From: Francisco Paulo Cipolla (cipolla@UFPR.BR)
Date: Tue Jun 07 2005 - 15:42:03 EDT
Hi Jerry. Do you know whether or not Laibman and Allin have their talks on paper already? I am interested in what they have to say on the subject. Thanks in advance and good trip if I do not get to talk directly to you until there. By the way could you show us in a map your route? Paulo Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM wrote: > Note that David L will be giving the David Gordon lecture on "The > Future Within the Present: Seven Theses for a Robust 21st Century > Socialism." Allin will also be there speaking on "New Possibilities > for a Democratic Planned Economy."/ In solidarity, Jerry > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Al Campbell" <al@economics.utah.edu> > Subject: [URPE] URPE Summer Workshop/Retreat > > REMINDER: For several years now, people have asked for a Summer > Workshop/retreat focused on alternatives - what can we do in the face > of this brutal hegemonic world social-political-economic order? This > year's workshop will be focused on this (with lots of other topics > addressed in the workshops as well). It promises to be very > interesting, and given the despair that has overcome some fighters for > social justice, inspiring - there are (plenty) of ways to fight back, and > beyond that, there are plenty of important challenges to the hegemonic > order going on right now. Plan to join us - it will be both informative > and fun (set in a camp on a lake in Western Connecticut) as usual. The > dates are Saturday evening, August 20 to Tuesday noon, August 22. > Full information on the conference and on getting there are on our > web site, www.urpe.org. > > Note: Preliminary schedule as of 6/1/2005. Further information on the > workshops will be posted at the end of June and July. For a good > sense of what the schedule will look like, see the schedule from 2003 > on our Web site, under the Summer Workshop/Retreat. > > Note 2: Anyone who comes can present or take part in a workshop, > concerning your work or ideas concerning social-economic justice. > Please let me know of any workshops you would be interested in > presenting or participating in. We like workshops of 2 to 4 people, > but we have quite a few with just one presenter, because that person is > the only person talking on that topic that year. If you see a workshop > below that you feel your work would fit into, let me know, I will put > you in touch with the organizer, and if there is room, we will include > you in the presentations. My (Al Campbell) email is > Al@economics.utah.edu. > > Note 3: I will be out of touch with the world from June 5 to June 29 > (down in the Grand Canyon). I will get back to you immediately > following that. If you have questions that need a response before then, > contact Paddy Quick at PaddyQuick@aol.com > > 2005 URPE Summer Workshop/Retreat > > Alternatives! > > The David Gordon Lecture: THE FUTURE > WITHIN THE PRESENT: Seven Theses for a > Robust 21st- Century Socialism. David > Laibman, Professor of Economics, Brooklyn > College and Graduate School CUNY, and > Editor of Science & Society. > > Plenary 1: Policy Alternatives > > Policy Implications of No Child Left Behind. Susan Williams > McElroy, Professor of Economics, University of Texas at Dallas. > > Be Utopian. Demand the Realistic. Bob Pollin, Professor of > Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst and Co-director of > the Politcal Economy Research Institute (PERI) > > Plenary 2: Restructuring Social Relations > > The Transformative Moment: Personal Healing and the Restructuring > of Economic Relations. Julie Matthaei, Professor of Economics, > Wellesley College > > Commodity Fetishism: A Concept for Organizing Sweatshop Labor. > John Miller, Professor of Economics, Wheaton College > > Re-mebedding the Rural Economy: Social Capital, Economic Justice, > and Environmental Stewardship. Héctor Sáez, Professor of > Economics, Community Development and Appied Economics > Program and Environmental Program, University of Vermont > > Plenary 3: Alternatives to Capitalism > > How Do We Begin to Get Serious About an American Transitional > Strategy? Gar Alperovitz, Professor of Political Economy, University > of Maryland. Author most recently of Beyond Capitalism: Reclaiming > Our Wealth, Our Liberty and Our Democracy > > New Possibilities for a Democratic Planned Economy. Allin Cottrell, > Professor of Economics, Wake Forest University. > > Participatory Economics. Robin Hahnel, Professor of Economics, > American Universtiy. Author most recently of Economic Justice and > Democracy: From Competition to Cooperation. > > Plenary 4: Graduate Students and Heterodox > Economics > { SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1} > Workshop with guest organization, the Association for Economic and > Social Analysis. > A Class Analysis of Socialism and Communism: What was the > USSR? > Steven Resnick and Richard Wolff > > Workshops planned as of June 1. > 1) Agents for Socialism and Community: Flirting with Aristotle > 2) Living Simple and Confronting Consumerism > 3) An Unfolding Revolution: Venezuela > 4) A student centered/constructivist/contextual learning model for > unemployment/outsourcing/globalization. > 5) Reading the Nation State; Literature as Political Economy > 6) The Future of New Immigrants Now and Then. A Case Study, New > Haven. > 7) Marxism and Today's Economic Problems. > 8) The Job Market or Economists > 9) Cuba Today > 10) Alternatives to Capitalism
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