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Thursday, June 04, 2020

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The Micro and Macro of The Changing Nature of Work and Leisure

Runs from Thursday, June 04 to Friday, June 05.

We are very sorry to announce that the Mirco and Macro of The Changing Nature of Work and Leisure workshop has been cancelled.

The Department is pleased to announce the Mirco and Macro of The Changing Nature of Work and Leisure workshop organised by Christine Braun and Roland Rathelot and Thijs van Rens.

4-5 June 2020
Scarman, University of Warwick

The nature of work and leisure is changing. Labour force participation has been decreasing steadily since 2000 while the media is filled with claims of rapid growth in informal employment in the “gig” economy. At the same time, technological change has a deep impact on the demand for work, by making some skills and some occupations easy to substitute by machines. Are these changes reflecting a revolution on the labour market, perhaps driven by the emerging sharing economy, or are they symptoms of deeper structural changes on the supply side? What are the implications of these changes for productivity and unemployment policies?

In this workshop, we aim to bring together researchers working on documenting and explaining the causes and implications of the changing nature of work for the micro and macro of labour economics.

Call for papers

We are looking for submissions related to but not limited to:

  • The casualisation of the labour market and the emergence of the gig economy
  • Changes in patters of the flexibility and decentralisation of employment
  • Determinants of trends in the demand for skill
  • Implications of these shifts for household behaviour and non-market time
  • Changing determinants of job search and labour force participation
  • Demographic shifts of the workforce and its consequences for the economy

We welcome empirical, quantitative and theoretical papers, and contributions at both an individual and aggregate level.

Submission

The deadline to submit papers for consideration is 15th March 2020. Papers should be submitted to micromacrowarwick at gmail dot com. Authors will be notified by April 2020.

Registration

page-type: formsbuilder

related:https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/events/2019/5/the_micro_and_macro_of_inequality

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Extraordinary Department Meeting
MS Teams
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Global Insights: COVID-19 and Gender Divides. A live-streamed panel discussing the challenges of COVID-19.

PAIS presents the fifth panel in our weekly live-streamed Global Insights series with our partners in Canada, the US, Ethiopia and Germany

This week’s panel will discuss a range of gender divides which have emerged/re-emerged as a result of the spread of COVID-19. The Panel will host experts from education, public health, employment, economic and migration perspectives.

Panelists

Juanita Elias, University of Warwick
Jenna Hennebry, BSIA and Wilfrid Laurier University
Sehin Teferra, Setaweet
Liane Wörner, University of Konstanz
Thespina (Nina) Yamanis, American University

Moderated by Ann Fitz-Gerald, Balsillie School of International Affairs

About the Global Insights series

“Global Insights” is a weekly live-streamed, moderated panel series which provides different national and regional perspectives on big questions currently facing researchers, policymakers and planners worldwide in light of the Coronavirus pandemic.

All are welcome. Sign up for free here: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/global-insights-covid-19-and-gender-divides-tickets-105981884670

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Knowledge and Understanding Seminar
By Zoom

Speaker: Richard Gipps (Oxford)

Title: 'On the Importance of Not Understanding the Patient'

Abstract​: "One kind of everyday understanding that we seek has to do with making sense of what someone’s getting at or on about with her initially opaque words or actions. The retrieval of such meaning is a mainstay of everyday life and an ambition that psychology often brings with it to the clinical setting – even when the thought there under consideration is psychotic. It’s also presupposed by such efforts at understanding, causally, why the patient thinks as she does as invoke the notion of a mistake or illusion: we can’t understand why someone makes a particular mistake unless we already understand something of its content. (The understanding here is captured by suggestions like: ‘Were I in her cognitive/perceptual/somatosensory/existential/environmental predicament, I’d come to that conclusion too’).
In this paper I suggest that certain theories of thought disorder, passivity experience and delusion – theories which hope to understand the patient by retrieving his speaker’s meaning – radically fail. They do so because they trade on an alienated conception of ordinary mental life which is itself only sustained by illusions of sense; they attempt to reduce delusion to illusion; and they fail the patient by evading the fact of, rather than meeting him in the midst of, his brokenness.
Despite the impossibility of retrieving speaker’s meaning from truly psychotic discourse, this does not render unavailable other forms of understanding (symbolic/motivational, neurological, situational etc.) of the psychotic subject. Even so, if we’re to achieve, with the psychotic subject, that (moral) form of understanding which can be said to be shown someone, we must first learn to avoid the temptation of attributing speaker’s or agent’s meaning to his psychotic words and acts. To this end this paper outlines what I’ll call an ‘apophatic’ (as opposed to a ‘cataphatic’) psychopathology. This ‘apophatic’ approach aims at understanding the patient not through positively understanding her words’ meaning but instead through understanding just why some of the things we’re most tempted to say of her fail her.
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