for Environmental History Conference
DESCRIPTION:The 12th Biennial European Society for Environmental History Conference (Bern\, August 22-26\, 2023) will have as its conference theme: Mountains and Plains: Past\, present and future environmental and climatic entanglements \nConference website: https://www.eseh2023.unibe.ch/conference/
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/12th-biennial-european-society-for-environmental-history-conference-bern-august-22-26-2023/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230814
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230819
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20221130T161603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221130T161603Z
UID:5443-1691971200-1692403199@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:ICOHTEC 50th Conference in Estonia\, August 14-18\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:ICOHTEC’s 50th Conference will be organized in Estonia at August 14-18\, 2023 \nTopic: INTERDEPENDENCIES. FROM LOCAL MICROSTORIES TO GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE\nHISTORY OF TECHNOLOGY \nCall for Papers (deadline for submissions is 15th January 2023) \nMore information: Please check the ICOHTEC site
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/icohtec-50th-conference-in-estonia-august-14-18-2023/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230608T104500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230608T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20230525T171451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230525T171646Z
UID:5544-1686221100-1686227400@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Seminar with Ginevra Sanvitale
DESCRIPTION:From chicken fiat to chicken nuggets. Notes on gender\, technology and poultry processing in 20th century Italy (1920s-1990s) \nResearch Seminar – Eindhoven History Lab (Atlas 9320) \nJune 8th 2023\, 10:45-12:00 \n  \n10:45-10:50 \nIntroduction. Erik van der Vleuten\, Eindhoven History Lab \n  \n10:50-11:10 \nFrom chicken fiat to chicken nuggets. Notes on gender\, technology and poultry processing in 20th century Italy (1920s-1990s). Ginevra Sanvitale\, Postdoctoral Research Fellow\, Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities\, Trinity College Dublin \n  \nPoultry meat is one of the main sources of animal protein in human diets worldwide. Historically\, female labor has been crucial in poultry farming and processing. I discuss the interconnected histories of women and poultry in 20th century Italy\, focusing on the technologies which enabled or facilitated this relationship\, from the “rationalisation” of rural poultry farming under the fascist regime to the rise of a large scale poultry processing industry from the 1960s onward. I look at these technology-enabled encounters between women and chickens from three intersecting domains of feminist food studies: the material\, the socio-cultural\, and the corporeal (Allen and Sachs 2007). \n  \n11:10-12:00 \nFollow the chicken. Looking for non-human animals in the history of technology. Informal discussion. \n  \nSeveral non-human animals inhabit the history of technology. Some have a destructive effect on technology\, such as the metaphorical and actual bugs altering the functioning of computer systems (Kidwell 1998). Other were the reason why technologies were developed or modified: a plough can be dragged by a human or by a horse\, but it will have a different design\, depending on the animal operating it. Non-human animals have also been equated with technologies. For example\, the modern broiler chicken can be envisioned as a “protein machine” designed to transform vegetable calories into animal proteins (Galusky 2022)\, while pigs and sheep under fascist regimes were fundamental “technoscientific organisms” for the maintenance of political power (Saraiva 2016). Mutual dependency relationships between human and non-human animals\, and the techno-scientific advancements facilitating them\, often imply significant transformations of ecosystems\, notably in global agri-food system: intensive animal farming histories are deeply interconnected with soy production histories (van der Vleuten and de Hoop 2022). In other words -or better\, in Donna Haraway’s words: “follow the chicken and find the world”. In this informal discussion we seek to find the many words which have been created\, or could be created\, by past\, present and future interactions between technologies and animals (human and not). Which non-human animals are most impacted by which technologies? How is their perception of these technologies different from that of humans\, e.g. in spatial and temporal terms? Do non-human animals create technologies\, or is it a prerogative of humans? If they do\, what can humans learn from other animals’ technological systems and processes? \n  \n12:00-12:15 \nHistory Lab planning meeting \n  \n  \nBibliography \n  \n\nAllen\, Patricia\, and Carolyn Sachs. ‘Women and Food Chains: The Gendered Politics of Food’. In Taking Food Public: Redefining Foodways in a Changing World\, 23–40. Taylor & Francis\, 2007.\nvan der Vleuten\, Erik\, and Evelien de Hoop. “Crisis narratives from the Dutch Soyacene: Regional sustainability hi/stories at sites of soy consumption.” In The Age of the Soybean.: An Environmental History of Soy During the Great Acceleration\, pp. 265-288. White Horse Press\, 2022.\nGalusky\, Wyatt. Protein Machines\, Technology\, and the Nature of the Future. Springer Nature\, 2022.\nHaraway\, Donna. When species meet. University of Minnesota Press\, 2008.\nKidwell\, Peggy Aldrich. “Stalking the elusive computer bug.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 20\, no. 4 (1998): 5-9.\nSaraiva\, Tiago. Fascist Pigs: Technoscientific Organisms and the History of Fascism. MIT Press\, 2016.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/seminar-with-ginevra-sanvitale/
LOCATION:History lab Atlas 9320
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230119
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230120
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20221123T194416Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221212T123951Z
UID:5432-1674086400-1674172799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:WORKSHOP: Global sustainability pasts/ presents/ futures II
DESCRIPTION:The Foundation SHT & the Eindhoven History lab organize the second workshop on Global sustainability pasts/ presents/ futures at 19 January 2023. Program: TBA
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/workshop-global-sustainability-pasts-presents-futures-ii/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230104
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230109
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220705T132418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220718T112420Z
UID:5308-1672790400-1673222399@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:CONFERENCE Technology and Material Culture in African History (Dar es Salaam)
DESCRIPTION:Technology and Material Culture in African History: Challenges and Potentials for Research and Teaching\nAn international conference\, Dar es Salaam\, Tanzania\, January 4 – 8\, 2023 \nCall for Papers and Roundtables\nThe conference seeks to consolidate and foster the further development of history of technology and material culture in Africa. By gathering scholars from Tanzania and across Africa\, as well as colleagues from other continents\, the conference will demonstrate the discipline’s high degree of relevance—to the research and teaching of history and adjacent fields\, as well as to contemporary political agendas. The organizers wish to use this event to discuss how historians of technology and material culture may contribute to the writing of a “usable past” for further generations.\nThe organizers invite historians\, archaeologists\, anthropologists\, geographers\, sociologists\, and urban scholars to discuss the potentials of interdisciplinary and international collaboration around present intellectual\, social\, technological\, and environmental challenges in Africa and globally. In the recent past\, African countries have increased citizens’ access to up-to-date mobility and communication technologies—electric household items\, mobile phones\, and engine-driven vehicles. As the variety of terms indicates—daladala\, matatu\, tro tros\, bodaboda\, bajaji\, and so on—artifacts are not just simply imported\, but constantly modified to fit local circumstances and needs. By and large\, however\, a historical understanding of these processes of domestication and reinvention is still lacking. That present-day historians of technology do not limit themselves to the study of modern\, Western machines and systems\, but include broader aspects of (pre-colonial\, colonial\, and post-colonial) “material culture\,” also means the discipline plays a central role both in research projects and teaching programs.\nThere have been growing initiatives to integrate Africa into the global history of technology and material culture\, but such efforts rarely focus on issues of teaching. Considering the\n2\nongoing curricular review at African universities\, it is a pressing concern to discuss the potentials of including the history of technology and material culture in Bachelor and Masters programs. The organizers are convinced that the discipline of history needs to include an African perspective and showcase Africa’s contribution to global history of technology and material culture. Therefore\, the conference focuses on policies\, practices\, and use to rethink the historiographic role played by material artifacts and systems. We believe there is a certain urgency in researching\, writing\, and teaching the history of technology and material culture from a truly African perspective. The organizers hope that the workshop will provide important additions to the nationalist and materialist views which have dominated African history research\, writing\, and teaching since independence.\nBy giving participants an opportunity to discuss existing research projects and teaching programs\, the organizers aim at laying the foundation for an international network of historians of technology and material culture in Africa. We thus ask interested teachers and researchers from Africa and beyond to contribute with standard workshop sessions and papers\, roundtable discussions\, and further innovative formats. Proposals may be on any thematic area in history of technology and material culture\, for example:\n– The place of technology and material culture in the teaching of African history\n– The political “usefulness” of technological and material history\n– Gender and material culture in African history\n– Craft technologies (e.g.\, basketry\, carpentry\, weaving\, pottery\, metal working).\n– Farming\, fishing\, and hunting technologies\n– The adoption of material objects (e.g.\, cars\, bicycles\, electronic and domestic appliances)\n– Infrastructure histories (e.g.\, transportation\, water\, power\, sanitation)\n– Repair and maintenance cultures\n– Archaeological evidence\nPlease submit 300-word proposals and one-page CVs to Emanuel L. Mchome at emanuellukio@yahoo.com or Frank Edward at f38edward@yahoo.co.uk.\nno later than August 31\, 2022.\nThis unique event is organized by the History Department at University of Dar es Salaam in collaboration with the ERC-funded research project “A Global History of Technology\, 1850-2000” at the Technical University of Darmstadt in Germany\, the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT)\, and the Foundation for the History of Technology in the Netherlands. The event will take place on site in Dar es Salaam\, Tanzania. Lodging and main meals are provided by the organizers; a one-day excursion is also included. Participants from Africa are invited to apply for travel grants. Selected applicants will be notified Sept. 15\, 2022\, and they will be requested to submit preliminary conference papers (min. 2\,500 words) by Nov. 15\, 2022. Representatives of leading scientific journals will be present at the event.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/conference-technology-and-material-culture-in-african-history/
LOCATION:Dar es Salaam
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221110
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221114
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220401T112734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220718T112208Z
UID:5169-1668038400-1668383999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:SHOT ANNUAL MEETING: Empire\, Globalization\, and Technological Change (New Orleans)
DESCRIPTION:Empire\, Globalization\, and Technological Change\nSHOT Annual Meeting New Orleans\n10-13 November 2022\n\n2022 SHOT Annual Meeting\, 10-13 November\, New Orleans (Louisiana)
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/shot-annual-meeting-new-orleans/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221019T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221019T180000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20221007T130916Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221007T130924Z
UID:5377-1666195200-1666202400@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:PhD defense Ginevra Sanvitale
DESCRIPTION:On 19 October\, Ginevra Sanvitale will defend her PhD thesis Technopolitical Resonance: Emotions\, computers and socialism in Cold War Italy (1965-1990). \nSee the TU/e page (incl. a link to the thesis) here.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/phd-defense-ginevra-sanvitale/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220914
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220917
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220705T131928Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220718T112124Z
UID:5301-1663113600-1663372799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:WORKSHOP Alternative engagements with the soil: ways of knowing\, being and doing in Mozambique (Maputo)
DESCRIPTION: 
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/workshop-alternative-engagements-with-the-soil-ways-of-knowing-being-and-doing-in-mozambique/
LOCATION:Maputo University\, Mozambique
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220629
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220702
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20210818T140116Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210818T140427Z
UID:4705-1656460800-1656719999@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:10th Tensions of Europe Conference: Technology\, Environment and Resources
DESCRIPTION:The 10th Tensions of Europe Conference will have as its main theme the history of interactions between technology\, environment and resources. It aims at exploring connections of factors such as scientific exploration\, technology development\, resource exploitation and use\, resource markets and environmental change by investigating both scientific and technological practices as well as imaginations\, representations and discourses related to natural resources and environmental issues. The conference puts particular emphasis on processes of circulation and appropriation of knowledge\, ideas\, representations\, technologies and resources across space and time in all historical periods and on local\, regional and global scales. \nThe Tensions of Europe conference is organised biennially by an interdisciplinary community of scholars who study the shaping of Europe through the lens of technology and material culture. We welcome fruitful interactions between historians of technology and scholars from all other fields of the humanities and social sciences (https://www.tensionsofeurope.eu). The conference is based on the transnational research network Challenging Europe: Technology\, Environment and the Quest for Resource Security (EurReS\, coordinated at Aarhus University) and the transnational research program Global Resources & Sustainability (GREASE\, coordinated by Eindhoven University of Technology). Both are part of the Tensions of Europe program “Technology & Societal Challenges\, ca. 1800-2050”.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/10th-tensions-of-europe-conference-technology-environment-and-resources/
LOCATION:Aarhus University
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220617
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220619
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20210104T170841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220411T091946Z
UID:4552-1655424000-1655596799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Gewina Woudschoten Conference on Contested Expertise: Trust in Science and Technology
DESCRIPTION:On 17-18 JUNE 2022  Gewina\, the Belgian-Dutch Society for the History of Science and Universities\, will hold its 9th biannual meeting in the Woudschoten Hotel & Conference Centre (Zeist). The theme of this year’s conference is: Contested Expertise: Trust in Science and Technology. EHL’s Erik van der Vleuten is invited as a keynoter. \nThis two-day conference brings together historians of science\, humanities\, medicine\, universities and technology; and all those from other fields with an interest in the history of knowledge.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/9th-gewina-woudschoten-conference-contested-expertise-trust-in-science-and-technology/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220520
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220521
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220321T195100Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220411T091423Z
UID:5083-1653004800-1653091199@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Conference and launch of the Deep Transitions Netherlands Research Program
DESCRIPTION:One-day conference and launch of the Deep Transitions Netherlands Research Program: \nDate: Friday 20 May 2022 \n  \nTHE DEEP TRANSITIONS NETHERLANDS PROJECT\nIn the Deep Transitions in the Netherlands Project\, the Eindhoven History Lab collaborates with researchers from Utrecht and Wageningen Universities to analyze the sociotechnical development of the Netherlands from a long-term perspective\, and to simultaneously develop system transformation investments strategies for policy makers\, industries and investors. \nMore info: see here.  \nEHL contact person: Frank Veraart \nPHASE 1 Seminar schedule\n \n\nOctober 8th 2021: Introduction to The Project\, Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability with Johan Schot (UU) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nNovember 5th 2021: Qualitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Bram Bouwens (UU) & Frank Veraart (TUe)\nDecember 10th 2021: Quantitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Johan Schot (UU) & Gaston Heimeriks (UU)\nJanuary 14th 2022: Interconnections between Systems with Harry Lintsen (TUe) & Erik van der Vleuten (TUe)\nFebruary 11th 2022: Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability Dynamics with Jan-Pieter Smits (TUE/CBS) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nMarch 11th 2022: The Second Deep Transition in the Making with Barbara van Mierlo (WUR) & Laurens Klerkx (WUR)\nMarch 25th 2022: Transformative Investing in the Netherlands with Johan Schot (UU) & Bram Bouwens (UU)\n\nThe Deep Transitions Netherlands Project has been supported by Dasym Investment Strategies and the Utrecht University\, TU Eindhoven\, WUR and UMC Strategic Alliance.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/one-day-conference-and-launch-of-the-deep-transitions-netherlands-research-program/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220406T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220615T000000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220330T072945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220330T084357Z
UID:5134-1649203200-1655251200@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Online seminar series: Global Matters III: Non-Eurocentric Histories and Futures of Technology and Sustainability
DESCRIPTION:On Wednesday April 6\, we kick off a short series of online discussion seminar series on Global Matters III: Non-Eurocentric Histories and Futures of Technology and Sustainability. The series will run from April to June 2022\, leading up to our stringed sessions at the 10th Tensions of Europe Conference in Aarhus. \nAnimesh Chatterjee (TU Darmstadt)\, Jonas van der Straeten\, Erik van der Vleuten (organizers) \n  \n 
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/online-seminar-series-global-matters-iii-non-eurocentric-histories-and-futures-of-technology-and-sustainability/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220325T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220325T143000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220321T194541Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T201620Z
UID:5078-1648213200-1648218600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Deep Transitions Netherlands Project Seminar 7: Transformative investment
DESCRIPTION:Organizers: Johan Schot (Centre for Global Challenges\, Utrecht University) and Sjoerd Bakker (Dasym) \n13:00 – 14:30\nLocation: Zoom\nAbstract\nThe final seminar in the series Deep Transitions in the Netherlands focuses on transformative investing. The financial world plays an important role in transforming human societies. But how can public and private investors best be mobilized to contribute to a sustainable future? This seminar addresses the role of the financial world and the investment strategies that promote a transformative change towards a more sustainable and inclusive organisation of socio-technical systems. During the seminar we would like to explore the idea of transformative investing in more detail. What new strategies are needed and how can public and private investors shape and accelerate the Second Deep Transition through transformative investment? What value and relevance has scientific research in this process? The vision and methods of the research-driven investment company Dasym will be explained and discussed.\nPlease see attached a paper by Jack Davies and Ed Steinmueller\, ‘Regime Transformative Investing’ that will be the starting point of the seminar. This document has been used as a briefing note for Global Deep Transition Investors Panel. For more information see also: The Promise Of Transformative Investment: Mapping The Field Of Sustainability Investing – Deep Transitions \n  \nTHE DEEP TRANSITIONS NETHERLANDS PROJECT\nIn the Deep Transitions in the Netherlands Project\, the Eindhoven History Lab collaborates with researchers from Utrecht and Wageningen Universities to analyze the sociotechnical development of the Netherlands from a long-term perspective\, and to simultaneously develop system transformation investments strategies for policy makers\, industries and investors. \nMore info: see here.  \nEHL contact person: Frank Veraart \nPHASE 1 Seminar schedule\n \n\nOctober 8th 2021: Introduction to The Project\, Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability with Johan Schot (UU) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nNovember 5th 2021: Qualitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Bram Bouwens (UU) & Frank Veraart (TUe)\nDecember 10th 2021: Quantitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Johan Schot (UU) & Gaston Heimeriks (UU)\nJanuary 14th 2022: Interconnections between Systems with Harry Lintsen (TUe) & Erik van der Vleuten (TUe)\nFebruary 11th 2022: Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability Dynamics with Jan-Pieter Smits (TUE/CBS) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nMarch 11th 2022: The Second Deep Transition in the Making with Barbara van Mierlo (WUR) & Laurens Klerkx (WUR)\nMarch 25th 2022: Transformative Investing in the Netherlands with Johan Schot (UU) & Bram Bouwens (UU)\n\nThe Deep Transitions Netherlands Project has been supported by Dasym Investment Strategies and the Utrecht University\, TU Eindhoven\, WUR and UMC Strategic Alliance.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/deep-transitions-netherlands-project-seminar-transformative-investment/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220311T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220311T143000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220321T194831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T201724Z
UID:5080-1647003600-1647009000@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Deep Transitions Netherlands project seminar 6: Well-being and Deep Transitions
DESCRIPTION:Organizers: Jan Pieter Smits\, Frank Veraart and Harry Lintsen\n(Eindhoven University of Technology and CBS)\nFriday 11 March 2022\, 13:00 – 14:30\nVia Zoom\nAbstract\nThe main question of this seminar is: Deep Transition theory is focused on dynamics but not on impact on sustainability/well-being; how do we gain knowledge on quality of life in the first and second deep transition? The answer: use the CBS Monitor of Well-being as starting point for research.\nWe will first explain the CBS Monitor of Well-being and look at the relation with the UN Sustainable Development Goals. A question of special interest is: how to apply the CBS Monitor of Well-being in historical research? We will further discuss the subject of the trade-offs and synergies: who/what benefits vs. who/what is lost and where. Finally we pose the question: how to apply the CBS monitor Well-being in relation to Deep Transitions in the Netherlands? For this we will propose four research strategies. \n  \nTHE DEEP TRANSITIONS NETHERLANDS PROJECT\nIn the Deep Transitions in the Netherlands Project\, the Eindhoven History Lab collaborates with researchers from Utrecht and Wageningen Universities to analyze the sociotechnical development of the Netherlands from a long-term perspective\, and to simultaneously develop system transformation investments strategies for policy makers\, industries and investors. \nMore info: see here.  \nEHL contact person: Frank Veraart \nPHASE 1 Seminar schedule\n \n\nOctober 8th 2021: Introduction to The Project\, Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability with Johan Schot (UU) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nNovember 5th 2021: Qualitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Bram Bouwens (UU) & Frank Veraart (TUe)\nDecember 10th 2021: Quantitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Johan Schot (UU) & Gaston Heimeriks (UU)\nJanuary 14th 2022: Interconnections between Systems with Harry Lintsen (TUe) & Erik van der Vleuten (TUe)\nFebruary 11th 2022: Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability Dynamics with Jan-Pieter Smits (TUE/CBS) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nMarch 11th 2022: The Second Deep Transition in the Making with Barbara van Mierlo (WUR) & Laurens Klerkx (WUR)\nMarch 25th 2022: Transformative Investing in the Netherlands with Johan Schot (UU) & Bram Bouwens (UU)\n\nThe Deep Transitions Netherlands Project has been supported by Dasym Investment Strategies and the Utrecht University\, TU Eindhoven\, WUR and UMC Strategic Alliance.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/deep-transitions-netherlands-project-seminar-well-being-and-deep-transitions/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220114T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20220114T143000
DTSTAMP:20260417T030811
CREATED:20220321T195654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T201437Z
UID:5086-1642165200-1642170600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Deep Transitions Netherlands Project Seminar 4:  Meta-rule dynamics and Interconnections between Systems
DESCRIPTION:Organizers:Erik van der Vleuten and Harry Lintsen (TUE) \nFriday January 14th 2022 \nZoom Meeting \nAbstract: \nIndustrial societies are constituted by a broad range of socio-technical systems fulfilling functions such as the provision of energy\, food\, mobility\, housing\, healthcare\, finance and communications. The Deep Transitions (DT) framework outlines a series of propositions on how the 250-year multi-system co-evolution has contributed to several current social and ecological crises. Drawing on evolutionary theories\, the DT framework places a special emphasis on the concepts of ‘rules’ and ‘meta-rules’ as coordination mechanisms within and across socio-technical systems\, respectively. \nIn this workshop\, we aim to collectively explore how to investigate the dynamics of meta-rules as coordination mechanisms within and across socio-technical systems. What major knowledge questions emerge? What meta-rule transfer mechanisms\, processes\, arena’s and subversions can we exploratively identify? How can one meaningfully research these in a follow-up research program? \nPlease contact Louisa King vifor further information about the seminar practicalities\, or Stephanie Begemann s\, Bram Bouwens  or Frank Veraart for more details of the Deep Transitions Netherlands project. \n  \nTHE DEEP TRANSITIONS NETHERLANDS PROJECT\nIn the Deep Transitions in the Netherlands Project\, the Eindhoven History Lab collaborates with researchers from Utrecht and Wageningen Universities to analyze the sociotechnical development of the Netherlands from a long-term perspective\, and to simultaneously develop system transformation investments strategies for policy makers\, industries and investors. \nMore info: see here.  \nEHL contact person: Frank Veraart \nPHASE 1 Seminar schedule\n \n\nOctober 8th 2021: Introduction to The Project\, Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability with Johan Schot (UU) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nNovember 5th 2021: Qualitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Bram Bouwens (UU) & Frank Veraart (TUe)\nDecember 10th 2021: Quantitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems with Johan Schot (UU) & Gaston Heimeriks (UU)\nJanuary 14th 2022: Interconnections between Systems with Harry Lintsen (TUe) & Erik van der Vleuten (TUe)\nFebruary 11th 2022: Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability Dynamics with Jan-Pieter Smits (TUE/CBS) & Harry Lintsen (TUe)\nMarch 11th 2022: The Second Deep Transition in the Making with Barbara van Mierlo (WUR) & Laurens Klerkx (WUR)\nMarch 25th 2022: Transformative Investing in the Netherlands with Johan Schot (UU) & Bram Bouwens (UU)\n\nThe Deep Transitions Netherlands Project has been supported by Dasym Investment Strategies and the Utrecht University\, TU Eindhoven\, WUR and UMC Strategic Alliance.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/deep-transitions-netherlands-project-seminar-meta-rule-dynamics/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR