Öffentliche Veranstaltungen

Portrait picture of Hanna Kuusela

“Family First” – Family Partiality as an Obstacle to More Equal Redistribution

Scholar in Residence Lecture III
  • Datum: 02.06.2026
  • Uhrzeit: 16:30 - 18:00
  • Vortragende: Hanna Kuusela
Hanna Kuusela is Associate Professor in Sociology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, and the MPIfG Scholar in Residence 2026. During her stay at the Institute, she presents a lecture series entitled "The Redistributive Ethos in Crisis: Three Imaginaries Dismantling the Welfare State." The three lectures will take place on May 5, and May 26, and June 2, 2026. [mehr]
Portrait photo of Jonathan Levy

Midas Touch: On the Demand for Money in History

MPIfG Lecture
  • Datum: 10.06.2026
  • Uhrzeit: 16:30 - 18:00
  • Vortragender: Jonathan Levy
  • Sciences Po, Paris
  • Sign up: info@mpifg.de
In his talk, Jonathan Levy introduces the problem of the demand for money in history, and seeks — drawing from Keynes — to clarify demand as a category of analysis across economic but also social, cultural, and political life. [mehr]
illustrative picture; two young persons talking to each other before a background of green bushes; in the foreground "twentieth anniversary - Summer Conference on Economy and Society"

Summer Conference on Economy and Society

Anniversary Conference
  • Beginn: 21.06.2026
  • Ende: 24.06.2026
The Summer Conference on Economy and Society was established in 2006 and will celebrate its twentieth anniversary in June 2026. When it was founded, the goal was to foster an ongoing dialogue between economic sociology and political economy. [mehr]
Portrait photo of Kai Koddenbrock

Understanding Germany in Times of Genocide: Franz Neumann and the Ongoing Question of Imperialism

MPIfG Lecture
  • Datum: 08.07.2026
  • Uhrzeit: 16:30 - 18:00
  • Vortragender: Kai Koddenbrock
  • Bielefeld University
  • Sign up: info@mpifg.de
In the face of exploding investments into the weapons industry, the rise of the AfD, and the silence in the face of plausible genocide, Kai Koddenbrock’s talk explores how these old and more recent theories of fascism and of imperialism can help us make sense of the current German “model.” [mehr]
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