Call for Research Proposals – The 19th Accounting History Symposium  

Saturday 1st July 2023 

Format: Face-to-face 

Time: 9.00 am -1.00 pm 

Venue: The Star on the Gold Coast, Australia 

Following the great success of the 18th Accounting History Symposium, held on Wednesday 7th December 2022, the Accounting History Special Interest Group (AHSIG) is pleased to announce the first event of 2023. The 19th Accounting History Symposium will be held on 1st July 2023 at the Star on Gold Coast, Australia. Associate Professor Carolyn Fowler of Victoria University of Wellington will be the guest speaker for the symposium. Carolyn is the joint editor of the Accounting History Journal and will give a talk about writing for and publishing in the Accounting History Journal. She will provide valuable insights and a behind-the-scenes overview of the process, the timing, and key points to enhance the quality of manuscripts. We are delighted to have Carolyn as the 19th Accounting History Symposium guest speaker in 2023.

In addition to the guest speaker, individuals interested in making a presentation about a planned or existing research project are invited to submit a research proposal (of no more than three pages, single-spaced) containing the following information: 

1. Project (working) title 

2. Background (or scenario for investigation) 

3. Main research objective in one sentence 

4. Concise key research question(s) 

5. Research methodology 

6. Period selection 

7. Limitations of the study 

8. Expected (original) contribution.

The due date for submission of research proposals is Friday, 19 May 2023, and should be sent to 

acchis.sig@gmail.com (please also copy in giulia.leoni@unige.it and maryam.safari@rmit.edu.au

In addition to the presentations of research proposals relating to accounting history, a panel of scholars will be in attendance, discussing and/or providing feedback on the presentations of the participants. 

The following registration fee will be applicable for the participants via the AFAANZ website: 

  • AHSIG members: $65 
  • AHSIG non-members: $90 

The registration fee will cover the catering including morning tea and lunch. 

We look forward to your participation at the 19th Accounting History Symposium

Giulia Leoni and Maryam Safari 

AHSIG Convenor and Deputy Convenor 

If you haven’t already done so, please follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn for our latest updates:

@AFAANZ

https://www.linkedin.com/company/65855223

 

CfP Social History of Migration

Call for Papers 

Migration in Modern Times: Systems – Routes – Experiences – Conflicts 

Archiv für Sozialgeschichte 64 (2024) 

The next issue of Archiv of Sozialgeschichte invites contributions in a research field that has fundamentally changed during the last years. Migration history stands at the intersection of different methodological debates and epochal approaches. It has moved away from the struggle for recognition that was initially marked by the need to emphasise the potential ‘achievements’ of migrant-receiving countries or migrants. The issue aims to consider current research trends and invites contributors from different (social-) historical disciplines to reflect on the future of the history of migration, both empirically and theoretically. The issue focuses on the time from the 18th century onwards, without excluding contributions on earlier periods. 

Migration systems 

The term migration system, which in our understanding only refers to stable connections between (world) regions through mobility over the course of long periods of time, has long been established in research. Since the 15th century, the movement of Europeans to the Americas and to colonies in other regions of the world has formed a pattern well into the 1950s. Likewise, the centuries-long deportation of Africans to Latin America and the South of the (later) USA until the second half of the 19th century referred to as the ‘Black Atlantic’ describes a similar process. Systems of migration do not only apply to the voluntary movement of migrants. Rather, it would be desirable to include debt-labour relationships, which have been the focus of much recent research and which affect numerous migrants from Asia. Bonded labour relations which are temporary de jure but not always de facto, allude to the temporary dimension of migration, which is not necessarily permanent. We are interested in return migration movements as well as seasonal patterns, regardless of whether they were controlled by harvest cycles of residence regulations, the importance of which is obvious, for example, for nurses from Eastern Europe working in Germany. On the one hand, the search for patterns requires the inclusion of the demo-economic situation in the regions of origin and the differently organised labour market in the target regions. This puts emphasis on the state as an important steering body that must be taken into account, without migration policy being the primary interest of the volume. On the other hand, it is important to take into account the actors who organise the movement between the region of origin and the target region, formally or informally, legally, semi-legally or illegally. Only by bringing both sides together will we be able to understand, for example, the long-term and stable recruitment of care workers from the South East Asian island countries to work in Europe and North America. 

Routes, means of transportation, networks 

The actors mentioned above consequently raise questions about the means of transportation available to migrants, the routes they used and the networks they were supported by or remained trapped in. Footpaths are still important today (and the knowledge about them is a key to illegal border crossing), but shipping, rail and air links have fundamentally changed the infrastructure of migration. Ports, railway stations and airports have become central relay stations that not only serve as interfaces between different sections of migration but also often block the latter because epidemic regulations enforce quarantines or entail forced accommodation in sometimes extraterritorial shelters under asylum law. The volume particularly addresses this tension between mobility and immobility, emphasising that regions of origin and target regions are not clear-cut starting and ending points of migration, which in some cases– such as migrant labour – remained closely linked. 

Experiences, knowledge and conflicts 

Above all, on arrival, it is often uncertain whether a place – usually a city – will or even should become the final destination. Timeframes, largely determined by the potential wish to return, also shape migrants’ strategies. It is no coincidence that they often try to find employment in trade and gastronomy. Such strategies need to be examined more systematically, also taking the importance of ethnic or religious networks into account. Last but not least, we are interested in whether these participation rights, including the right to vote, are claimed and when, and what reactions can be observed in the majority society. Local workers have often denied migrants participation in the labour market – a constant challenge for trade union organisations, especially as employers have often used ethnically or racially discriminated groups as strikebreakers. In addition to the labour market, the housing market is particularly prone to conflict, showing that migration does not invariably equate to poverty. The Russians who have fled to Georgia are sometimes viewed with suspicion because their above-average professional qualifications enable them to pay very high rents. While the volume will not be able to systematically analyse all of these fields of conflict, we do hope for conceptual and empirically rich contributions. 

The Friedrich Ebert Foundation will host a conference, expected to take place in October 2023, to discuss ideas, themes and questions for contributions on the subject of AfS 64 as outlined above. We invite scholars to submit proposals of no more than 3,000 characters by 5 June 2023. Abstracts, conference papers and subsequent contributions may be submitted in German or English. Subsequently, the editors of the Archiv für Sozialgeschichte will select contributions, which should be approximately 60,000 characters (including footnotes). The submission deadline for contributions is 31 January 2024. 

The Archiv für Sozialgeschichte is edited by Claudia Gatzka, Kirsten Heinsohn, Thomas Kroll, Anja Kruke, Philipp Kufferath (managing director), Friedrich Lenger, Ute Planert, Dietmar Süß and Meik Woyke. 

For further information and all articles in open access up to 2021, see: https://www.fes.de/afs/ 

Contact 

Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung 
Archiv für Sozialgeschichte 
Email: afs[at]fes.de 
Tel.: +49 228/883-8057 
Web: http://www.fes.de/afs 

Lecturer in Business History & Heritage

Lectureship (T&R) in Business History and Heritage

– closing date 11 of May 2023 –

The new post is in the Department of Business and Society at the School of Business and Management (QMUL).

https://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/8303.html

The post holder will contribute to our  BSc Management in which we already offer two modules in Business and Management in Historical Context year 1 (compulsory) and Business and History Year 2 (elective). In addition, we would like to add another module in year 3. The post holder will also contribute to the MSc Heritage Management (a program that is directed and mostly delivered by Dr Ed Legon a Social and Business Historian). 

We are interested in established lecturers but also (and perhaps especially) in scholars that have just submitted their PhD or achieved their doctorate recently. 

Dr Giuliano Maielli

Reader in Organisation Studies
Head of Department of Business and Society
School of Business and Management
Queen Mary, University of London

http://www.busman.qmul.ac.uk/staff/maiellig.html

Accounting Biographies collection freely available

SAGE Publications has established a new Editors’ Choice Collection for Accounting History on the theme “Accounting Biographies”. The articles in this new collection are freely available for a limited period until 30th May 2023 and are found at the following link:https://journals.sagepub.com/page/ach/accountingbiographies?pbEditor=true

This augments the prior Editors’ Choice Collection on the same topic from 2015 and will be a handy reference for authors seeking to submit on any of the upcoming Special Issues (see: https://journals.sagepub.com/page/ach/call-for-papers) or a general issue of the Journal.

There are now 22 Editors’ Choice Collections for Accounting History, with the series designed to cover key themes within the accounting history field. These are updated and refreshed from time to time. Details relating to the other Collections are available at the following link: https://journals.sagepub.com/page/ach/collections/editors-choice/index.

In order to receive journal Contents alerts, please click on the “Sign Up” button located in the “Connect with us” box on the journal home page found at: http://journals.sagepub.com/home/ach

We hope that you find the newly-added collection, as well as the previous ones, to be helpful and enjoyable reading!

Carolyn Cordery, Carolyn Fowler and Laura Maran

Editors, Accounting History

TOC of Business History Issue 65 – 2, 2023, now out!

Business History Volume 65, Issue 2 is now available. It is a Special issue: “Brokers of the wealthy (Transnational business associations)”, edited by Pierre Eichenberger, Neil Rollings, and Janick Marina Schaufelbuehl.

The list below also includes the book reviews published in the issue. Full online TOC here

Ballor, G. (2023) ‘Liberalisation or protectionism for the single market? European automakers and Japanese competition, 1985–1999’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 302–328. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.2025218.

Diana Kelly’s The Red Taylorist: the life and times of Walter Nicholas Polakov, reviewed by Bernardo Bátiz-Lazo. Business History, 65(2), pp. 391–392. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.2021612.

David, T. and Eichenberger, P. (2023) ‘’A world parliament of business’? The International Chamber of Commerce and its presidents in the twentieth century’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 260–283. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.2025219.

Eichenberger, P., Rollings, N. and Schaufelbuehl, J.M. (2023) ‘The brokers of globalization: Towards a history of business associations in the international arena’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 217–234. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2022.2112671.

Iberg, L. (2023) ‘Fighting for a neoliberal Europe: Swiss business associations and the UNICE, 1970–1978’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 366–381. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.1892643.

Emily Erikson’s Trade and nation: how companies and politics reshaped economic thought, reviewed by William Pettigre, Business History, 65(2), pp. 395–396. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2022.2043641.

Pitteloud, S. (2023) ‘Let’s coordinate! The reinforcement of a “liberal bastion” within European Industrial Federations, 1978-1987’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 345–365. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.1905797.

Edmond Smith’s Merchants: The Community That Shaped England’s Trade and Empire, reviewed by Alka Rama, Business History, 65(2), pp. 393–394. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2022.2039443.

Rollings, N. (2023) ‘The development of transnational business associations during the twentieth century’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 235–259. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.1958783.

Schaufelbuehl, J.M. (2023) ‘Becoming the advocate for US-based multinationals: The United States Council of the International Chamber of Commerce, 1945–1974’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 284–301. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.1877273.

Sluga, G. (2023) ‘Business transnationalism, looking from the outside in’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 382–388. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2022.2130896.

Stephen R Wenn and Robert Barney, The Gold in the Rings: The People and Events That Transformed the Olympic Games, reviewed by Kevin Tennent, Business History, 65(2), pp. 389–390. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.2018156.

Waterhouse, B.C. (2023) ‘The Business Roundtable and the politics of U.S. manufacturing decline in the global 1970s’, Business History, 65(2), pp. 329–344. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2020.1863949.