Lecture | Liberal Worldmaking and the Imaginative Geography of Sex Trafficking – Jeanne Morefield (Oxford)

Date and time: 9 May 2023, 16.00-17.30 Place: Utrecht, room: Drift 23, 0.12 No registration is needed, unless you want to participate online. In that case, send an e-mail to: info@globalintellectualhistory.org. Abstract Since the late 1990’s, global attention to the issue of human trafficking (particularly sex trafficking) has skyrocketed within international institutions and among fascist more »

Schuman lecture Maastricht University: Learning to learn from history

Until the Second World War, remembering the past in Europe only served to glorify the nation, stir up revanchism and sanctify heroes. After 1945, the trauma of war, totalitarianism, and the Holocaust gave rise to a new ambition: that of learning from history. But has this succeeded? A decade or two ago, that memory began more »

Lecture: Islam, Democracy and Development

Is Islam compatible with Western political and socioeconomic institutions? If yes, what explains the problems of authoritarianism and underdevelopment in many Muslim-majority countries? In this year’s acmes annual lecture, Ahmet Kuru will address these questions by referring to his award-winning book Islam, Authoritarianism, and Underdevelopment: A Global and Historical Comparison (Cambridge University Press, 2019). In his lecture Ahmet more »

NIAS Talk: Dutch Colonies of Benevolence

Last year, the UNESCO World Heritage recognized the lasting cultural significance of the unfree ‘colony of benevolence’ at Veenhuizen (now home to the National Prison Museum). This round table brings together three leading researchers on domestic colonies to discuss the international significance of this colony, which opened its doors 200 years ago. This round table more »

Symposium: Die Niederlande, Deutschland und Europa in Zeiten des Abnehmenden Friedens

Am 15. Mai ist es genau 375 Jahre her, dass 1648 in Münster mit dem spanisch-niederländischen Friedensvertrag der erste Teil des Westfälischen Friedens geschlossen wurde. Seitdem gelten Münster und Westfalen als Symbol für den Versuch in einer Welt von Einzelstaaten dauerhaft Frieden zu schaffen. Aus diesem Grund organisiert das ZNS, in Kooperation mit der Stadt more »

Diversity of Belonging in Europe

Belonging – or not belonging – lies at the core of many of the recent ‘crises’ and ongoing processes of change that continue to shape as well as to shake up contemporary Europe. New forms of socio-spatial inclusion and exclusion have been both embraced and contested – and always (re)negotiated – as part of ongoing more »

Symposium: Het Huis van Thorbecke in de Koloniën

Graag nodigen wij u uit voor het symposium: Het Huis van Thorbecke in de koloniën. De veranderende plaats van de voormalige koloniën in de CBS-definities van westerse migranten, de Molukse kwestie en de overheidsexcuses voor koloniale slavernij tonen de actualiteit van (post)koloniale burgerschapskwesties. Het zijn kwesties die vragen om interdisciplinaire uitwisseling. Het symposium vindt plaats more »

Lecture: Writing as Activism

On 8 June, the Centre for Environmental Humanities organises ‘Writing as Activism: Dutch Literature in the Climate Crisis’, an event with award-winning writers Geert Buelens and Maarten van der Graaff. Buelens and Van der Graaff will read from their recent literary work and discuss how they bring environmental activism into their creative writing. The readings will be in Dutch (English more »

Conference | Parliament Contested? Rethinking the relationship between national politics, global crises, and pressure from below in the 1970s

The purpose of this conference is to reassess the role of national parliaments and national policy-making processes in the 1970s in light of the increasing global challenges and extra-parliamentary pressure that occurred. What can be seen as decisive turning points shaping the political history of the era? Were they the same in each country, or more »