Reading group – 13th session From 2021-03-23 to 2021-03-23
Zoom, 16h (GMT time)
The 13th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place on March 23 2021 at 4pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: Margaret Somers "Toward a Predistributive Democracy: Diagnosing Oligarchy, Dedemocratization, and the Deceits of Market Justice" (2021 forthcoming). Margaret Somers, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of his paper which will be followed by a reply by Catarina Neves and a debate with the participants.
Margaret Somers (speaker): Margaret R. Somers is Professor Emerita of Sociology and History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is a comparative historical sociologist specializing in the work of Karl Polanyi, as well as political economy and economic thought (predistribution and the political economy of moral worth); democracy and citizenship rights; concept formation and historical epistemology. She is the author, with Fred Block, of The Power of Market fundamentalism: Karl Polanyi’s Critique, Harvard 2014, an intellectual archaeology of Polanyi’s thought that aims to generate a repertoire of Polanyian concepts, theoretical insights, and a usable social theory (named “Book of the Year 2014” by Economic Sociology and Political Economy (economicsociology.org). Her book Genealogies of Citizenship: Markets, Statelessness, and the Right to have Rights (Cambridge 2008), is a study of how the moral authority of the market has transformed rights-bearing citizens into the internally stateless, making rights, inclusion and moral worth a privilege dependent on contractual market value (awarded the 2009 Giovanni Sartori Award for concept formation by the American Political Science Association). Her work in-progress, Toward a Predistributive Democracy: Free-market Utopianism and the Alchemy of Misrecognition examines how the fiction of the free market primes us to misrecognize the cause of inequality as deregulation, blinds us to how capital grows relative to labor by extracting value rather than creating it, and to the role of predistributive dedemocratization in accelerating and institutionalizing oligarchy.
Catarina Neves (discussant) : Catarina Neves is a researcher at Centre for Ethics, Politics and Society, where she is also doing her PhD in Political Philosophy, with a thesis titled “Justifying an Unconditional Basic Income: reciprocity, productive justice and the impact of UBI in the labor market”. She is also a teaching assistant at Nova School of Business and Economics, in Lisbon.
Reading group – 12th session From 2021-03-12 to 2021-03-12
Zoom, 16h (GMT time)
Nicholas Vrousalis (speaker): Nicholas Vrousalis is an Associate Professor in Practical Philosophy at Erasmus University Rotterdam. Before coming to Rotterdam, he also taught political philosophy at Cambridge, Leiden, and KU Leuven. His research interests revolve around distributive ethics, democratic theory, the history of political thought (especially Kant, Hegel and Marx).
Daniele Santoro (discussant): Daniele is a researcher at the Centre for Ethics, Politics, and Society, where he is also in charge of Political Philosophy Research Area and the Center Seminar Series. HE previously held appointments at Luiss University (where he also taught courses in political philosophy, history of political thought, philosophy of social sciences, and bioethics) and at the National Research Council of Italy. HE earned a PhD in Philosophy of Law from the University of Padua, and held research fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study of Aix-Marseille University, and the Hoover Chaire of UCL Louvain. His current interests are in constitutional rights, the justification of dissent, and the epistemic aspects of rights.
Reading group – 11th session From 2021-03-04 to 2021-03-04
Zoom, 17h (GMT time)
The 11th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place on March 4 2021 at 5pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: O’Shea, T. Socialist republicanism. Political Theory, 48(5), 548-572 (2020). Tom O’Shea, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of his paper which will be followed by a reply by Vincent Bourdeau and a debate with the participants.
Tom O’Shea (speaker): Tom O'Shea is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Roehampton. He researches several areas of practical philosophy - including moral, social, and political philosophy - with a focus on human freedom. Tom's current project excavates the history of radical republican thought and defends a socialist republican conception of political and economic liberty.
Vincent Bourdeau (discussant): Vincent Bourdeau is Lecturer in Social and Political Philosophy at the University of Besançon (UBFC, France) and researcher in the lab Logiques de l'agir (E.A. 2274). He is working on the relations between republicanism, socialism and the emergence of social sciences in the 19th century and has also published on contemporary developments concerning republicanism. Amongst recent works on these subjects in French: Quand les socialistes inventaient l'avenir. Presse, théories et expériences (1825-1860), La Découverte, 2015 (directed with Thomas Bouchet, Edward Castleton, Ludovic Frobert and François Jarrige) and La République et ses démons. Essais de républicanisme appliqué, éditions è®e, 2006 (directed with Roberto Merrill). Publications in English include : "Revolutionary France and the Social Repubic that never was" (https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/revolutionary-france-and-social-republic-that-never-was/) and "What do todays republicans have to say about work" (https://blog.politics.ox.ac.uk/what-do-todays-republicans-have-to-say-about-work/).
Reading group – 10th session From 2021-02-19 to 2021-02-19
Zoom, 16h (GMT time)
The 10th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place on February 19 2021 at 4pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: Hockett, Robert. “Open labor market operations”. Challenge 63:6 (2019). Robert Hockett, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of his paper which will be followed by a reply by Alan Thomas and a debate with the participants.
Robert Hockett (speaker): Robert Hockett joined the Cornell Law Faculty in 2004. His principal teaching, research, and writing interests lie in the fields of organizational, financial, and monetary law and economics in both their positive and normative, as well as their national and transnational, dimensions. His guiding concern in these fields is with the legal and institutional prerequisites to a just, prosperous, and sustainable economic order.
A Fellow of the Century Foundation and regular commissioned author for the New America Foundation, Hockett also does regular consulting work for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the International Monetary Fund, Americans for Financial Reform, the 'Occupy' Cooperative, and a number of federal and state legislators and local governments.
Prior to doing his doctoral work and entering academe, he worked for the International Monetary Fund and clerked for the Honorable Deanell Reece Tacha, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.
Alan Thomas (discussant): Professor Alan Thomas began his professional career in Philosophy as a lecturer at King’s College, London, between 1993 and 1998. Following this he moved to the University of Kent to take a position as senior lecturer there. In 2007 he was a visiting scholar at the University of British Columbia and in 2010 he held the position of Fellow of the Murphy Institute at Tulane University. Between 2010 and 2016 he was Professor of Ethics at Tilburg University. During that time he also held a visiting fellowship at the Australian National University (2015) and a visiting research professor position at St. Louis University (also 2015). In 2016 he came to York to be Professor of Philosophy and Head of Department.
CEPS Seminars (Online) From 2021-01-25 to 2021-01-26
16:30 - 18:30
CEPS Seminars (Online) From 2021-01-25 to 2021-01-26
Online
Dates: Monday January 25, 2021 | 14:00-18:30 CET; Tuesday, January 26, 2021| 15:00-18:30 CET.
Every cohort of voters may dream of being "the people", under the sway of serial visions of sovereignty; or understand itself, more modestly, as co-author of a constitutional project in a sequential pattern rooted in the past and extending into the future. Sequential Sovereignty articulates a view of popular sovereignty and constituent power grounded in John Rawls’s "political liberalism".
Political Liberalism opens up with the question, "How is it possible for there to exist over time a just and stable society of free and equal citizens, who remain profoundly divided by reasonable religious, philosophical, and moral doctrines?". In response to populist threats to democracy, still latent in 1993, this book focuses on a hitherto neglected two-word phrase within Rawls’s question: "over time".
That inconspicuous phrase signals the urgency of clarifying how "the people," as the transgenerational author of the constitution, relates to its living segment in its dual capacity of electorate – a constituted power amongst other constituted powers – and, at the same time, of the co-author of the constitution, possessed of amending power. While the people’s constituent power responds to the political conception of justice most reasonable for its bearers, amending power responds to the normativity of constitutional essentials already in force.
Why couldn’t the present voters be as sovereign as the whole transgenerational people?
When addressing this question, we experience why "political liberalism" is broader than Political Liberalism. Rawls’s best answer is not his explicit one but rests on the notion of reciprocity integral to "the reasonable". Alongside horizontal reciprocity among free and equal citizens, a new Rawlsian notion of vertical reciprocity among free and equal generations of the same people can cast light on the relation of the people to its living segment.
Program
January 25 | 14:00 - 18:30 CET
14:00-14:15 - Workshop Presentation - Joāo Cardoso Rosas (CEPS, UMinho)
14:15-15:00 - Alessandro Ferrara - Introduction to Sequential Sovereignty
15:00-16:00 - Chapter 3: Political liberalism on constituent power: beyond an ossified binary | Comments by Ben Schupmann (Yale-NUS College)
16:00-16:30 - break
16:30-17:30 - Chapter 4: Constituent power and a "political conception of the people" | Comments by David Rasmussen (Boston College)
17:30-18:30 - Chapter 6: Representing the people as interpreting the constitution |Comments by Cristina Lafont (Northwestern University)
January 26 | 15:00 - 18:30 CET
15:00 -15:30 - Alessandro Ferrara: Précis of chapters 5 and 7
15:30 -16:30 - Chapter 5: Time and representation: on representing the people and the electorate |Comments by Giuseppe Ballacci (CEPS, UMinho)
16:30-17:00 - break
17:00-18:00 - Chapter 7: Transforming the constitution: amending power and political liberalism |Comments by Camila Vergara (Columbia University)
18:00-18:30 - Conclusions: Daniele Santoro (CEPS, UMinho)
The workshop is open to everyone. Each session will be followed by a Q&A with the public. Pre-registration is required. After registering, we will send a confirmation email containing information on how to join the meeting and the pre-circulated material when available. For inquiries, contact the organizers at ceps@ilch.uminho.pt.
The Seminar Series in Ethics and Political Philosophy is a research-oriented initiative hosted by the Center for Ethics, Politics, and Society at the University of Minho, whose aim is to discuss works in progress of both established and younger scholars working in the fields of ethics, social and political philosophy, political and social theory.
Reading Group - 9th session From 2021-01-21 to 2021-01-21
Online session, 4p.m.
The 9th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place on January 22 2021 at 4pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: Vallier, Kevin. "Rawls, Piketty, and the critique of welfare-state capitalism." The Journal of Politics 81.1 (2019): 142-152. Kevin Vallier, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of his paper which will be followed by a reply by Stuart White and a debate with the participants.
Kevin Vallier is an Associate Professor ofPhilosophy at Bowling Green State University, where he directs their program inPhilosophy, Politics, Economics, and Law. Vallier’s interests lie primarily inpolitical philosophy, ethics, philosophy of religion, and philosophy, politics,and economics (PPE). He is the author of three monographs, four edited volumes,and over forty peer-reviewed book chapters and journal articles. His booksinclude Liberal Politics and PublicFaith: Beyond Separation (Routledge 2014), Must Politics Be War? Restoring Our Trust in the Open Society (OxfordUP 2019), and Trust in a Polarized Age (OxfordUP 2020).
Stuart White is Associate Professor of Politics at Jesus College, Oxford, which he joined in 2000 after three years at MIT where he gained a Career Development Research Award for his teaching. His research focuses centrally on democracy, citizenship and property rights and the question of what rights to resources we should have as members of a democratic community. Relevant publications include Radical Republicanism, co-edited with Bruno Leipold and Karma Nabulsi, forthcoming,and Building a Citizen Society: The Emerging Politics of Republican Democracy. London: Lawrence and Wishart. Co-edited with Daniel Leighton. 2008. He coordinates with Roberto Merrill the project on UBI experiments UBIEXP. Webpage.
CEPS Seminars Seris in Ethics and Political Philosophy From 2020-12-16 to 2020-12-16
4:30–6:30pm (GMT/UTC +0) , Online
In the last two decades there has been a rising interest in the democratic function of trust. Based on work initially begun by sociologists in the early 1990s, political theorists have subsequently focused on the distinctively political consequences of trust. This large swath of publications notwithstanding, the democratic relevance of elites' trust in citizens has so far remained unexplored. This paper aims at filling this gap. It offers a more complete account of political trust that builds on but goes significantly beyond the currently accepted juxtaposition of social and political trust. Starting from a richer taxonomy of types of trust relationships, the paper provides first a descriptive account of elites' trust in citizens and then an explanation of their democratic relevance.
The Seminar Series in Ethics and Political Philosophy is a research oriented initiative hosted by the Center for Ethics, Politics, and Society at the University of Minho, whose aim is to discuss works in progress of both established and younger scholars working in the fields of ethics, social and political philosophy, political and social theory.
The seminars are open to everyone, but pre-registration is required. After registering, we will send a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting and the pre-circulated material when available. For inquiries, contact the organizers at ceps@ilch.uminho.pt
Debate From 2020-12-16 to 2020-12-16
18h, Zoom
RBI From 2020-12-10 to 2020-12-10
19h, Zoom
Reading Group - 8th session From 2020-12-07 to 2020-12-07
Online session, 3p.m.
The 8th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place December 7 2020 at 3pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: Lisa Herzog, "Are financial markets epistemically efficient (and if so, in the right way)?" (manuscript). Lisa Herzog, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of her paper which will be followed by a reply by Pedro Teixeira and a debate with the participants.
Lisa Herzog works at the intersection of political philosophy and economic thought. Between 2016 and 2019, she was professor for political philosophy and theory at the Technical University of Munich, since 2019 she works at the Faculty of Philosophy and the Center for Philosophy, Politics and Economics of the University of Groningen. She holds a master (Diplom) in economics from LMU Munich, and an M.St. in Philosophy and D.Phil. in Political Theory from the University of Oxford. She has worked at, or visited, the universities of St. Gallen (CH), Leuven (BE), Frankfurt/Main (D), Utrecht (NL), and Stanford (US). She was a Rhodes Scholar (2007-2011), and in 2019, she received the Tractatus-Preis and the German Award for Philosophy and Social Ethics. Herzog has published on the philosophical dimensions of markets (both historically and systemically), liberalism and social justice, ethics in organizations and the future of work. The current focus of her work are workplace democracy, professional ethics, and the role of knowledge in democracies.
Pedro Teixeira teaches political philosophy at the Otto-Suhr Institute of Political Science (Free University of Berlin), where he recently concluded his PhD on the work of Rawls, Habermas and Honneth. From 2017 to 2019 he received a PhD Scholarship by FCT (Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation). In 2017, during his PhD, he was a visiting scholar at the Philosophy Department of Columbia University in New York. He worked as a research assistant at the Department of Finance of the London School of Economics (LSE) and at the Department of Economics of NOVA School of Business and Economics in Lisbon. His current work focuses on conceptions of socialism, political economy, theories of the market, models of democratic control of the economic sphere and on issues related to the roots of political and social normativity.
RBI From 2020-11-30 to 2020-11-30
Online, 19h
A deputada Cristina Rodrigues volta a organizar mais um "À Conversa", em directo na sua página do Facebook, desta vez sobre o Rendimento Básico Incondicional (RBI).
O RBI voltou à atenção do público através de uma recente iniciativa legislativa europeia que solicita à Comissão Europeia a apresentação de uma proposta que vise a introdução de RBIs, em toda a UE, de forma a reforçar a coesão económica, social e territorial.
Mas afinal o que é o RBI? Segundo o livro Rendimento Básico Incondicional: Uma Defesa da Liberdade (Almedina, ed. 70), este é “um rendimento cuja quantia deve ser suficiente para garantir condições de vida decentes, pago em dinheiro a todos os cidadãos de forma incondicional, ou seja, sem ter em conta a situação financeira, patrimonial ou salarial (no caso dos que sejam remunerados pelo trabalho) de todas as pessoas que o recebem”. Os seus autores - Jorge Pinto, Gonçalo Marcelo, Sara Bizarro e Roberto Merrill - dizem ainda que “deve ser considerado um direito universal, individual e incondicional, e idealmente será uma quantia suficientemente elevada para assegurar a cada cidadão uma existência digna e uma participação na sociedade que esteja livre de constrangimentos económicos que levem à exclusão”.
Quem o defende crê que o RBI é sobretudo uma ferramenta para reduzir as enormes desigualdades que se acentuam cada vez mais, incentivando o envolvimento de todos os cidadãos nas respectivas comunidades onde poderiam ter uma vida digna. Além da promoção da dignidade, uma vez que todos os cidadãos seriam iguais beneficiários do mesmo rendimento, a implementação do RBI oferece a possibilidade de uma vida mais plena e mais feliz pois cada cidadão pode seguir uma vocação, uma vontade de empreender, de trabalhar não apenas devido à obrigação de pagar contas. Além de que a situação de pandemia que vivemos actualmente constitui uma oportunidade sem precedentes para reflectir seriamente sobre a necessidade de uma nova geração de políticas de protecção social com redes de segurança mais robustas, em que se insere precisamente o RBI.
Decerto que há desafios e mitos inerentes à sua implementação, dos quais se destacam, por exemplo, o financiamento e o alegado incentivo ao não trabalho.
Para perceber melhor as bases do RBI, as suas vantagens e os seus desafios, convidamos Catarina Neves, doutoranda em filosofia social e política na Universidade do Minho, com uma tese sobre a justificação do rendimento básico incondicional, e a sua ligação com o emprego e com a reciprocidade; Jorge Pinto, doutorado em filosofia social e política e co-autor do livro Rendimento Básico Incondicional: Uma Defesa da Liberdade (Almedina, ed. 70); Roberto Merrill, Professor Auxiliar de Filosofia na Universidade do Minho, Presidente da Associação Portuguesa pelo Rendimento Básico Incondicional e também co-autor do livro supra citado.
Reading Group From 2020-11-06 to 2020-11-06
Online session, 2p.m.
The 7th session of the reading group of the PREDPOD project will take place November 6 2020 at 2pm. In this session the following article will be discussed: Gavin Kerr, "Predistribution: what it is and why it matters" (manuscript). Gavin Kerr, our invited speaker, will make a brief presentation of the main ideas of his paper which will be followed by a debate with the participants. The password to join the meeting room are as follows: Meeting Room (password: 612106)
Gavin Kerr an independent post-doctoral researcher currently based near Bonn in Germany. His research interests lie at the intersection of the fields of politics, philosophy, and economics. He pursued his doctoral studies in political philosophy at Queen's University Belfast, and has been conducting research on the ideas of predistribution and the property-owning democracy since graduating in 2011. His current research focuses on the importance of land and other forms of rent in economic theory and practice, and on the relevance of land economics to the issue of environmental sustainability. His book on these topics was published in 2017, The Property-Owning Democracy: Freedom and Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century, by Taylor & Francis.
Lição inaugural do Curso de Filosofia From 2020-10-21 to 2020-10-21
Anfifeatro A1, Ed.1 (CP I), 14:30h
Reading Group From 2020-10-16 to 2020-10-16
Online session, 2p.m.
Summer School From 2020-09-14 to 2020-09-21
Sessão Zoom
MANCEPT 2020 From 2020-09-09 to 2020-09-11
Zoom Meeting
🗗 | Program | AbstractsMANCEPT - Manchester Centre for Political Theory From 2020-09-09 to 2020-09-11
Manchester
CEPS Seminars (Online) From 2020-07-16 to 2020-07-16
16h30- 18h30 (Lisbon time)
Public Webinar From 2020-07-10 to 2020-07-10
Online
Summer School in Political Philosophy and Public Policy From 2020-07-06 to 2020-07-09
University of Minho
Conference From 2020-07-01 to 2020-07-03
University of Minho
CEPS Seminars From 2020-06-30 to 2020-06-30
Ceps Seminar Room
🗗CEPS Seminars From 2020-04-23 to 2020-04-23
Ceps Seminar Room
🗗CEPS Seminars From 2020-04-16 to 2020-04-16
Ceps Seminar Room
CEPS Seminars From 2020-04-15 to 2020-04-15
Ceps Seminar Room
CEPS Seminars From 2020-03-19 to 2020-03-19
Ceps Seminar Room
Conferência e Apresentação de Livro From 2020-03-18 to 2020-03-18
Audiório Ed 1.07, 10:30
Por convite do CEPS e do departamento de Relações Internacionais, o Prof. Carlos Gaspar dará uma conferência no dia 18 de Março próximo às 10h30 no audiório Ed 1.07. pelas 10h30.
O lançamento do seu livro mais recente será na Livraria Almedina às 17h, começando com uma breve apresentação dos Prof. Sandra Dias Fernandes e J. A Colen, e seguido de perguntas e respostas.
5th Braga Colloquium in the History of Moral and Political Philosophy From 2020-01-20 to 2020-01-21
University of Minho (Braga, Portugal)
Evento From 2019-12-12 to 2019-12-12
Restaurante Panorâmico da Universidade do Minho
CEPS Seminars From 2019-12-09 to 2019-12-09
Ceps Seminar Room, 14:30h
Unconditional Basica Income From 2019-12-05 to 2019-12-05
Nova School of Business and Economics
10th Summer School in Political Philosophy and Public Policy From 2019-07-09 to 2019-07-11
Auditorium of ILCH
CEPS Seminars From 2019-07-08 to 2019-07-08
CEPS Room, 16h30-18h30
CEPS Seminars From 2019-06-25 to 2019-06-25
CEPS Room, 14h30-16h30
CEPS Seminars From 2019-06-17 to 2019-06-17
CEPS Room, 14h30-16h30
International Congress From 2019-06-13 to 2019-06-15
Universidade do Minho, Braga
CEPS Seminars From 2019-06-12 to 2019-06-12
CEPS Room, 15h30-17h30
EIBEA 2019 From 2019-06-11 to 2019-06-13
Universidade do Minho
🗗 | WebsiteCEPS Seminars From 2019-05-29 to 2019-05-29
CEPS Room, 14h30-16h30
Seminário From 2019-05-23 to 2019-05-23
Auditório ILCH, 15h
CEPS Seminars From 2019-05-21 to 2019-05-21
Sala CEPS, 14:30h
CEPS Seminars From 2019-05-02 to 2019-05-02
CEPS meeting room, 14:30h
UBI Workshop Series - Session 1 From 2019-04-23 to 2019-04-23
CEPS Seminar Room
CEPS Seminars From 2019-04-03 to 2019-04-03
CEPS meeting room, 14:30h
4th Braga Colloquium in the History of Moral and Political Philosophy From 2019-01-29 to 2019-01-30
Universidade do Minho
🗗 | WebsiteResearch Seminars in Ethics and Political Philosophy From 2019-01-25 to 2019-01-25
Universidade do Minho, CEPS meeting room, ILCH, ground floor, 14h30
International Congress From 2019-01-24 to 2019-01-26
University of Minho
Global Ethics Day From 2018-10-17 to 2018-10-17
University of Minho , CEPS Room
Inspired by Earth Day, the Global Ethics Day was created to explore the role of ethics in a globalized world. By invitation of its founder, the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, the Centre for Ethics, Politics and Society at the University of Minho (Braga, Portugal) joins the fifth edition of this planetary event by organizing an open discussion session on the following topic: through Wich ethics for the Anthropocene?
Seminar on Ethics and Political Philosophy From 2018-10-01 to 2018-10-01
University of Minho, CEPS meeting room, ILCH, ground floor, 14h30
Seminar on Ethics and Political Philosophy From 2018-09-11 to 2018-09-11
University of Minho , Auditorium of ILCH
Summer-School From 2018-07-03 to 2018-07-05
University of Minho
Theme: Which Property? Whose Capital? Property-Owning Democracy and the Socialist Alternative
Colloquium From 2018-06-11 to 2018-06-12
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
Keynote speakers: Prof. Catriona McKinnon (University of Reading, UK) [cv]; Prof. Darrel Moellendorf (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt) [cv]
Seminar on Ethics and Political Philosophy From 2018-05-30 to 2018-05-30
Sala CEPS, 18h, Universidade do Minho - Campus Gualtar
Seminar From 2018-05-04 to 2018-05-04
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
Almoços de ética From 2018-04-20 to 2018-04-20
Restaurante panorâmico da UMinho
Seminar From 2018-04-20 to 2018-04-20
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
Seminar From 2018-04-13 to 2018-04-13
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
Seminar From 2018-04-06 to 2018-04-06
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
Colloquium From 2018-02-01 to 2018-02-02
University of Minho Braga, Portugal
Theme: Radicalism and Compromise. Keynote speaker: Avishai Margalit (The Faculty of Humanities at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem) [cv]
Colloquium From 2017-09-25 to 2017-09-26
Universidade do Minho - Auditório ILCH
Summer-School From 2017-07-13 to 2017-07-15
University of Minho
Theme: Philosophical Ideas for a Brave New World of Work