Deadline for Abstracts: 31 January 2023

Linz/Upper Austria, 7–9 September 2023
Conference Languages: English / German

Industrialization and deindustrialization have been global and combined phenomena ever since the Industrial Revolution. The wave of industrialization associated with England in the late 18th and early 19th centuries formed but one element of a dramatic global restructuring of production which came with the
loss and transformation of livelihoods in other parts of the world. India is emblematic for that, as the surge in machine-driven industrialization in England
went hand in hand with the decline if not dismantling of the more craft-based textile industries in India. Since then, we have witnessed many waves of
deindustrialization, reindustrialization and economic transition around the world. These interconnected processes have been accompanied by often dramatic
changes in employment opportunities and the world of work more generally.

This conference seeks to explore processes that are often described as ‘deindustrialization’ from a global and historical perspective. It starts from the assumption that the term itself is problematic, as the economic processes leading to deindustrialization at the same time might include processes of
reindustrialization. The term itself is also not used widely in different languages: in German ‘Strukturwandel’ is preferred, in Italian there ‘ristruccturazione’ and in French we often hear about ‘modernisation’. The ambivalence of terminology points at the diversity of processes of industrial restructuring: they may be due to shifts of profit expectations between industrial sectors, changing modalities of international capital movements or to the transformation of labour processes and management strategies within a specific industrial sector. Each of these interconnected processes of crisis resolution can result in various forms of spatial relocation, and re-composition of the labour force.

Hence, we are asking how best to understand the processes of economic and spatial transition, their social and cultural consequences as well as their political
fall-outs. We are interested in resistance to economic transitioning processes where industrial capital is leaving one place and moving to another. We would
like to receive paper proposals that seek to recuperate the voices of those most affected by economic transitions, including workers and their communities,
adjacent social strata directly affected by industrial restructuring, labour movements and urban as well as rural social movements.
Furthermore, we are keen to learn about how these transitions might have changed traditional gender orders and how they might have opened up new
ethnic divisions. Finally, we wish to pay special attention to how the memory of an industrial past and of specific trajectories of deindustrialization have
influenced the postindustrial orders that have been emerging in many of the formerly industrial regions. Memory has been a powerful political resource and
the construction of industrial heritage has not just been the nostalgic backdrop to a vibrant tourist industry but also the backbone of resistance towards an
undermining of ways of life and of solidaristic collective cultures that characterized industrial societies. Memory has also traveled between old and new
sites of de/industrialization, and can function as a resource informing endeavors to build new solidarities and community-building. Processes of deindustrialization and reindustrialization need to be embedded in wider problems of capitalist development and the tensions between global
markets and local conditions. If ‘capital moves’ (Jefferson Cowie), it might fix problems for capitalist development but it also causes problems for those
attached to specific localities. Furthermore, processes of industrialization have often caused massive environmental problems, which are left to postindustrial
futures once the industries have gone. Papers dealing with questions of political ecology and energy transition will therefore also be welcome.

The conference will attempt to shed light on processes of deindustrialization in a global framework paying attention to dramatic forms of deindustrialization and industrial restructuring in the global South as well as the global North including Eastern Europe. The history of developmentalist politics and their failure raises questions about the interrelatedness of developments in the global North and the global South. Focusing on localities and regions where industrial capital has left and/or has relocated to, the conference wishes to explore the spatial reorganization of capitalism and its conferences in regions and countries around the world. Transregional and comparative studies will be especially welcome. Undoubtedly, so far, studies of deindustrialization have tended to focus on the global North. The conference wishes to develop a de-centered global perspective by bringing in the global South and the interrelatedness of both spatial spheres. It also seeks to draw attention to less well-studied regions/sites affected by deindustrialization around the world. Finally, being aware that deindustrialization processes arguably go back a long way, this conference will be open to papers on the early modern period as well.
Deindustrialization studies has been strongly transdisciplinary and the conference would invite contributions not just from historians but from a range of different disciplines, including the social sciences, geography, anthropology, memory studies, social movement studies and others who have engaged with the types of economic transitions discussed above.

Submission

Proposed papers should include:

  • Abstract (max. 300 words)
  • Biographical note (continuous text, max. 200 words)
  • Full address and Email address

The abstract of the suggested paper should contain a separate paragraph explaining how and (if applicable) to which element(s) or question(s) of the Call
for Papers the submitted paper refers. The short CV should give information on the applicant’s contributions to the field of labour history, broadly defined, and specify (if applicable) relevant publications. For the purpose of information, applicants are invited to attach a copy of one of these publications to their
application.

Proposals to be sent to Laurin Blecha: conference@ith.or.at

Conference Publications

As a rule (i.e. with very few exceptions) the ITH publishes edited volumes arising from its conferences. Since 2013 the ITH conference volumes have been
published in Brill’s Studies in Global Social History Series, edited by Marcel van der Linden. The ITH encourages the conference participants to submit their
papers to this publication project. High-quality papers will be selected by the volume’s editors.

Time Schedule

Submission of proposals: 31 January 2023
Notification of acceptance: 28 February 2023
Full papers or presentation version: 15 August 2023

Prepatory Group

Ravi Ahuja, University Göttingen
Stefan Berger, Ruhr University Bochum
Laurin Blecha, ITH, Vienna
Eszter Bartha, Hannah Arendt Institute, Dresden
Paolo Fontes, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Therese Garstenauer, ITH, Vienna
David Mayer, ITH, Vienna

The ITH and its members

The ITH is one of the worldwide known forums of the history of labour and social movements. The ITH favours research pursuing inclusive and global perspectives and open-ended comparative thinking. Following its tradition of cooperating with organisations of the labour movement, the ITH likewise puts emphasis on the conveyance of research outside the academic research community itself. Currently ca. 100 member institutions and a growing number of individual members from five continents are associated with the ITH.

Information on ITH publications in the past 50 years:
https://www.ith.or.at/en/publications/

Online ITH membership application form:
https://www.ith.or.at/de/mitgliedschaft/

Find the Call as a PDF-File here: Call for Papers ITH Conference 2023