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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Eindhoven History Lab
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TZID:Europe/Amsterdam
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220617
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220619
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
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:20260417T144658
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:20260417T144658
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:20260417T144658
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:20260417T144658
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:20260417T144658
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
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211210T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211210T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210920T124629Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211112T144107Z
UID:4808-1639152000-1639152000@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:PhD defense Patrick Bek: "No Bicycle\, No Bus\, No Job: The Making of Workers’ Mobility in the Netherlands\, 1920-1990"
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/phd-defense-patrick-bek/
LOCATION:Atlas 0.710
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211210T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211210T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20220321T201948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T202735Z
UID:5097-1639123200-1639155600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:﻿Deep Transitions Netherlands Project Seminar 3: Quantitatively Researching Meta-rules and Systems
DESCRIPTION:Gaston Heimeriks and Johan Schot (Utrecht University)\nFriday 10 December 2021\, 13:00 – 14:30\nLink to Zoom 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. In this workshop\, we aim to discuss possible mixed-method approaches and data sources to provide an empirical assessment of the propositions of the DT framework. \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/%ef%bb%bfdeep-transitions-netherlands-project-seminar-3-quantitatively-researching-meta-rules-and-systems/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211118
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211122
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210104T171330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210323T095619Z
UID:4555-1637193600-1637539199@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Joint SHOT-HSS Annual Meeting
DESCRIPTION:18-21 November 2021 the joint SHOT-HSS Annual Meeting will take place in New Orleans (Louisiana). \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSociety for the History of Technology  \nAnnual Meeting \nNew Orleans\, 19-21 N0vember 2021\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \nDear SHOT Members and contacts\, \nThe SHOT Program Committee is pleased to issue the Call for Papers and Sessions for the SHOT 2021 Annual Meeting\, to be held 19-21 November\, 2021 in New Orleans\, USA \n  \nLink to full CfP SHOT Annual Meeting New Orleans 2021 \n  \ncontents: \n·    SHOT 2021 Annual Meeting in New Orleans \n·    Conference Theme: Environment\, Infrastructure\, and Social Justice \n·    Session Proposals & Abstract Submission \n·    General Guidelines for submission \n·    Presentation Options & Remote Access during SHOT 2021 NOLA \n·    An Experiment with Hybrid (Live-Streaming) Sessions \n·    Remote Presentation Options \n·    Indicating Your Presentation Preferences \n·    Guidelines for Resubmissions from 2020 \n·    How to Resubmit Organized Sessions and Roundtables \n·    How to Resubmit Your Contributed Paper \n  \nNote from SHOT-Secretariat: participation in the SHOT meeting in any form requires SHOT membership and registration for the SHOT meeting. You can join SHOT here\, or when registering for the meeting (registration will open at about 2 months prior to the meeting).\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSociety for the History of Technology Call For Papers\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDear Colleagues\, \n  \nThe SHOT Program Committee is pleased to issue the Call for Papers and Sessions for the SHOT 2021 Annual Meeting to be held 18-21 November 2021\, in New Orleans. This will be a joint meeting with the History of Science Society . The current plan is for the conference to be held in-person in New Orleans\, but with support for a limited number of Hybrid Sessions (live\, online streaming) and an option for Remote Presentations in light of COVID-19 as well as SHOT’s effort to expand access and promote further internationalization (see details below). \n  \nWe are preserving the theme of the 2020 SHOT Annual Meeting\, “Environment\, Infrastructure\, and Social Justice” with particular attention to the role of race and anti-Black racism in history. The Committee also invites paper and session proposals on any topic in a broadly defined history of technology\, including topics that push the boundaries of the field. \n  \nSHOT is an interdisciplinary and international community of scholars. We meet to share research on the historical interaction of technology and culture across time and across the globe. We define “technology” to include both the very new—machine learning and social media—and the very old—irrigation systems and temple architectures. Our definition of technologist includes not just engineers\, but also consumers\, maintainers\, and makers. We welcome scholarship that examines the role of race\, class\, gender\, disability\, and other forms of identity and difference in shaping both technology and social relationships. \n  \nSHOT is committed to diversity. In addition to intellectual quality\, we warmly welcome session proposals that reflect diversity in their line-up of speakers\, in particular with regard to career level\, gender\, ethnicity\, race\, and geography. The Program Committee will prioritize proposals that make a conscious effort to increase diversity\, both of topics and of presenters. Therefore\, SHOT seeks proposals that are diverse in terms of temporal or geographic foci\, proposals that include one or more women and/or underrepresented minorities (especially BIPOC)\, and proposals that include speakers at different professional stages\, with different institutional affiliations and/or different nationalities and geographies. \n  \nSHOT and its Program Committee look forward to a vigorous\, enthusiastic\, and intellectually stimulating annual meeting in New Orleans! \n  \nSHOT Program Committee – Joseph November (Chair)\, Atsushi Akera\, and Yulia Frumer \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSHOT 2021 Annual Meeting in New Orleans \n  \nNew Orleans. The name alone conjures a host of images: multicultural food\, magnificent architecture\, distinct music and dialects\, and devastating hurricanes. For some\, New Orleans is the most European of U.S. cities. For others\, it is the northernmost Caribbean port. In the complex and often tragic history of race relations in the United States\, the city holds a distinctive place: location of the largest slave market of pre-Civil War America; birthplace of jazz; and\, most recently\, exemplar for the human costs of environmental inequality and racialized vulnerability to disaster. \n  \nNicknamed the Crescent City because of its unique geography—the Mississippi River curves deeply around its urbanized core—New Orleans has long been a vital commercial center for both domestic and global trade. A long history of infrastructural interventions needed to manage the river for human use is evident throughout the city\, making it a particularly compelling destination for historians of technology. Today\, nearly half of New Orleans exists below sea level. Indeed\, the channelization of the Mississippi River\, coupled with the vast pumping system constructed to drain storm water from the interior bowl created by the levees\, has deprived the landscape of the sediment that a naturally overflowing river provides. The result is an actively sinking city\, despite the injection of billions in federal post-Hurricane Katrina recovery aid. The benefits of this infusion of aid have\, moreover\, been unevenly distributed. New Orleans remains one of the most impoverished metropolitan regions in the United States. \n  \nTo assert that New Orleans has a troubled\, dichotomous history is to state the obvious. And yet the city persists\, a fabled\, hemispheric crossroads with an unmatched joie de vivre. That SHOT and the History of Science Society (HSS) in New Orleans have chosen to jointly host their meetings New Orleans in 2021 (2020 was the 15th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and the 10th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill) is no small matter. This co-mingling of associations offers scholars a splendid opportunity to reflect on the relationship between the environment\, infrastructure\, and social justice at the juncture of science and technology\, and how all of these elements contribute to the ongoing story of New Orleans and to the maintenance of our modern world. To pay tribute to the location of the meeting\, we encourage proposals that relate to a broadly interpreted theme of “Environment\, Infrastructure\, and Social Justice.” \n  \n  \nConference Theme: Environment\, Infrastructure\, and Social Justice \n  \nInfrastructure is an inherently social mode for the modification of natural environments. It is the most basic form of sociotechnical collaboration; it is fundamental to society’s functions; and it is indispensable for other technological developments. Infrastructure requires vision\, planning\, engineering\, management\, and maintenance. It also necessitates considerations of risk and an anticipation of environmental events with potential to seriously impact human lives and nonhuman landscapes. Colloquially described as “natural disasters\,” these events become “disasters” only when infrastructure fails. \n  \nAt the same time\, infrastructure is also a symbol of nationhood and civilization. It is often cited as a justification for conflict\, imperialism\, and displacement. The benefits that it offers and harm that it causes are not distributed equally. Those who are displaced or otherwise affected by new infrastructure projects too often do not experience their benefits. And when infrastructure fails\, the harm often falls disproportionately on those who are already socially and economically disadvantaged. \n  \nWe invite SHOT participants to reflect on these themes from a historical as well as a contemporary perspective\, and with respect to a variety of socio-cultural environments. Among the aspects which deserve discussion are how infrastructure modifies human and natural environments; how risk assessment influences infrastructure planning; how different societies approach infrastructure vis-à-vis other forms of technological development; and how climate change brings about reassessments of infrastructural needs. \n  \n  \nSession Proposals & Abstract Submission \n  \nAn important note for all applicants (including resubmittals of accepted session proposals in 2020): If health/safety conditions force the cancellation of the 2021 meeting\, SHOT has committed to holding the meeting entirely in virtual format. Your commitment to presenting in New Orleans in 2021 should also be viewed as a commitment to present that same material at a virtual version of the conference\, in the event that the 2021 physical meeting is cancelled. If the conference moves online\, session lengths will be shortened from 90 to 60 minutes. \n  \nNote for applicants who have been invited to participate in sessions sponsored by the SHOT Internationalization Committee: Please be sure to indicate on the application form that your session has been sponsored by the SHOT Internationalization Committee. \n  \n  \nFor the 2021 meeting the Program Committee welcomes proposals of these types \n  \nJoint SHOT/HSS sessions: Since this meeting will be held in conjunction with HSS\, it is possible to submit a proposal that speaks to both SHOT and HSS communities\, and which would appear on both programs. When submitting a joint proposal\, indicate this fact in the abstract and make sure to submit an identical proposal through the HSS website. The Program Committees of both societies will evaluate these joint proposals. (The proposal may meet the formatting requirements of either society.) SHOT and HSS plan to stream at least some of the joint sessions. Please indicate whether your panel is interested in being a hybrid session. \n  \nTraditional sessions: Sessions of 3 or 4 papers\, with a chair listed in the session proposal. It is not necessary to have a commentator. However\, if a commentator has a central role in the session\, they will be counted as an additional speaker. Deadline: April 18\, 2021 \n  \nUnconventional sessions: Sessions with formats that diverge in useful ways from traditional sessions. These can include (but are not limited to) roundtables\, discussion panels\, workshop-style sessions with pre-circulated papers\, “you write\, I present” sessions\, and poster sessions. Poster proposals should describe the content and the visual material to be used in the poster. Individuals whose posters are accepted must be available to talk about them in a lunch/evening slot to be decided by the Program Committee. The Program Committee encourages other creative formats to facilitate communication\, dialogue\, and audience involvement. The Program Committee will look favorably on formats that make sessions less hierarchical and reduce the ‘distance’ between audience and author\, and between author and commentator. Deadline: April 18\, 2021. \n  \nOpen sessions: Individuals interested in finding others to join an organized session may propose Open Sessions\, starting March 15\, with a final deadline of April 7. Open Session descriptions\, along with the organizer’s contact information\, will appear on the SHOT website. (The earlier the proposal is sent to SHOT\, the earlier it can be posted to the website.) For individuals who want to join a proposed session from the Open Sessions list\, please contact the organizer for that session\, not the Program Committee. In order to give the session organizer sufficient time to select proposals and assemble a final list of presenters\, the deadline for submitting your paper proposal to the organizer is April 7\, 2021. Open Session organizers will then assemble completed sessions and submit them through SHOT’s online system by April 18\, 2021. \n  \nIndividual papers: Proposals for individual papers will be considered\, but the Program Committee will give preference to pre-organized sessions (traditional\, unconventional\, or completed open sessions). Scholars who might ordinarily propose an individual paper are encouraged to propose Open Sessions themselves or to join an Open Session already listed. Deadline: April 18\, 2021. \n  \n  \nGeneral Guidelines for Submission \n  \nSHOT allows the same speaker to present papers at consecutive meetings but turns down papers that are substantially the same as previously accepted ones. Any submission on the same topic should explain how the new paper differs from the prior presentation. \n  \nMost pre-organized sessions\, if accepted\, will remain as proposed. In select cases\, depending on the quality and coherence of the individual papers\, part of a proposed session may be turned down\, merged into another organized session\, or combined with individual papers to form a new session. If you believe that your session can only work as one single unit\, please specify “all or none” in the abstract. In this case\, the Program Committee may reject the whole session proposal despite the presence of qualified individual papers. \n  \nIndividuals are permitted to take on multiple roles at SHOT\, as well as additional roles at HSS. However\, no individual is to give more than one titled paper or commentary for both societies. Additional presentations in SIGs\, participation in roundtables\, poster sessions\, and other activities for which no title is listed in the SHOT meeting program are allowed; however\, a paper at a graduate student workshop does count as a paper for this purpose. The SHOT Program Committee ensures there are no schedule conflicts between an individual’s various roles on the SHOT program. However\, SHOT and HSS cannot resolve conflicts between papers / commentaries and other roles across societies. In cases when an individual’s presentation or commentary would conflict with additional roles on the other society’s program\, the individual will be asked to forgo the additional role. \n  \nEach session proposal should be accompanied by an abstract that details: 1) the session’s overall theme; 2) each individual presenter’s contribution; 3) the role of a commentator (if any); 4) diversity statement (see above); 5) whether a given proposal desires “all or none”; 6) hybrid session requests and remote participation and/or presenter preferences\, with explanation\, if applicable; and 7) whether any of the presenters are candidates for SHOT’s Robinson Prize. \n  \nIndividual paper proposals should indicate whether the presenter is a Robinson Prize candidate\, and provide their remote participation preferences\, with explanation\, if applicable. \n  \nSpecific instructions related to submission details appear on the SHOT webpage (https://www.historyoftechnology.org/). For joint SHOT/HSS session proposals\, please submit proposals to both SHOT and HSS. For details about HSS proposal submission\, please visit the HSS webpage (https://hssonline.org/). \n  \n  \nPresentation Options & Remote Access during SHOT 2021 NOLA \n  \nWe first note once again that the SHOT physical meeting in New Orleans will be switched entirely to a virtual format if health conditions are deemed to be unsafe. \n  \nAn Experiment with Hybrid (Live-Streaming) Sessions \nSHOT is thinking boldly about how to structure our 2021 meeting to address possible concerns about travel during COVID-19. The Society is also committed to facilitating access and inclusion\, reducing the environmental impact of meetings\, and supporting the ongoing internationalization of our field. Accordingly\, we will be conducting an experiment this year by offering three parallel hybrid (live-streaming) sessions available for remote access. We highlight the following\, and hope to assess our society and its membership’s interest and willingness to lead the way in making our conferences accessible to people around the globe at a fraction of the cost of attending an in-person meeting. We see this as a process every society needs to experiment with\, as climate change and other issues come to the fore. For the 2021 SHOT Annual Conference\, the Program Committee hopes to offer the following: \n  \n●     Live stream of the opening plenary\, keynote\, presidential roundtables\, and other program highlights\, such as the Da Vinci Lectures \n●     Live stream of a number of SHOT-HSS joint sessions (cosponsored with HSS) \n●     Live stream of sessions selected by the Program Committee that are deemed to be of greatest interest to a global/remote audience \n  \nThose participating in a hybrid (live-streaming) session\, including the audience\, will be able to contribute to the Q&A period. All individuals with an assigned role in a hybrid session (presenters\, chairs\, and commentator) will need to register for the conference at the usual registration rates (lower for graduate students\, etc.). \n  \nRemote Presentation Options \n  \nUnder conditions where the conference does meet in New Orleans\, we understand that some potential presenters may remain concerned about COVID-19 exposure; they may also wish to\, or need to participate remotely for other reasons. Accordingly\, in addition to the opportunity to present remotely if selected for a hybrid (live-streaming) session\, presenters may give their papers as a pre-recorded presentation in any session. Those doing so must commit to pre-recording their presentation and sending that file to their session organizer and chair by a deadline before the meeting starts. A session organizer or chair\, in a session where at least one paper will be delivered remotely\, will need to commit to handling the actual screening of this presentation in their session. Sessions for which all presenters plan to deliver their papers remotely must include a session organizer or chair who will be in-person; if you do not have such an individual\, please indicate this on your proposal and if your organized session is accepted\, the Program Committee will work to identify an individual who will be there in person to convene the session.) Remote presenters are also welcome to make arrangements with the session organizer or chair for them to join their session’s Q&A period by phone. Remote presenters will need to register for the conference at the usual registration rates (lower for graduate students\, etc.). \n  \nIndicating Your Presentation Preferences \n  \nIn submitting a session proposal or individual abstract\, organizers and authors should indicate: \n  \n1.    Whether they wish to have their paper/sessions considered for a hybrid (live-streaming) session. \n2.    Whether they intend to participate in person; as a remote presenter only if assigned to a hybrid session; or as a remote presenter regardless of session assignment (You may rank order your preferences\, with the reasons for your preferences\, if applicable.) \n3.    Or if an organized session\, which presenters requests each of these presentation formats. (NOTE: Sessions for which all presenters plan to deliver their papers remotely must include a session organizer or chair who will be in-person; if you do not have such an individual\, please indicate this on your proposal and if your session is accepted\, the Program Committee will work to identify an individual who will be there in person to convene the session.)\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nGuidelines for Resubmissions from 2020 \n  \nWe regret that the 2020 SHOT Annual Meeting could not take place in person as was planned. If your paper or session or roundtable was accepted in spring 2020 for the original fall 2020 meeting and was not part of the Virtual Forum held in October 2020\, then you have the following options. \n  \n  \nHow to Resubmit Organized Sessions and Roundtables \n  \nAll organized sessions as published in our 2020 NOLA Program (https://www.historyoftechnology.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Program-website-version-24-june-2020.pdf) will be given three options to present in 2021. \n  \nOption S1: Roll over your unchanged session proposal \nAs a session or roundtable organizer\, please contact your fellow presenters and ask them whether they wish to make changes to the abstracts of their presentations or to the overall session proposal. If you all agree to present your work as published in the 2020 program\, you may re-submit your unchanged session proposal. In this case\, you will be given priority for a slot if we are able to meet in person. (Participants in re-submitted sessions may choose to present their paper remotely\, and the session may request to be considered for a hybrid live-streamed format – please see above for details.) Resubmitting a panel proposal does not guarantee acceptance\, but does give it priority. \n  \nOption S2: Re-submit your proposal with changes \nAs research develops\, plans and availability change\, and new connections or urgencies emerge\, so option 1 may not seem applicable to your session or roundtable. For example\, you may wish to keep the title and abstract of your proposal the same\, but one or two speakers have withdrawn and been replaced with new speakers. If your proposal differs in these ways from the version accepted to the 2020 program\, please re-submit your session proposal and indicate that a similar proposal was accepted to the 2020 meeting. Resubmitting a panel proposal does not guarantee acceptance\, but does give it priority. \n  \n  \nOption S3: Submit a new session proposal \nOur call for papers will also invite new proposals. Should your ideas or plans for a session change considerably to what you have submitted in 2020 (as published in our 2020 program)\, please submit a new proposal. \n  \nAttention: If you re-submit a joint SHOT-HSS session or roundtable proposal\, please also consult HSS’s guidelines\, as you will have to re-submit your proposal to both societies. \n  \n  \nHow to Resubmit Your Contributed Paper \n  \nOption P1: Re-submit your paper as part of the session as created for the 2020 program \nCreating sessions from contributed papers is the most time-consuming task for program co-chairs when they compose the meeting program. Whether or not your paper is accepted depends on quality but also on whether it fits into a set of four contributions in meaningful ways. The original 2020 program was constructed to highlight interesting conjunctions between individual authors. For this reason\, we kindly ask you to consult the published 2020 program to review how your paper was originally assigned to a session. If you like the way you were grouped together\, please contact the other contributors in your session and see if you would like to re-submit this session as an organized session proposal. In order to do so\, you will need to provide an abstract with an overall framework and name a session chair. For the 2021 meeting\, we will give high priority to sessions re-submitted in this way. (You may choose to present your paper remotely\, and the session may request to be considered for a hybrid live-streamed format – please see Presentation Options & Remote Access for details.) \n  \nOption P2: Find collaborators to form a new organized session \nIf Option P1 does not work for you\, we encourage you to reach out to other colleagues to form a new organized session. This will enable you to deepen your networks and to collectively build a conceptual framework in which to present your work with others. Pre-organized sessions usually draw a bigger and more responsive audience than contributed papers sessions that lack such a common thematically-deep framework. \n  \nIf you decide to re-submit your paper as part of a new organized session\, your proposal will be considered as a new organized session proposal. We cannot guarantee that your session will be accepted in the 2021 program\, but please note that generally\, the acceptance rate of organized sessions is much higher than that of stand-alone papers. \n  \nOption P3: Re-submit your paper as a stand-alone contribution \nYou may of course also re-submit your paper as a stand-alone contribution. In this case\, you will have to re-apply just like anyone else who will submit a new paper proposal. Because the program co-chairs for the 2021 meeting will have to figure out how your paper fits with others to make an engaging session\, we cannot consider your re-submitted contribution with priority even if your paper had been accepted in 2020. (You may choose to apply and indicate that you plan to present your paper remotely – see Presentation Options & Remote Access)
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/joint-shot-hss-annual-meeting/
LOCATION:New Orleans
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211115T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211115T180000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20211111T103654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211112T143427Z
UID:4842-1636993800-1636999200@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Student symposium: Historical Transition Studies
DESCRIPTION:DUE TO THE DUTCH COVID SITUATION\, WE WILL MOVE THIS SYMPOSIUM ONLINE \nTU/e Symposium on Historical Transition Studies \n Location: Atlas 1.65 –> ONLINE\n \n  \nSustainable innovation and transitions are deeply temporal phenomena. Innovation choices of one generation affect the needs of later ones. Sociotechnical transitions too are long-term processes that may take decades to unfold\, sometimes even centuries. And yet\, the bulk of innovation and transition studies research has a ‘here and now’ character. A long-term perspective uncovers many hidden innovation and transition dynamics and conflicts. But how can we produce academic knowledge about this\, and how can academic insights inform current sustainable innovation and transition efforts? \n  \nAt the symposium\, we will discuss diverse academic research approaches to this issue. In doing so\, however\, we will turn the tables. TU/e scholars will profit from the expertise of master’s students who have put different research approaches to a test. In essays for the course 0EM130 Modern societies in transition\, they have engaged in-depth with different concepts and their analytical value and will share their experiences in different thematic panels. Their inputs will also feed into a wider discussion on the potentials and limitations of a field we might tentatively call Historical Transition Studies. \n  \nAgenda \n16:30     Introduction by Erik van der Vleuten \n16:40     Overview of the different groups by the lecturers \n16:55     Short presentations by the students on their essay topics \n17:10     Roundtable discussion: Putting the approach of Historical Transitions Studies to the test. What is its explanatory value\, especially from a global perspective? \n17:40     Concluding Discussion: Why engaging with historical transitions as an engineering student? And to the senior scholars: How to increase the outreach of our discipline within the academic landscape? \n18:00     End and informal get-together in De Zwarte Doos [1] \n[1] Note the definition of the term symposium in Oxford Languages: “1. a conference or meeting to discuss a particular subject. 2. a drinking party or convivial discussion\, especially as held in ancient Greece after a banquet (…).” \n 
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/student-symposium-historical-transition-studies/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211115
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211116
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20211110T120832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211112T143251Z
UID:4829-1636934400-1637020799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Mini-workshop Global History of Technology and Sustainability
DESCRIPTION:DUE TO THE DUTCH COVID SITUATION\, WE WILL MOVE THIS WORKSHOP ONLINE \nOn Monday 15 November 2021\, we will host a small workshop on the Global History of Technology and Sustainability. The workshops explores issues and challenges related to our new research project Global Sustainability: Past–Present–Future\, and draws on the experiences of the Global History of Technology program at TU Darmstadt. Mikael Hård\, Jonas van der Straeten and David Drengk from TU Darmstadt will participate.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/mini-workshop-global-history-of-technology-and-sustainability/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211105T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211105T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20220321T202636Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T202916Z
UID:5103-1636099200-1636131600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Deep Transitions Seminar 2: Qualitatively researching meta-rules and systems Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Bram Bouwens (UU) & Frank Veraart (TUe) \nNovember 5th 2021 \n13.00-14.30 \n  \nAfter the first successful Deep Transitions Netherlands Project Seminar  we are looking forward to continue discussing the Deep Transitions project in the Netherlands with you. The seminar series facilitate the development of a research program on deep transitions in the past and in the future. The seminars are meant to inform\, to discuss and to get your feedback on proposed ideas during the break-out sessions. \nThe second online seminar will take place on November 5th. This seminar will focus on qualitative research methods of socio-technical systems and meta-rules.  The purpose of this seminar is to introduce preliminary ideas on the topic and to start the debate on how we can use historical research to understand the first Deep Transitions\, in order to inform the second Deep Transition in the making. \nThe slides of the seminar and a summary of the conversation topics and other relevant material can be found at the seminar series website. Access to these materials require signing up to the meetings by e-mail to Louisa King \n  \nProgram \n13.00-13.10       Welcome and Introduction to Deep Transitions Program \n13.10-13.30       Deep Transitions in the Netherlands: qualitative research (Bram Bouwens and Frank Veraart \n13.30-13.35       Introduction to Break-out sessions \n13.35-13.55       Break-out session 1 (3 rooms) \n13.55-14.20       Break-out session 1 (3 rooms) \n14.20-14.30       Plenary: summaries and discussion \n14.30                  Closing \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/5103/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211008T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20211008T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20220321T202307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220321T202506Z
UID:5100-1633680000-1633712400@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Deep Transitions project SEMINAR 1: Introduction to the Project\, Deep Transitions\, Wellbeing and Sustainability
DESCRIPTION:Johan Schot (Utrecht University) & Harry Lintsen (Eindhoven University of Technology)\n8th October 2021\n13.00-14.30 \nWe are excited to announce that the first in a series of six seminars on the Deep Transitions Netherlands project will take place on 8 October\, organized within the framework of the Strategic Alliance between Utrecht University\, TU Eindhoven and Wageningen University & Research. The seminars are intended for interested parties to exchange ideas on the design of a research program on sustainability transitions in the Netherlands\, which will be implemented by April 2022.\nAs you have expressed an interest in participating in these seminars\, we hereby provide you with an overview of the content and form of the seminar. This serves as both a reading guide for background literature and an explanation of the seminar format. \nContent – Reading Guide\nThis introductory seminar has three goals; firstly\, we will introduce the Deep Transitions Project and our goals to develop a research agenda. We will then introduce the key theoretical and methodological notions of the program based on Deep Transitions and Wellbeing & Sustainability trade-offs literature. In the third part of the seminar we use break-out sessions to organize knowledge exchange and to stimulate discussion\, which will be employed as an input in building our research agenda. We whole heartedly appreciate your attendance and ideas that you can contribute as part of the discussion.\nThe theory and methodology section of this seminar will incorporate discussion on the connection between notions of Deep Transitions and long-term analyses of wellbeing & sustainability. In short\, Deep Transitions literature employs concepts of socio-technical systems\, landscape\, regime rules/metarules and niche emergence as spaces of innovation to understand and explain how new meta rules emerge\, are implemented and stimulate simultaneous change across multiple socio-technical systems. The literature argues that radical change in multiple systems is required to achieve climate change\, resource neutrality and societal equality goals. In its explanatory framework\, this literature describes shows how the meta rules of the first deep transition\, based on non-renewable resources and fuels\, are the main causes for the current social and ecological challenges. The current framework lacks a coupling towards the impact of deep transitions and how sustainability is operationalized across socio-technical systems however. Long term analyses of wellbeing & sustainability can offer more in-depth information on the development of various aspects of sustainability (climate mitigation\, nature development\, global equality and so forth) and the trade-offs between such elements in time and space. \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-project-seminar-1-introduction-to-the-project-deep-transitions-wellbeing-and-sustainability/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210930T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210930T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210920T124506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210920T132247Z
UID:4804-1633017600-1633017600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:PhD defense Henk-Jan Dekker: "Cycling Pathways: The Politics and Governance of Dutch Cycling Infrastructure\, 1920-2020"
DESCRIPTION:In an effort to fight climate change\, many cities try to boost their cycling levels. They often look towards the Dutch for guidance. However\, historians have only begun to uncover how and why the Netherlands became the premier cycling country of the world. Why were Dutch cyclists so successful in their fight for a place on the road? Cycling Pathways explores the long political struggle culminating in today’s high cycling levels. Delving into the archives\, it uncovers the important role of social movements and shows in detail how these interacted with national\, provincial and urban engineers and policymakers to govern the distribution of road space and construction of cycling infrastructure. It discusses a wide range of topics\, ranging from activists to engineering committees\, from urban commuters to recreational cyclists and from the early 1900s to today in order to uncover the long and all-but-forgotten history of Dutch cycling governance.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/phd-defense-henk-jan-dekker/
LOCATION:Auditorium\, Senaatszaal
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210916T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210916T173000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210914T114647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210914T115043Z
UID:4780-1631808000-1631813400@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:TU DELFT Lipkens Lecture : Technology\, Societal Challenges and Global Sustainability History
DESCRIPTION:EHL’s Erik van der Vleuten will deliver the first lecture in the new Lipkens Lecture cycle at TU Delft. Maurits Ertsen (TUD) will act as  commentator. \nFor more information please consult the TU Delft Studium Generale website.
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/tu-delft-lipkens-lecture-technology-societal-challenges-and-global-sustainability-history/
LOCATION:TU Delft Library Central Hall
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210727T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210728T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210303T085128Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T180637Z
UID:4627-1627372800-1627491600@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Reflecting Technology in Academic Teaching
DESCRIPTION:Workshop on teaching environmental\, societal\, and ethical dimensions of technological change. \nDeadline for submissions: March\, 31th\, 2021 \nOrganisation: Rafaela Hillerbrand / Marcus Popplow (Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis & Institute for Technology Futures\, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) \nAnna Antonova / Hanna Straß-Senol (Environmental Humanities Development\, Rachel Carson Center\, LMU Munich) \nKarena Kalmbach / Andreas Spahn / Gunter Bombaerts (Eindhoven University of Technology) \n  \nScientific and technological developments have manifold effects that often go beyond the specific problem they are designed to tackle\, expanding to a range of social and environmental areas. To address this\, fields like history and philosophy of technology\, technology assessment\, and environmental humanities all analyse the environmental\, social\, and ethical dimensions of technological change from various disciplinary backgrounds. Thereby\, they foster critical reflection of (and sometimes a corrective to) scientific and technological advances. Although strong conceptual links exist between these different fields\, their institutional and pedagogical practices have grown apart over the last decades. For an encompassing perspective on the issues discussed in these fields\, reciprocal references need to be strengthened\, both in research and in teaching. We hold that teaching\, in particular\, can profit from a multi- and interdisciplinary exchange between these fields. \n  \nTo stimulate discussion on related issues\, we are hosting a workshop in Karlsruhe in July 2021 to discuss good practices of interdisciplinary teaching that can foster reflexivity especially\, if not exclusively\, in the context of Technical Universities. The workshop is a milestone event of the newly founded KIT-Academy on Responsible Research\, Teaching and Innovation\, ARRTI\, funded by the Excellence Strategy of German Universities\, which aims to foster critical reflection amongst KIT students and researchers on their engineering and scientific practices. The workshop is organised in cooperation with colleagues at Eindhoven University of Technology and the LMU Munich. \n  \nWe invite junior as well as senior lecturers from diverse disciplinary backgrounds to share their experiences in interdisciplinary teaching. We welcome presentations of experiences with particular courses and lectures at all levels – from introductory courses through project and practice-oriented seminars\, to colloquia for Ph.D. students –as well as reflections on the conceptual didactical level for diverse groups of students from the humanities\, social sciences\, and engineering and natural sciences. Contributions are expected to be given in English. \n  \nPotential topics for presentations include \n  \n\nChallenges and strengths of interdisciplinary teaching\nThe role of humanities in education about technologies\nDidactical best practices\, educational methods and innovations\nExperiences in teaching humanities to non-humanities students\nThe importance of critical reflection for technical universities\nMeasuring effect of humanities education in engineering curricula (motivation\, critical thinking\, competences\, …)\nIntegrated curriculum approaches\n…\n\n  \nThe workshop continues a tradition of workshops on teaching the history of science and technology. Contributions to an earlier workshop at the Technical University Berlin may serve as a reference\, accessible online (www.ksp.kit.edu/9783731509028\, in German only). Recent workshops such as “Meeting the Challenge of Engineering Ethics” in Eindhoven in 2019 (https://www.sefi.be/2020/01/22/meeting-the-challenge-of-engineering-ethics-education-the-sefi-ethics-sig-workshop-2019/) and ”Teaching Environmental Humanities” at the Rachel Carson Center in Munich (https://www.carsoncenter.uni-muenchen.de/events_conf_seminars/event_history/2019-events-history/conferences2019/environmental-workshop/index.html) can also serve as an inspiration for potential participants. \n  \n  \nPlease send in your proposals for contributions (no more than 250 words\, along with a brief CV) by March\, 31st\, 2021 to: technology_teaching@itz.kit.edu. \n  \nThe final program will be published in May 2021. At the moment\, we assume that the workshop cannot take place in person in Karlsruhe due to the Corona pandemic and will be organized as an online-event. If a hybrid format turns out to be possible\, travel and accommodation costs will be covered for presenters who wish to come to Karlsruhe. \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for any questions that might arise at the mailing address mentioned above. We look very much forward to stimulating exchanges. \n  \nRafaela Hillerbrand \nMarcus Popplow \n 
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/cfp-reflecting-technology-in-academic-teaching/
LOCATION:Karlsruhe
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210628
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210703
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20210108T131941Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T180809Z
UID:4581-1624838400-1625270399@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:Tensions of Europe Digital Workshop Festival
DESCRIPTION:The ToE network plans a digital workshop Festival (28 June-2 July 2021)\, filling the gap caused by postponing the 10th biennial ToE conference to 6-8 July 2022. \nTo the conference page\n \nJoin A Unique Series of Online Events from the 28th of June to the 2nd of July 2021: \nThe ToE network plans a digital workshop Festival (28 June-2 July 2021)\, filling the gap caused by postponing the 10th biennial ToE conference to 6-8 July 2022. The organization will be bottom-up; if you would like to plan\, or are already planning\, relevant international ToE-related events around that time\, please consider connecting them to this initiative! Please note that you are free to decide the date and slot\, theme within Tensions’ scope\, format\, participants\, preferred platform in case you have one. For the sake of coherence\, connections between and promotion of all initiatives\, the management committee will act as programmer of this decentralized festival. We will supply a web environment and promotion of these bottom-up initiatives which will make up the 2021 Tensions of Europe digital workshop Festival. \nContact: Foundation for the History of Technology (SHT)\nOrganizers: Tensions of Europe network (you\, if you like!)\nDeadline: 31st of January for open session proposals; 28th of February for fully-fledged events\nDate: 28 June – 2 July 2021 \nFee: symbolic ;)\nPlace: Online \nMore information
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/tensions-of-europe-digital-workshop-festival/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20201119T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20201119T163000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20201012T103618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201012T103618Z
UID:4243-1605780000-1605803400@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:KNHG Digital Congress
DESCRIPTION:In close collaboration with the Environmental Humanities Center at the VU University Amsterdam\, KNHG is organizing a digital conference entitled ‘More than Human Past: Historians\, Eco-history and Environmental Humanities.’ Our researchers Erik van der Vleuten and Frank Veraart make a contribution on this event.\n\nRead more in Dutch
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/knhg-digital-congress/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20201110T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20201113T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20201026T144745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201026T150717Z
UID:4345-1604995200-1605286800@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:International workshop: Social-technical-environmental entanglements in the postcolonial Anthropocene
DESCRIPTION:This workshop is a follow-up to our 2019 workshop Resources\, Infrastructures and the Anthropocene: global North-South dialogues“\, in the context of our Global Sustainability history project. An international author team will meet to discuss draft versions for a special journal issue on the postcolonial Anthropocene.\n \nOrganizers: Evelien de Hoop (VU Amsterdam)\, Aarthi Sridhar (Dakshin Foundation/ University of Amsterdam)\, Claiton Marcio da Silva (Universidade Federal da Fronteira Sul)\, Erik van der Vleuten (Eindhoven History Lab).
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/international-workshop-social-technical-environmental-entanglements-in-the-postcolonial-anthropocene/
LOCATION:digital workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201008
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201012
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20200912T115922Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201012T120218Z
UID:4249-1602115200-1602460799@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:SHOT Virtual Forum
DESCRIPTION:Because of COVID-19\, we are unable to meet as planned in person in New Orleans in 2020. Instead of our physical conference SHOT and HSS are now organizing a virtual conference that will take place 8-11 October. \nMore info
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/shot-virtual-forum/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200715
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200718
DTSTAMP:20260417T144658
CREATED:20200701T101713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201208T112529Z
UID:4518-1594771200-1595030399@www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl
SUMMARY:International Committee for the History of Technology ICOHTEC 2020 congress: A History of Technology for an Age of Crisis
DESCRIPTION:Due to the Covid-19 pandemic the 47th Annual Meeting of ICOHTEC in Eindhoven took place virtually from 15-17 July 2020. The program offered an innovative mix of traditional and new session formats\, plenary sessions\, round tables\, and social events. All contributions addressed the symposium theme ‘A History of Technology for an Age of Crisis’. \nWe thank all participants for their contributions! On the password protected part of this website you will be able to watch the recorded plenary and parallel sessions until 9 August 2020. \nSławomir Łotysz\, President of ICOHTEC\nStefan Poser\, Secretary General of ICOHTEC\nErik van der Vleuten\, Jan Korsten\, and Angelique Brons-Bakker\, Local Organizing Committee Eindhoven \n  \nConference website: https://icohtec2020eindhoven.org/
URL:https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/event/international-committee-for-the-history-of-technology-icohtec-2020-congress-a-history-of-technology-for-an-age-of-crisis/
LOCATION:digital/ Eindhoven
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR