Posthumus Conference 2024

From to
Een detail van een kaart van Leeuwarden uit 1664 waarop de skyline van de stad te zien is.
A border detail of a map of Leeuwarden from 1664, via Wikimedia Commons.

The N.W. Posthumus Institute and the Fryske Akademy jointly invite you to the 2024 edition of the Annual Posthumus Conference. This year’s edition will take place on 23 and 24 May at Campus Fryslân in the Frisian capitol city of Leeuwarden, with ‘Regional History in a Global Context’ being this year’s central theme.

Region as unit of research

Regional history has traditionally been in the periphery for many (although not all) social and economic historians. Despite Sidney Pollard’s claim that the British Industrial Revolution was a regional rather than a national phenomenon, economic historians have frequently tended to focus on the national level, while social historians often preferred to study local communities.

Recently, attention for the region as unit of research in social and economic history has been growing. New methods for studying the economic development of regions have been developed, such as the quantitative analysis of historical regional accounts and the calculation of the Gross Regional Product. Familiar topics of social history, such as labour and labour conditions, gender and mobility were found to have regional as well as local dimensions, while for the relatively new field of the historical interactions between man and environment the region turned out to be a highly suitable level of research.

‘Glocal history’

Regions, obviously, have never been isolated: they have always functioned in a wider context. Commercial and cultural exchange on an interregional but increasingly also on a global scale affected daily life and economic opportunities of regions everywhere. Relations between regions changed continuously because of shifts in commercial networks, the availability of human capital, investment policies and transport facilities, technical developments and new divisions of labour. Some regional economies grew into drivers of a global trade, or acted as focal points for migration on a global scale. Others coped with economic and demographic demise and had to adapt to global changes. As a result, borders of regions also changed, as did regional identities.

The interaction between the global and the regional level is a highly relevant issue in today’s world. In keeping with the interest in ‘glocal history’, it also deserves the attention of social and economic historians.

Programme

This year’s keynote will be delivered by Professor Nikolaus Wolf, Chair of Economics and Economic History at Humboldt University Berlin. The programme also offers several parallel sessions of Posthumus PhDs presenting their research papers, as well as thematic meetings of the research networks of the N.W. Posthumus Institute. The conference also offers plenty of opportunities to meet fellow researchers and students in a more informal setting, such as the lunches, the conference dinner, as well as the guided tour of the historical prison Blokhuispoort and the closing drinks.

Start date and time
End date and time
Location
Campus Fryslân, Wirdumerdijk 43, Leeuwarden
Registration

Please register here

More information
Visit the website for registration and more information