-- SSHA 1993 Program: Baltimore Nov 4-7 --complete text of program--- for further information, contact program chair Eileen McDonagh, dept political science Northeastern U Boston MA 02115 voice: 617-373-2796 fax: 617-373-5311 her bitnet address = emcd@nuhub---- POSTER PRESENTATION: NEWSPAPERS AND MORAL LEADERSHIP: THE NEW YORK NEWSPAPER MORAL WAR OF 1840 Elliot King Loyola College in Maryland (Media Studies Program)POSTER PRESENTATION: THE FORMATION OF THE EUROPEAN STATE SYSTEM: A SIMULATION MODEL John Komlos University of Munich (Economics)
POSTER PRESENTATION: BROWN SUGAR: THE MAKING OF THE PAST IN AN AUSTRIAN TOWN, 1945-1992 Anne Gevers University of Amsterdam (Postdoctoraal Instituut voor de Sociale Wetenschap)
POSTER PRESENTATION: NAME-STANDARDISATION AND AUTOMATIC FAMILY RECONSTITUTION Christer Lundh Lund University (Economic History)
POSTER PRESENTATION: THE BUSINESS ROOTS OF COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY: THE HISTORY OF PUNCH CARDS AS PRECURSORS TO ELECTRONIC "RECORDS" Margaret O. Adams National Archives and Records (Archival Services Branch, Center for Electronic Records) THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SEMINARY OF HISTORY AND POLITICS: RECONSIDERING THE GENEALOGY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE HISTORY
Moderator: Joseph Cooper Johns Hopkins University (Provost)
Panelist: Robert Fogel University of Chicago (Economics)
Panelist: David Harvey Johns Hopkins University (Geography and Environmental Engineering)
Panelist: John Higham Johns Hopkins University (History)
Panelist: Kirstie McClure Johns Hopkins University (Political Science)
Panelist: Dorothy Ross Johns Hopkins University (History)
Proceedings will be taped and transcribed for possible publication in Social Science History.
Frank Shivers Baltimore Architecture Foundation and Johns Hopkins University (Regional Historian, Author of Baltimore Walks and Talks: An Intimate Guide) and Frank Towers Clarion University (History)
Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm and Friday, 3:45-5:45 pm
PANEL: FROM "MOBTOWN" TO POSTMODERN CITY: A HISTORICAL WALKING TOUR OF BALTIMORE FROM THE 18TH TO 20TH CENTURY
Meet at Radisson Hotel Lobby. Nominal Fee: $2 at time of tour. Limited to the first 20 persons.
1A Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: ONCE AGAIN, MODERNIZATION: NORBERT ELIAS, THE "CIVILIZING PROCESS," AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE/LEGAL HISTORY
Chair: Lee Beier Illinois State University (History)
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT FOR THE CIVILIZED AND UNCIVILIZED IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND Barbara Hanawalt University of Minnesota (History)
ELIAS AND THE HISTORY OF CRIME IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE Pieter Spierenburg Erasmus University (History)
MODERNIZATION AND CRIMINALITY: WHAT IS THE EXPLANATION? Helmut Thome University of Halle (Sociology)
Commentator: Herman Diederiks University of Leiden (Economic and Social History)
1B Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: THE CULTURAL CONTEXT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: EUROPEAN TEXTILES IN THE EIGHTEENTH AND NINETEENTH CENTURIES
Chair: Greg Clark University of California, Davis (Economics)
THE SOURCES OF INNOVATION: MANUFACTURERS, MAKERS, AND MARKETS IN THE WOOLEN AND WORSTED INDUSTRY OF EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY YORKSHIRE John Smail University of North Carolina at Charlotte (History)
GENDER AND UNEVEN RURAL INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT: THE IRISH AND SCOTTISH LINEN INDUSTRIES Jane Gray Indiana University, South Bend (Sociology)
THE CULTURAL MILIEU OF FACTORY LIFE: PATERNALISM, INDUSTRIALIZATION, AND URBANIZATION IN DUNBARTON, COUNTY DOWN, 1825-1900 Marilyn Cohen Montclair State College (Anthropology)
THE USE OF TIME AND SPACE IN NINETEENTH CENTURY GERMAN AND BRITISH TEXTILE MILLS Richard Biernacki University of California, San Diego (Sociology)
Commentator: Greg Clark University of California, Davis (Economics)
1C Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: HOUSEHOLD AND FAMILY IN PRE-TRANSITION JAPAN
Chair: Geraldine Mineau University of Utah (Human Genetics)
NATURAL FERTILITY PATTERNS IN THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD Ken'Ichi Tomobe Tokuyama University (Economics)
ADOPTION AS A STRATEGY FOR SUCCESSION UNDER DEMOGRAPHIC CONSTRAINTS -- A CASE OF 19TH CENTURY TAMA Emiko Ochiai Doshisha Women's College of Liberal Arts (Liberal Arts) Satomi Kurosu The International Research Center for Japanese Studies
Commentator: Kenneth H. Fliess University of Nevada, Reno (Anthropology)
1D Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: AMERICA'S CHILDREN BY JOHN HERNANDEZ AND CHILDREN IN TIME AND PLACE, EDITED BY GLEN ELDER, JOHN MODELL AND ROSS PARKE
Panelist: Tamara K. Hareven University of Delaware (Family Studies and History)
Panelist: Maris Vinovskis University of Michigan (History)
Panelist: Richard Lerner Michigan State University (Institute for Children, Youth and Families)
Panelist: Donald J. Hernandez U.S. Bureau of the Census (Population Division)
Panelist: Glen H. Elder, Jr. University of North Carolina -- Chapel Hill (Sociology)
1E Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Founders Suite
PANEL: SPATIAL ASPECTS OF WORLD-SYSTEMS I: ANCIENT
Chair: Timothy Baugh Smithsonian (Repatriation Office)
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EURASIA IN HEGEMONIC TRANSITIONS Giovanni Arrighi State University of New York-Binghamton (Sociology)
CROSS-WORLD-SYSTEM ANALYSIS Christopher Chase-Dunn Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
THE BRONZE AGE WORLD-SYSTEM AND ITS CYCLES Andre Gunder Frank (Scholar at Large)
WINE, WOMEN, AND MINES: ETRUSCAN AND MYCENANEAN WORLD-SYSTEMS Darrell La Lone De Pauw University (Sociology and Anthropology)
Commentator: Timothy Baugh Smithsonian Office (Repatriation)
Thomas D. Hall DePauw University (Sociology and Anthropology) George Derluguian State University of New York-Binghamton (Sociology)
1F Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: THE SOCIAL BASES OF AMERICAN POLITICS
Chair: Jack Reynolds University of Texas at San Antonio (History)
AMORAL FAMILISM AS A SOURCE OF POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AMONG ITALIAN-AMERICANS: PATTON, PENNSYLVANIA, AS A CASE IN POINT Stefano Luconi University of Rome (American Studies)
TO EXCLUDE 'BROKEN-DOWN WIRE-PULLERS AND PARTY HACKS': THE AMESBURY-SALISBURY STRIKE AND THE SOCIAL ORIGINS OF POLITICAL NATIVISM IN ANTEBELLUM MASSACHUSETTS Mark Voss Hubbard University of Massachusetts at Amherst (History)
THE SAN FRANCISCO VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT AND THE MACHINE: URBAN POLITICS AND THE FALL OF AN INSTITUTION, 1849-66 Amy S. Greenberg Harvard University (History)
Commentator: Jack Reynolds University of Texas at San Antonio (History)
1G Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: WOMEN, WELFARE, AND WAGES: GENDER AND U.S. PUBLIC POLICIES BEFORE AND AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR
Chair: Sonya Michel University of Illinois (History)
THE TRANSITION FROM MOTHERS' PENSIONS TO AID TO DEPENDENT CHILDREN: NATIONAL AND STATE-LEVEL RESPONSES, 1929-1950 Edwin Amenta New York University (Sociology) Nancy K. Cauthen New York University (Sociology) Eric Eto New York University (Sociology)
CONTRASTING VISIONS, CONTESTING REFORMS: THE CHILDREN'S BUREAU AND FERA'S STRUGGLE OVER AID TO DEPENDENT CHILDREN Barbara Machtinger Boston College (History)
WOMEN ON THE VERGE: EQUAL PAY IN THE AMERICAN STATES, 1943-62 Yvonne Zylan New York University (Sociology) Robert Max Jackson New York University (Sociology)
Commentator: Sonya Michel University of Illinois (History)
1H Thursday, 1:30-3:30 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS AND IDENTITY FORMATION
Chair: Michael Hanagan New School for Social Research (History)
DISCOURSE AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS AMONG EARLY 19TH CENTURY ENGLISH WORKERS Marc Steinberg Clark University (Sociology)
CLASS FORMATION AND AMERICAN SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Scott McNall University of Toledo (Sociology)
INSERTING THE BODY INTO THE POLITICS OF CLASS Kathleen Canning University of Michigan (History)
Commentator: Ronald Aminzade University of Minnesota (Sociology)
2A Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: MEANING AND MOBILIZATION: THINKING GLOBALLY
Chair: Gene Burns Princeton University (Sociology)
SOLIDARITY, MOBILIZATION AND IDEOLOGY CONSTRUCTION: THE RITUAL OF THE IRISH LAND MEETINGS, 1879-1881 Anne Kane University of California, Los Angeles (Sociology)
MAKING ENEMIES, MAKING REVOLUTIONS: MORAL BOUNDARIES IN IRAN AND CAMBODIA James M. Jasper New York University (Sociology) Tamara Dumanovsky New York University (Sociology)
TOWARD A THEORY OF SEMIOTIC RESISTANCE: THE USE OF LOCAL HISTORIES TO REBUILD POPULAR MOVEMENTS IN A CHILEAN SHANTYTOWN Julia Paley Harvard University (Anthropology) Maureen R. Waller Princeton University (Sociology)
Commentator: Gene Burns Princeton University (Sociology)
2B Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: ESSAYS ON THE NATURE OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Chair: Rolf Dumke Universit t der Bundeswehr (Social Science)
BANK CREDIT AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY 1813-1860 Paul Lockard University of Massachusetts (Economics)
ENGLAND 1700-1850: THE MISSING AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Gregory Clark University of California -- Davis (Economics)
A MODEL OF NINETEENTH CENTURY EUROPEAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT James Foreman-Peck St. Antony's College (Economics)
COUPLEX MODELS OF ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT Joseph D. Reid, Jr. George Mason University (Economics)
Commentators: Fran ois Crouzet University of Paris-Sorbonne (History) John Komlos University of Munich (Economic History)
2C Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: THE CULTURAL DEMOGRAPHY OF DEATH
Chair: James R. Lehning University of Utah (History)
MOVING THE ANCESTORS INTO THE HOUSE Laurel L. Cornell Indiana University (Sociology)
THE PURITAN LIFE TABLE Daniel Scott Smith University of Illinois at Chicago (History) J. David Hacker University of Minnesota (History)
FROM REMEMBERING DEATH TO REMEMBERING LIFE: CHANGING STYLES OF FUNERAL DISCOURSE IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK Robert V. Wells Union College (History)
Commentator: James R. Lehning University of Utah (History)
2D Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: SPATIAL ASPECTS OF WORLD-SYSTEMS II: MODERN
Chair: Leonard Hochberg Stanford University (Sociology)
HARMONIC FREQUENCY OF ECONOMIC CYCLES AND GLOBAL INTEGRATION, 1790-1990: REGIONAL INCORPORATION INTO THE WORLD-SYSTEM Peter Grimes Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
RADIO TELEGRAPHY AND INTER-STATE COMPETITION, 1901-1939 Peter Hugill Texas A & M (Geography)
Commentator: Leonard Hochberg Stanford University (Sociology)
2F Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: THE POLITICS OF PENSIONS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF BRITAIN, CANADA, AND THE UNITED STATES, 1880-1940 BY ANN SHOLA ORLOFF
Chair: Julia Adams University of Michigan (Sociology)
Panelist: Frances Fox Piven CUNY (Sociology and Political Science)
Panelist: Michael Hanagan New School for Social Research (Center for Historical Studies)
Panelist: Seth Koven Villanova University (History)
Panelist: Jane Jenson Universit de Montr al (Science Politique)
Panelist: Ann Orloff University of Wisconsin (Sociology)
2G Thursday, 3:45-5:45 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: COMMON DIFFERENCES: THE IMPACT OF RACE AND ETHNICITY ON WOMEN'S SURVIVAL STRATEGIES IN THE 19TH CENTURY UNITED STATES
Chair: Elinor Accampo University of Southern California (History)
AUTONOMY AND/OR COMMUNITY: ITALIAN AND JEWISH IMMIGRANT WOMEN IN TURN OF THE CENTURY NEW YORK Kathie Friedman Kasaba University of Washington, Tacoma (Liberal Studies/Sociology)
MEXICAN IMMIGRANT FAMILIES IN SAN ANTONIO Shannon Barker The George Washington University (American Studies)
AMBIGUOUS LIVES: FREE WOMEN OF COLOR IN RURAL GEORGIA, 1789-1879 Adele Logan Alexander University of Maryland (African-American Studies)
Commentator: Donna Gabaccia University of North Carolina, Charlotte (History)
3A Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Salon B
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: THE LONDON HANGED: CRIME AND CIVIL SOCIETY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BY PETER LINEBAUGH
Chair: Mary Beth Emmerichs University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee (History)
Panelist: Richard Soderlund Illinois State University (History)
Panelist: Joseph Reidy Howard University (History)
Panelist: Thomas Holloway Cornell University (History)
Panelist: Peter King Nene College (History)
Reply: Peter Linebaugh Trinity College (History)
3B Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Royale Board Room
PANEL: RECASTING DEFINITIONS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY IN ENGLISH LAW
Chair: Pat McCune Eastern Michigan University (History and Philosophy)
OATH-BREAKING AND CULPABILITY IN ANGLO-NORMAN ENGLAND Peter Tjapkes University of Michigan (History)
CONCEPTS OF GROUP RESPONSIBILITY IN THE REGICIDES' TRIALS OF 1660 Sarah Harrison University of Michigan (History)
FROM THE SIN OF DRUNKENNESS TO THE EXCUSE OF 'TEMPORARY PHRENSY' IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY COURTROOM Dana Rabin University of Michigan (History)
Commentator: Pat McCune Eastern Michigan University (History and Philosophy)
3C Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Hanover Suite A
PANEL: MEASUREMENT CULTURES: EPISTEMOLOGICAL ISSUES AND EMPIRICAL APPROACHES
Organizer: Marc Ventresca University of Illinois (College of Commerce)
Chair: Elizabeth West McGill University (Sociology)
TRACKING CATEGORIZATION PRACTICES AMONG POVERTY ORGANIZATIONS IN NEW YORK CITY, 1888-1917 John Mohr University of California, Santa Barbara (Sociology)
HISTORICAL AND CURRENT PERSPECTIVES ON UNDERCOUNTS IN 19TH CENTURY CENSUS DATA Miriam King University of Michigan (Sociology/Population Studies Center) Diana L. Magnuson University of Minnesota (History)
FORMALIZING AMBIGUITY IN MEASUREMENT Andrew Abbott University of Chicago (Sociology)
Commentators: John R. Hall University of California, Davis (Sociology) Margo Anderson University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (History)
3D Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Founders Suite
PANEL: ASPECTS OF SCHOOL DEVELOPMENT, MAINTENANCE AND USE
Chair: Ian Winchester Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (History and Philosophy)
HOUSEHOLD STRUCTURE AND SCHOOL PARTICIPATION IN THE UNITED STATES, 1850 TO 1940: A NATIONAL AND REGIONAL ANALYSIS Daniel C. Kallgren University of Minnesota (History)
MAINTENANCE OF SCHOOL EQUIPMENT IN THE HIGH SCHOOLS OF GUWAHATI, INDIA M. K. Pal Read and Write Centre (Secretary)
COLLEGE VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN THE UNITED STATES, 1900-1930 Edward P. Duggan Goucher College (Career Development Office)
MASS SCHOOLING AND MANUFACTURING PRODUCTIVITY IN THE UNITED STATES, 1890-1960 Robert Balfanz University of Chicago (Education)
Commentator: Chad Gaffield University of Ottawa (History)
3E Friday 8:45-10:45 am Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: COMPARATIVE PANEL ON ADOPTION IN HISTORY
Chair: Judith Modell Carnegie-Mellon University (History)
CREATING THE SUITABLE FAMILY: ADOPTION AND GENDER ROLES IN THE AMERICAN FAMILY, 1948-1972 Daniel Pinkerton University of Minnesota (History)
FAMILY STRATEGY AND ADOPTION IN PREINDUSTRIAL FRANCE Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux International Commission on Historical Demography
REFLECTIONS ON ADOPTION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY JAPAN Kathleen Uno Temple University (History)
Commentator: Ann Waltner University of Minnesota (History)
3F Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVES ON FAMILY AND HOUSEHOLD FORMATION IN AUSTRIA AND ENGLAND
Chair: Josef Ehmer Universitat Wien (Institut f r Wirtschafs und Sozialgeschichte, Vienna)
ECONOMIC STRUCTURES AND HOUSEHOLD PATTERNS IN NINETEENTH CENTURY AUSTRIA Jim Brown University of Minnesota (History)
MOBILITY INTO AND OUT OF HOUSEHOLDS IN LATE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND Sheila Cooper Indiana University, Indianapolis (Graduate School)
MOBILITY OF HOUSEHOLDS AND MOBILITY OF MEMBERS OF HOUSEHOLDS: SOME EVIDENCE FROM RURAL ENGLAND BEFORE 1900 Richard Wall Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure
Commentator: Josef Ehmer Universitat Wien (Institut f r Wirtschafs und Sozialgeschichte, Vienna)
3G Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Lafayette Suite
PANEL: HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN FRONTIERS I
Chair: John Markoff University of Pittsburgh (Sociology and History)
GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS SHAPING DIFFERENTIAL INDIGENOUS INCORPORATION INTO THE EUROPEAN WORLD-ECONOMY: NORTHERN NEW SPAIN AND LA PLATA Thomas D. Hall DePauw University (Sociology and Anthropology)
AMAZONIAN BRAZIL AS A FRONTIER Archibald Haller University of Wisconsin (Rural Sociology) Maria Haller University of Wisconsin (Rural Sociology)
F.J. TURNER'S INFLUENCE IN CANADA AND LATIN AMERICA Richard W. Slatta North Carolina State University (History)
Commentator: John Markoff University of Pittsburgh (Sociology and History)
3H Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Versailles Room
PANEL: INDUSTRIAL FLEXIBILITY: FRANCE AND THE U.S.A.
Chair: Philip Scranton Rutgers University - Camden (History)
FLEXIBLE INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: A CASE STUDY OF RURAL INDUSTRY IN 19TH CENTURY FRANCE Alain Dewerpe Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Centre de Recherches Historiques)
FLEXIBILITY FOR WHOM? IMMIGRANTS AND WOMEN IN THE SWEATSHOP Nancy L. Green Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Centre de Recherches Historiques)
HYPER-INNOVATION AND THE AMERICAN CLOTHING TRADES, 1880-1920 Bernard Smith Drew University (Economics)
Commentator: Robert Frost SUNY - Albany (History)
3I Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Salon E
PANEL: RACE, GENDER, AND POPULAR REPRESENTATIONS OF EMPIRE IN THE UNITED STATES, 1890-1914
Chair: Eric Arnesen University of Illinois at Chicago (African-American Studies)
REPRESENTATION OF RACE AND GENDER IN U.S. ASSIMILATIONIST AND IMPERIALIST DISCOURSE IN THE 1880'S-1910'S Louise Newman University of Florida, Gainesville (History)
NATIONALISM, EMPIRE, AND WHITENESS IN AMERICAN WORKING CLASS IDEOLOGY, 1890-1914 Andrew Neather Duke University (History)
CONTESTING CONSTRUCTIONS OF "RACE" AND EMPIRE; WAR LETTERS, CHARLES CHESTNUTT AND SUTTON GRIGGS Sabine Engel Duke University (English)
Commentators: Eric Arnesen (African-American University of Illinois at Chicago
Barry Goldberg Fordham University, College at Lincoln Center (Social Science)
3J Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Fairmont Suite
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: DATA MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS FOR HISTORICAL RESEARCH
Chair: Janice Reiff University of California, Los Angeles (History)
IBM-PC SYSTEMS Myron Gutmann University of Texas, Austin (History)
MINICOMPUTER SQL SYSTEMS George Alter Indiana University (History) G rard Bouchard Universit du Qu bec Chicoutimi (SOREP)
CUSTOM SYSTEMS Bertrand Desjardins University of Montreal (Demography)
SYSTEMS FOR MANAGING VISUAL DATA Daniel Greenstein Glasgow University (Modern History) Jan Oldervoll University of Bergen (History)
BIBLIOGRAPHY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS Steve Rappaport University of Pennsylvania (History)
MACINTOSH SYSTEMS Roy Rosenzweig George Mason University (History)
3K Friday, 8:45-10:45 am International
PANEL: THE HISTORY OF THE CHESAPEAKE ECOSYSTEM -- A PANEL DISCUSSION
Chair: Randolph Roth Ohio State University (History)
Panelist: Grace Bush Johns Hopkins University (Geography and Environmental Engineering)
Panelist: Carville Earle Louisiana State University (Geography and Anthropology)
Panelist: Tim Silver Appalachian State University (History)
Commentator: Tom Webb Brown University (Geological Sciences)
3L Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Maestro
PANEL: IRISH IMMIGRANT WOMEN AND THE MID-ATLANTIC URBAN EXPERIENCE
Chair: Alan Kraut The American University (History)
KEEPING HOUSE: IRISH IMMIGRANT WOMEN AND SOCIAL MOBILITY IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, 1840-1880 Jennifer Altenhofel The American University (History)
VOICES IN DISTRESS: IRISH WOMEN AMONG PHILADELPHIA'S LABORING POOR, 1785-1800 Margaret McAleer Georgetown University (History)
Commentator: Hasia Diner University of Maryland at College Park (American Studies) 3M Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Charles Suite
PANEL: ATTITUDINAL CHANGE DURING AND AFTER THE GULF WAR
Chair: Sam Hoff Delaware State University (Political Science)
APPROXIMATING PUBLIC OPINION DURING PAST WARS: A HISTORIAN'S PERSPECTIVE Tim H. Blessing Pennsylvania State University - Berks Campus (History)
GULF WAR ATTITUDE MEASUREMENTS USING THE OSGOOD SEMANTIC DIFFERNTIAL TECHNIQUE Henry O. Patterson Pennsylvania State University - Berks Campus (Psychology)
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON ATTITUDE CHANGE: INSTITUTIONS, PERSONS, GROUPS, ISSUES Doris J. Turkes Pennsylvania State University - Berks Campus (Sociology)
Commentators: Sam Hoff Delaware State University (Political Science)
Mildred A. Schwartz U. of Illinois at Chicago (Sociology)
3N Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: RACIAL VIOLENCE
Chair E.M. Beck University of Georgia (Sociology)
WHITE VIOLENCE AND BLACK RESPONSES IN THE POSTBELLUM SOUTH, 1880-1930 Wm. Fitzhugh Brundage Queen's University (History)
SOURCES OF CONTEMPORARY RACIAL UNREST IN THE UNITED STATES: FROM THE 1960S THROUGH THE 1990S Susan Olzak Stanford University (Sociology) Suzanne Shanahan Stanford University (Sociology)
THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF RACE RIOTS Roberta Senechal de la Roche Washington and Lee University (History)
Commentator: Stewart E. Tolnay SUNY--Albany (Sociology)
3O Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Salon A
PANEL: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON RELIGIOUS SOCIALIZATION
Chair: Mary Bendyna Georgetown University (Government)
FROM PULPIT TO PARLOUR: SHIFTS IN PASTORAL FOCI David Bos Amsterdam School for Social Research (PDIS)
WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN PATRIARCHICAL SOCIETIES: CHURCH AND CIVIL CODES Eni de Mesquita Samara The University of Texas at Austin (Population Research Center)
A CYCLICAL THEORY OF CHRISTIAN POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN THE UNITED STATES Ted G. Jelen Illinois Benedictine College (Political Science)
Commentator: Mary Bendyna Georgetown University (Government)
3P Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Salon D
PANEL: AGRICULTURAL TRANSFORMATIONS ON THREE CONTINENTS
Chair: Donald Parkerson East Carolina University (History)
PLANTING ELITES IN SOUTHWEST INDIA, 1700-1960 Paul E. Baak Free University/University of Amsterdam (Centre for Asian Studies Amsterdam (CASA))
LINEN, LABOR AND ULIMOGENITURE: A HISTORICAL MODEL OF RURAL FAMILY STRUCTURE IN GERMANY Rosalie Horstman Haines University of Delaware (Anthropology)
THE INTENSIFICATION OF SOUTHERN AGRICULTURE, 1860-1880: AN HISTORICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL PROBLEM John Otto International Center
Commentator: Donald Parkerson East Carolina University (History)
3Q Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Salon C
PANEL: SINGLE MOTHERS, POVERTY, AND POLICY
Chair: Theda Skocpol Harvard University (Sociology)
SINGLE MOTHERS, WORKFARE AND THE NEW JOBS PROGRAM Marjorie Abend-Wein Harvard University (Sociology)
FAMILY EVENTS AND HOUSEHOLD INCOME DURING THE FIVE YEARS FOLLOWING PARENTHOOD Nan Marie Astone Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (Population Dynamics)
SINGLE MOTHERS AND ABSENT FATHERS: THE POSSIBILITIES AND LIMITS OF CHILD SUPPORT POLICY Kathryn Edin Rutgers University (Sociology)
Commentator: Theda Skocpol Harvard University (Sociology)
3S Friday, 8:45-10:45 am Hanover Suite B
PANEL: RECONCEPTUALIZING WOMEN'S REPRODUCTIVE AND POLITICAL POWER
Chair: Kirstie McClure Johns Hopkins University (Political Science)
GENDER OPPRESSION, SEXUAL LIBERATION AND FEMALE SEXUALITY IN THE RHETORIC OF THE FRENCH BIRTH CONTROL MOVEMENT Elinor Accampo University of Southern California (History)
(RE)PRODUCTIVE LABOR AND AMERICAN LIBERALISM: CONCEPTIONALIZING MOTHERHOOD AND THE STATE OF NATURE Eileen McDonagh Northeastern University (Political Science)
WIFELY DUTIES: MARRIAGE, LABOR, AND THE COMMON LAW IN NINETEENTH CENTURY AMERICA Sara Zeigler University of California -- Los Angeles (Political Science)
Commentators: Kirstie McClure Johns Hopkins University (Political Science)
Catherine Fisk Loyola Marymount University (Loyola Law School)
4A Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Mount Vernon Suite
PANEL: HONOR, DISHONOR, AND LEGAL DISPUTES AMONG COMMON PEOPLE IN TRADITIONAL EUROPE
Chair: Lloyd Bonfield Tulane University (Law)
CONSTRUCTING PROOF AND CHARACTER: COURTS, WITNESSES, AND DISPUTES IN MEDIEVAL MARSEILLE Daniel L. Smail University of Michigan (History)
A QUESTION OF DIGNITY: PEASANT LEGAL CULTURE IN LATE IMPERIAL RUSSIA Jane Burbank University of Michigan (History)
SEX, LIES, AND THE CHURCH COURTS OF PRE-REFORMATION ENGLAND L. R. Poos The Catholic University of America (History)
Commentator: Carol L. Lansing University of Florida (History)
4B Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Salon A
PANEL: MEDICINE AND THE BODY POLITIC
Chair: Kathleen Canning University of Michigan (History)
EVIL HUMORS: WITCHCRAFT, ILLNESS, AND MEDICINE IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ENGLAND Lucinda McCray Beier Illinois State University (College of Arts and Sciences Research Office)
ABORTION AND THE SOCIAL BODY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW YORK Nicola Beisel Northwestern University (Sociology)
THE NATURAL LIFE AND THE DISCOURSE OF HEALTH IN EUROPE Signe Mellemgaard Odense University (Humanities Research Center)
STATISTICS AND THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH: THE METHODS OF W.H. DUNCAN, M.D., 1847-1863 Paul Laxton University of Liverpool (Geography)
Commentator: Kathleen Canning University of Michigan (History)
4C Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Maestro
PANEL: THE UNIQUE DISCONTINUITY OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Chair: David Mitch University of Maryland (Economics)
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: A CONCEPT TOO MANY? Joel Mokyr Northwestern University (Economics)
REFLECTIONS ON THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN FRANCE Fran ois Crouzet University of Paris-Sorbonne, Emeritus (History)
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AS THE ESCAPE FROM THE MALTHUSIAN TRAP John Komlos University of Munich (Economic History)
Commentator: John Smail University of North Carolina at Charlotte (History)
4D Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: DECLINE AND RECOVERY IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Chair: Hugh Rockoff Rutgers University (Economics)
THE WEST-GERMAN WIRTSCHAFTSWUNDER: A CRITICAL APPRAISAL Rolf Dumke Universit t der Bundeswehr (Social Science)
GERMANY AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE MARSHALL PLAN Helge Berger University of Munich (Economics) Albrecht Ritschl University of Munich (Economics)
SUPPLY SIDE POLICIES V.S. DEMAND SHOCKS IN GERMAN POSTWAR ECONOMIC GROWTH Holger Wolf New York University (School of Business)
INTERNATIONAL POLICY COORDINATION AND REFLATION DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION James Foreman-Peck St. Antony's College (Economics)
Commentators: Hugh Rockoff Rutgers University (Economics)
Chiarella Esposito University of Mississippi (History)
4E Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: INFANTICIDE AND CHILD ABANDONMENT
Chair: Tamara K. Hareven University of Delaware (Family Studies and History)
TWO KINDS OF POSITIVE CHECKS: PARENTAL STRATEGIES AND INFANTICIDE IN LATE IMPERIAL CHINA James Lee California Institute of Technology (History) Wang Feng University of Hawaii (Sociology)
INFANTICIDE IN TOKUGAWA JAPAN Hiroshi Kawaguchi Tezukayama University (Economics)
MAKING ANGELS: MORTALITY AMONG ABANDONED INFANTS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY ITALY David I. Kertzer Brown University (Anthropology and History) Michael J. White Brown University (Sociology)
Commentator: Ann Jannetta University of Pittsburgh (History)
4F Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVES ON FAMILY AND HOUSEHOLD PATTERNS
Chair: Richard Wall Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure
STRUCTURING SERIAL DATA FOR COMPUTING: CENSUS LISTS AND THE KATASTER Franz Eder University of Vienna (Institute for Economica and Social History)
FOLLOWING HOUSEHOLDS OVER TIME: A DUTCH EXAMPLE OF THE LONGITUDINAL APPROACH FOR THE PERIOD 1830-1930 Eric Beekink Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute
CROSS SECTIONAL AND LONGITUDINAL APPROACHES IN JAPANESE POPULATION HISTORY Laurel Cornell Indiana University (Sociology)
Commentator: Nancy Karweit Johns Hopkins University (Center for Social Organisation of Schools)
4G Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Founders Suite
PANEL: HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN FRONTIERS II
Chair: John Markoff University of Pittsburgh (Sociology and History)
BORDERS, BOUNDARIES AND CLASS STRUCTURE: FRONTIERS, WORLD SYSTEMS AND MISSING LINKS Richard Hogan Purdue University (Sociology)
MAINTAINING THE MASHPEE FRONTIER IN EARLY NEW ENGLAND Daniel Mandell (Scholar at Large)
FRONTIER CLASS CONFLICT AND THE LOCATION OF STATE INSTITUTIONS: RANCHERS, FARMERS, AND SEPARATISM IN BUENOS AIRES PROVINCE 1810-1830 Karl Monsma Northwestern University (Sociology)
SLAVERY ON TWO FRONTIERS: THE GERMAN COAST AND CASTRO'S COLONY Lauren Ann Kattner Franklin University (Intercultural Studies)
Commentator: John Markoff University of Pittsburgh (Sociology and History)
4H Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Salon B
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE ON "GETTING WORK" BY WALTER LICHT
Chair: Philip Scranton Rutgers University (History)
Panelist: Nancy Folbre University of Massachusetts (Economics)
Panelist: Alice Kessler-Harris Rutgers University (History)
Panelist: Francois Weil cole des Hautes tudes en Sciences Sociales (Centre d' tudes nord-am ricaines)
Panelist: Louis Galambos Johns Hopkins University (History)
Panelist: Walter Licht University of Pennsylvania (History)
4I Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: MASCULINITY, MILITANCE, AND MAINTENANCE: REPRESENTATIONS OF LABOR IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Chair: Eric Weitz St. Olaf College (History)
CONFRONTING A MASCULINE LABOR MOVEMENT: THE PLACE OF SOLIDARITY AND MILITANCY IN THE LIVES OF WOMEN ELECTRICAL UNION ORGANIZERS Nancy Palmer Boston College (History)
REDRAWING GENDERED NOTIONS OF MILITANCE: THE I.W.W. AND THE LAWRENCE BREAD AND ROSES STRIKE C. Joseph Cugini Boston College (History)
"REAL" WORK AND THE MAINTENANCE OF IDENTITY: THE SYMBOLIC SIGNIFICANCE OF TRADITIONAL LABOR IN THE RECENT ECONOMIC HISTORY OF NEWFOUNDLAND Lisa Sullivan Harvey Mudd College (Humanities and Social Sciences)
Commentator: Eric Weitz St. Olaf College (History)
4J Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Salon C
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: BRINGING BACON HOME: THE DIVERGENT PROGRESS OF COMPUTER-AIDED HISTORICAL RESEARCH IN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES
Chair: Daniel Greenstein Glasgow University (Modern History)
Panelist: Richard Jensen University of Illinois at Chicago (History)
Panelist: Daniel Greenstein Glasgow University (Modern History)
Panelist: Jan Oldervoll University of Bergen (History)
Panelist: Peter Wardley University of the West of England (Business History)
4K Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: BEYOND SOCIAL MOBILITY: THE ECONOMIC PROGRESS OF IMMIGRANTS IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY UNITED STATES
Chair: John James University of Virginia (Economics)
COMING TO ZION: THE FORTUNES OF THE FOREIGN-BORN IN UTAH, 1850-1870 Clayne Pope Brigham Young University (Economics)
DOWN AND OUT OR UP AND OUT: THE OCCUPATIONAL AND FINANCIAL MOBILITY OF NON-PERSISTERS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA Joseph Ferrie Northwestern University (Economics)
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY ON THE URBAN FRONTIER: NATIVITY, WEALTH, AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE IN EARLY CHICAGO David Galenson University of Chicago (Economics)
Commentators: Jon Gjerde University of California, Berkeley (History) Stanley Engerman University of Rochester (Economics and History) Joel Perlman Harvard University (Graduate School of Education)
4L Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: MIGRATION AND ETHNIC GROUP RELATIONS IN U.S. METROPOLITAN AREAS: HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY VIEWS
Chair: Alice O'Connor University of Chicago (Center for the Study of Urban Inequality)
BLACKS AND HISPANICS IN METROPOLITAN MIAMI SINCE THE 1950'S Raymond Mohl Florida Atlantic University (History)
MIGRATION AND THE WAGES AND EMPLOYMENT OF BLACK MALES Maria Enchavtegui The Urban Institute
ETHNIC GROUP RELATIONS IN LOS ANGELES: SOCIAL SCIENCE MODELS AND DAILY LIFE Melvin Oliver University of California, Los Angeles (Sociology)
Commentator: Philip Kasinitz Hunter College and C.U.N.Y Graduate Center (Sociology)
4M Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Salon E
PANEL: GENDER AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT: STUDIES OF CHICAGO IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY
Chair: Robyn Muncy University of Maryland, College Park (History)
WOMEN VOTERS AND POLITICIANS IN AMERICAN CITIES AT THE PROGRESSIVE ERA: A REPORT ON MASS AND ELITE PARTICIPATION Philip J. Ethington University of Southern California (History)
DOING THE WORK OF GOVERNMENT: THE CHICAGO WOMAN'S CLUB AND PROGRESSIVE REFORM Victoria Getis University of Michigan (History)
REDEFINING POLITICAL AUTHORITY: CHICAGO WOMEN AND POLITICAL INNOVATION IN STATE BUILDING Joanne L. Goodwin University of Nevada, Las Vegas (History)
Commentators: Robyn Muncy University of Maryland, College Park (History)
Alexander Keyssar Duke University (History)
4N Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: TERM LIMITS FOR CONGRESS: A ROUNDTABLE ON GEORGE F. WILL'S RESTORATION
Chair: Erik W. Austin Institute for Social Research (ICPSR)
Panelist: Cleta Mitchell U.S. Term Legal Institute (Executive Director)
Panelist: Peter Argersinger University of Maryland - Baltimore County (History)
Panelist: Frederick H. Pauls Library of Congress (Congressional Research Service)
Panelist: Edward L. Lascher, Jr. Harvard University (Kennedy School of Government)
4O Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Chair: Arnold H. Taylor Howard University (History)
BLACK POWER AND BLACK POLITICS: THE FREEDOM DEMOCRATS IN MISSISSIPPI, 1966-67 Michael Paul Sistrom University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (History)
POWER TO THE PEOPLE VERSUS POLITY ACCESS: COMPETING GOALS IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Francesca Polletta Williams College (Sociology)
THE CYCLES OF AMERICAN HISTORY REVISITED: EVIDENCE FROM P.O. RESEARCH William Mayer Northeastern University (Political Science)
Commentators: Arnold H. Taylor Howard University (History)
Martha Prescod Norman University of Michigan (History)
4P Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm International
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: THE CHRISTIAN RIGHT, PAST AND FUTURE
Chair: Clyde Wilcox Georgetown University (Government)
Commentators: Author of The Old Christian Right Leo Ribuffo George Washington University (History)
Author of God's Warriors: The Christian Right in Twentieth Century America Clyde Wilcox Georgetown University (Government)
Author of The Christian Right in Congress and The Transformation of the Christian Right Matthew C. Moen University of Maine (Political Science)
Author of The Political Mobilization of Religious Beliefs and The Political World of the Clergy Ted G. Jelen Illinois Benedictine College (Political Science)
4Q Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Charles Suite
PANEL: WAR, PEACE, AND THE LIFE COURSE: AMERICAN VETERANS AFTER THREE WARS
Chair: James W. Oberly University of Wisconsin -- Eau Claire (History)
THE TIMING AND INCIDENCE OF CIVIL WAR PENSION CLAIMS Timothy J. Haggerty Carnegie Mellon University (History)
VETERANS, AMERICAN SOCIETY, AND MEMORY OF THE GREAT WAR Jennifer Diane Keene U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences (History)
WHEN WORLD WAR II CAME TO MEN'S LIVES: A PERSPECTIVE ON SOCIAL TIMING Glen H. Elder, Jr. University of North Carolina -- Chapel Hill (Sociology) Michael J. Shanahan University of North Carolina -- Chapel Hill (Sociology) Elizabeth Colerick Clipp University of North Carolina -- Chapel Hill (Sociology)
Commentator: Paul Gade U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences (Psychology)
Commentator: Roger Ransom University of California, Riverside (History)
4R Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Versailles Room
PANEL: EXTENDING ANALYSES OF THE WELFARE STATE
Chair: George Steinmetz University of Chicago (Sociology)
TRANSFORMING EXISTING VOCABULARIES IN WELFARE STATES: FEMINIST STRATEGIES AND THE MAKING OF WOMEN'S CITIZENSHIP Barbara Hobson Stockholm University (International Graduate School, Social Policy and Women's Studies) Marika Lindholm SUNY -- Stony Brook (Sociology)
THE LIMITS OF DISTRIBUTIONAL CONFLICT: STATE AND SOCIETY AND THE CRISIS OF THE WEIMAR WELFARE STATE Benjamin Lieberman Fitchburg State College (History)
Commentator: George Steinmetz University of Chicago (Sociology)
4S Friday, 1:00-3:00 pm Salon D
PANEL: GENDER, POLITICS AND STRATEGY: FEMINISTS CONFRONT THE 1990'S
Chair: Johanna Brenner Portland State University (Sociology/Women's Studies)
GENDER POLICY: THE CASE OF THE FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE ACT Lise Vogel Rider College (Sociology)
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN: STRATEGIES FOR EDUCATION, CONSENSUS AND EMPOWERMENT Sherrilyn Ifill University of Maryland (School of Law)
DEPENDENCY ON MEN, THE MARKET, OR THE STATE: THE RHETORIC AND REALITY OF WELFARE Roberta Spalter-Roth Institute for Women's Policy Research (Director of Research)
Commentator: Johanna Brenner Portland State University (Sociology/Women's Studies)
Cynthia R. Daniels Rutgers University (Political Science)
5A Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Maestro
PANEL: INDISCRETE YOUTH: CRIME AND THE POLICING OF THE YOUNG
Chair: Jane Burbank University of Michigan (History)
THE GROWTH OF JUVENILE PROSECUTIONS AND CHANGING ATTITUDES TO THE YOUNG OFFENDER IN URBAN AND RURAL ENGLAND, 1780-1830 Peter King Nene College (History)
THE CRIMINALIZATION OF PRANKS AND PLAY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY BRITAIN Mary Beth Emmerichs University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee (History)
A SMALL CITY RESPONDS TO CRIMES AGAINST THE PUBLIC ORDER: BURLINGTON, VERMONT, 1858-1880 Michel J. Martin Temple University (History)
PROVING IT IN THE STREETS: ADOLESCENT STREET GANGS AND MASCULINITY IN POST-WORLD WAR II NEW YORK Eric C. Schneider University of Pennsylvania (College of Arts and Sciences)
Commentator: To be Announced
5B Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: LAW AND AUTHORITY IN COLONIAL AMERICA
Chair: David J. Sharpe George Washington University (Law)
THE COURTS OF ADMIRALTY AND VICE ADMIRALTY IN COLONIAL MARYLAND Michael C. Tolley Northeastern University (Political Science) David R. Owen Law Office of Semmes, Bowen and Semmes
THE COURTS OF ADMIRALTY AND VICE ADMIRALTY IN COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA Matthew Harrington University of Pennsylvania
THE HALIFAX COURT OF VICE ADMIRALTY Arthur J. Stone Federal Court of Canada (Judge)
Commentator: David J. Sharpe George Washington University (Law)
5C Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Salon A
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: FROM MARKET-PLACES TO A MARKET ECONOMY: THE TRANSFORMATION OF RURAL MASSACHUSETTS, 1780-1850 BY WINIFRED ROTHENBERG
Chair: Stanley Engerman University of Rochester (Economics and History)
Panelist: Lorena Walsh Colonial Williamsburg Foundation (History Museum)
Panelist: John Brook Tufts University (History)
Panelist: Stephen Innes University of Virginia (History)
Panelist: Hal S. Barron Harvey Mudd College, Claremont Colleges (History)
Commentator: Winifred Barr Rothenberg Tufts University (Economics)
5D Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Salon E
PANEL: ENTRY INTO THE LABOR FORCE AND HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION
Chair: John Wallis University of Maryland (Economics)
AGE AT LEAVING HOME IN U.S.: A VIEW FROM FAMILIES MATCHED IN THE CENSUS Richard Steckel Ohio State University (Economics)
WHY DID SO MANY CHILDREN WORK IN 1910? Susan Carter University of California -- Riverside (Economics) Richard Sutch University of California -- Berkeley (Economics)
THE ACQUISITION OF SKILLS BY BRITISH YOUTH David Mitch University of Maryland (Economics)
WAGE COMPRESSION AND WAGE INEQUALITY BETWEEN BLACK AND WHITE MALES IN THE UNITED STATES, 1940-1960 Thomas Maloney University of Chicago (Center for the Study of Urban Inequality)
THE "MOTHER-WORKER" AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF TEMPORARY LABOR: GENDER IDEOLOGY AND THE "DISPOSABLE WORKER" OF THE 1990S Lisa Adler Rutgers University (Political Science)
Commentators: John Wallis University of Maryland (Economics)
Elyce Rotella Indiana University (Economics)
5E Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Versailles Room
PANEL: FAMILY RECONSTITUTION, AGE BIAS AND MIGRATION. PART ONE: MODELS AND PROBLEMS
Chair: Katherine A. Lynch Carnegie-Mellon University (History)
MIGRATION, MARRIAGE AND MORTALITY: CORRECTING SOURCES OF BIAS IN ENGLISH FAMILY RECONSTITUTIONS, A SUMMARY AND UPDATE Steven Ruggles University of Minnesota (History)
MIGRATION AND MARRIAGE IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND Edward Anthony Wrigley Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure
THE RELIABILITY OF ESTIMATIONS OF NUPTIALITY, FERTILITY AND MORTALITY BASED ON FAMILY RECONSTITUTION John Rogers Uppsala University (History)
Commentator: Katherine A. Lynch Carnegie-Mellon University (History)
5F Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: STAYERS, MOVERS, AND PRIME MOVERS
Chair: David Siddle University of Liverpool (Geography)
PRE-INDUSTRIAL EUROPEAN SEGREGATION Marco H.D. van Leeuwen Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences (Sociology)
RED RIVER BOUND: CANADIAN MIGRATION TO EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA AT THE END OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Randy W. Widdis University of Regina (Geography)
ACCESS TO ORIGINS: CONCEPTS OF ANCESTORS, CULTURAL CENTERS AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF LONG-DISTANCE TRADE Mary Helms University of North Carolina at Greensboro (Anthropology)
Commentator: David Siddle University of Liverpool (Geography)
5G Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Salon D
PANEL: WORK AND LITERACY: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF SKILL AND LEARNING
Chair: Michael Hanagan New School for Social Research (History)
PATHS TO 'SELF-EDUCATION': SCHOOLING AND OTHER KINDS OF LEARNING IN THE LIVES OF FRENCH AND GERMAN AUTOBIOGRAPHERS Mary Jo Maynes University of Minnesota (History)
THE WORKER INTELLECTUAL IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE: A CASE STUDY OF BENOIT MALON, THE SOCIALIST AUTODIDACT Eiko Fukuda Columbia University (History)
HISTORICAL PERPECTIVES ON WORKER LITERACY IN POST-FORDIST U.S. FIRMS Lauren Benton Rutgers - NJIT (History)
WORKERS IN TWO WORLDS: FRENCH AND AMERICAN WORKERS' VIEWS ON AMERICAN AND FRENCH LABOR Marianne Debouzy University of Paris - VIII (American Social History)
Commentators: Michael Hanagan New School for Social Research (History)
Sara Nalle William Paterson College (History)
5H Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm International
PANEL: LABOR, THE LAW, AND POLITICAL REFORM
Chair: Hanna Schissler University of Minnesota (Sociology)
THIRTY YEARS OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING: JOSEPH PAUL ST. SURE, MANAGEMENT-LABOR NEGOTIATOR, 1902-1966 Jennifer M. Winter The American University (History)
THE RENAISSANCE OF CONTRACT IN THE PRIVATE WELFARE STATE: VOLUNTARISM AND LAISSEZ-FAIRE CONTRACT DISCOURSE IN THE FEDERAL COMMON LAW OF EMPLOYEE BENEFITS Catherine Fisk Loyola Marymount University (Loyola Law School)
GOING PUBLIC: THE PROGRESSIVES CONCEPTION OF UNIONISM Ruth O'Brien CUNY (Government)
Commentator: Hanna Schissler University of Minnesota (Sociology)
5I Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: CHAOS, COMPLEXITY AND THE WORKINGS OF HISTORY
Chair: Randolph Roth Ohio State University (History)
CULTURAL CONNECTIONS Chuck Dyke Temple University (Philosophy)
ON MARX'S LINEARITY: WHY MARX HATED THE MARKET Allan Megill University of Virginia (History)
NONLINEARITY, COMPLEXITY AND SCIENTIFIC IMAGINATION: JAMES FRANCK AS PHYSICIST AND BIOPHYSICIST Alan Beyerchen Ohio State University (History)
Commentator: Steven R. Cunningham University of Connecticut (Economics)
5J Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Caswell Suite
PANEL: ETHNICITY, MIGRATION, AND COMMUNITY
Chair: Sharon Lee University of Richmond (Sociology and Anthropology)
NEW ESTIMATES OF RURAL TO URBAN MIGRATION FOR U.S. WHITES, 1880-1920 Katherine Hempstead Catholic University of America (History)
INTERNAL MIGRATION AMONG GREEK IMMIGRANTS TO THE U.S., 1890-1930 Richard D. Chicko Temple University (American History)
MIGRATION, POPULATION GROWTH AND URBANIZATION IN LATE-18TH CENTURY HUNGARY Gyula Benda ELTE University of Budapest (Economics)
Commentator: Sharon Lee University of Richmond (Sociology and Anthropology)
Commentator: The Audience
5K Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Salon C
PANEL: THE POWERS THAT AREN'T: DEBATES ON THE EXPANDED STATE IN THE 20TH CENTURY U.S.
Chair: Bruce Schulman Boston University (History)
SMALL GOVERNMENT IDEOLOGY IN THE 1930S Paula Baker University of Pittsburgh (History)
CIVIL RIGHTS Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn Syracuse University (History)
VETERANS' DISCOURSE ABOUT THE STATE Elizabeth Faue Wayne State University (History)
Commentator: Bruce Schulman Boston University (History)
5L Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Salon B
PANEL: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION OF CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
Chair: Allan J. Lichtman American University (History)
Panelist: Candice J. Nelson American University (Government)
Panelist: Robert E. Mutch Independent Scholar
Panelist Ann McBride Common Cause
Panelist: Steven Law U.S. Senate (Office of Sen. McConnell)
5M Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: AGRARIAN RADICALISM IN COMPARATIVE CONTEXT
Chair: Richard J. Jensen University of Illinois at Chicago (History)
THE CULTIVATOR'S CHOICE: AN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF POPULIST KANSAS Eugene P. Sigel University of Massachusetts at Amherst (Economics)
THE SOCIAL ORIGINS OF AGRARIAN NAZISM A. Brian Ault University of Minnesota (Sociology)
COTTON ECONOMY IN TRANSITION: DIFFUSION OF THE MECHANICAL COTTON HARVESTER Wayne A. Grove College of William and Mary (Economics)
Commentator: Vernon Lidtke Johns Hopkins University (History)
5N Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Founders Suite
PANEL: COMMERCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN RURAL AMERICA: 1790-1830
Chair: Gregory Nobles Georgia Institute of Technology (History)
PURSUING A STAPLE ECONOMY ON THE EARLY NATIONAL FRONTIER Ellen Eslinger DePaul University (History)
SHOPKEEPERS AND FARMERS IN RURAL NEW YORK: 1790-1830 Thomas S. Wermuth Marist College (History)
THE TRIALS OF A COMMERCIALIZING ELITE IN RURAL SOCIETY: NORTHWESTERN RHODE ISLAND, 1800-1820 Daniel Jones New Jersey State Archives
Commentators: Gregory Nobles Georgia Institute of Technology (History)
Cathy Matson University of Delaware (History)
5O Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: UNIVERSALISM, RACE, AND POST-WORLD WAR II U.S. SOCIAL POLICY
Chair: Margaret Weir Brookings Institution
STACKING THE DECK: THE TRUNCATION OF UNIVERSALISM, 1939-1950 Michael K. Brown University of California -- Santa Cruz (Political Science)
RACE AND THE ADMINISTRATION OF SOCIAL POLICY, 1935-1965 Robert C. Lieberman Harvard University / Princeton University (Political Science)
Commentators: Margaret Weir Brookings Institution
Edward D. Berkowitz George Washington University (History)
5P Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Charles Suite
PANEL: STUDYING THE STATE: CONCEPTS AND CRITIQUES
Chair: Eric Uslaner University of Maryland (Government and Politics)
CLASSICAL THEORY: THE STRUGGLE TO OVERCOME THE CONTRADICTIONS OF CIVIL SOCIETY Dominic Milazi University of Bophutahtswana (Sociology)
THE PROBLEM OF THE STATE IN SOCIAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCES - TOWARD A NEW UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONCEPT OF THE STATE? Lars B. Kaspersen University of Aarhus (Institute of Political Science)
STATES AND SOCIETIES: THE ESTABLISHMENT OF NATIONAL STATISTICAL BODIES Jean-Pierre Beaud Universit du Qu bec Montr al (Political Science) Jean-Guy Pr vost Universit du Qu bec Montr al (Political Science)
Commentator: Eric Uslaner University of Maryland (Government and Politics)
5Q Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: HOUSING AND NEIGHBORHOODS
Chair: Philip J. Ethington University of Southern California (History)
CHURCHES AND NEIGHBORHOODS: BOSTON Gerald Gamm University of Rochester (Political Science)
WOMEN, MEN, AND THE HOUSING PROBLEM: CHICAGO ACTIVISTS, 1900-1920 Maureen Flanagan Independent Scholar (History)
DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFTS AND URBAN INVESTMENT IN HOUSING Ira Cohen Illinois State University (Honors Program) Ann Cohen Illinois State University (Community Research Service)
Commentator: Philip J. Ethington University of Southern California (History)
5R Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: GENDER AND DIFFERENTIAL MORTALITY: INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS
Chair: Michael R. Haines Colgate University (Economics)
GENDER SPECIFIC MORTALITY IN VICTORIAN LONDON Graham Mooney University of Liverpool (Geography)
GENDER AND MORTALITY IN IMPERIAL AND WEIMAR GERMANY, 1871-1930 Michael R. Haines Colgate University (Economics)
Hallie J. Kinter University of Michigan (Population Studies Center)
GENDER AND MORTALITY: JAPAN AND ENGLAND IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Sheila Ryan Johansson
GENDER AND MORTALITY; SWEDEN, 1750-1900 Jan Sundin Linkoeping University (Health and Society)
Commentator: Gretchen Condran Temple University (Sociology)
5S Friday, 3:15-5:15 pm Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: THE "PERSONAL," THE "SOCIAL," AND THE "POLITICAL:" NEW PERSPECTIVES ON LABOR AND THE STATE
Chair: Nancy Grey Osterud San Jose State University (History)
SWEET SIXTEEN: THE DIARY OF BLANCHE DENNIS WHEELOCK, DEPARTMENT STORE CLERK IN TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY CHICAGO Dorsey Phelps The University of Iowa (History)
REDISCOVERING THE SOCIAL: VISITING AND THE EVERYDAY LIVES OF WORKING PEOPLE IN ANTEBELLUM NEW ENGLAND Karen V. Hansen Brandeis University (Sociology)
THE MANCHESTER LITERARY SOCIETY, 1815-1845: POLITICS AND LETTERS IN THE LIBERAL PUBLIC SPHERE Howard M. Wach Clarkson University (Liberal Studies, History)
Commentator: Nancy Grey Osterud San Jose State University (History)
6A Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Lafayette Suite
PANEL: CRIME AND CULTURE: PRISONERS, POLICE AND POLITICS SINCE 1800
Chair: Eric Johnson Central Michigan University (History)
A SEMINARY OF VICE: PRISON LIFE IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY MASSACHUSETTS Larry Goldsmith University of Pennsylvania (History)
ON SPEAKING TERMS: ENGLISH POLICE CONSTABLES AND THE WORKING CLASS, 1900-1939 Joanne Klein University of South Carolina, Sumter (Humanities and Social Sciences)
GAMBLING SYNDICATES, POLITICAL CORRUPTION, AND POLICE RESPONSE: CHICAGO FROM 1890 TO 1914 Mark H. Haller Temple University (History and Criminal Justice)
Commentator: Wilbur Miller SUNY Stonybrook (History)
6B Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: POLICING THE INTOXICATED: ALCOHOL AND DRUG POLICY SINCE 1890
Chair: Eric Monkkonen UCLA (History)
WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH THE INEBRIATE?: THE MEDICAL TREATMENT OF INEBRIATES IN MASSACHUSETTS, 1893-1919 Sarah W. Tracy Rutgers University (Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research)
THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN DRUG POLICY: UNDERSTANDING THE ETHICS OF INTOXICATION Michael A. Rinella SUNY Albany (Political Science)
SYSTEMS AND PARTICIPANTS: THE NATURE OF FELONY CRIME AND THE RESPONSES TO IT IN PENNSYLVANIA, 1750-1825 Christopher N. Fritsch Harrisburg Area Community College -- Lancaster Campus (History)
Commentator: Ellen Dwyer Indiana University (Criminal Justice and History)
6C Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Salon D
PANEL: NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE IMPERIAL IMAGINATION: PERSPECTIVES AND COMPARISONS
Chair: Antoinette Burton Indiana State University (History)
PSYCHOHISTORY AND THE IMPERIAL IMAGINATION Lewis Wurgaft Harvard Medical School (Psychiatry)
COLONIAL POLICY IN HIGHLAND SCOTLAND AND THE PUNJAB Heather Streets Duke University (History)
HISTORICAL IGNORANCE AND POPULAR PERCEPTION: AMERICAN IMPRESSIONS ON BRITISH INTERVENTION IN PALESTINE Lawrence Davidson West Chester University (History)
Commentator: Anne Norton University of Pennslyvania (Political Science)
6D Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Fairmont Suite
PANEL: THE HISTORY OF SOCIOLOGY AS CULTURE
Chair: Steven Biel Harvard University (History and Literature)
ALL'S FAIR IN LOVE AND WAR: SOCIAL SCIENCE, GENDER, AND THE U. S. MILITARY IN WORLD WAR II Josephine Callisen Bresnahan Harvard University (Committee on Higher Degrees in the History of American Civilization)
THE THERAPEUTICS OF CULTURE IN THE EARLY WORK OF W. E. B. DU BOIS AND ROBERT E. PARK Jessica Marshall Harvard University (History of American Civilization)
VICTORIAN MORALITY AND THE SOCIOLOGY OF THE SEXUAL ADOLESCENT Jeff Moran Harvard University (History)
URBAN CAR CULTURE SEEN FROM THE REAR SEAT: URBAN CHILDHOOD AND CITY SOCIALIZATION IN DENMARK, 1930-1945 Ning de Coninck-Smith University of OdenseHumanities Research Center (Humanities Research Center - Man and Nature)
Commentators: Steven Biel (History and Harvard University Literature)
Mary Waters Harvard University (Sociology)
6E Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Salon E
PANEL: PROPERTY RIGHTS, POLITICS, AND ECONOMIC GROWTH Chair: Gavin Wright Stanford University (Economics)
MONEY, PUBLIC POLICY, AND STABILIZATION IN ARGENTINA IN THE 19TH CENTURY Jeremy Adelman Princeton University (History)
POLITICS, RISK MANAGMENT, AND CAPITALIST GROWTH: THE AUSTRALIAN CASE Colin White La Trobe University (Economic History)
POLITICS AND EARLY CAPITALIST GROWTH IN 19TH CENTURY SETTLER ECONOMIES: PROPERTY RIGHTS AND MUCH MORE Cynthia Taft Morris Smith College (Economics)
MEDIATION AND THE DISCOURSE OF PROPERTY TRANSFER IN EARLY-MODERN EUROPE David Siddle University of Liverpool (Geography)
Commentator: Gavin Wright Stanford University (Economics)
6F Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Founders Suite
PANEL: HISTORICAL LITERACY AND SOCIAL SCIENCE HISTORY: CLASS PRACTICE AND PEDAGOGICAL THEORY
Chair: Harvey J. Graff University of Texas at Dallas (School of Arts and Humanities)
TEACHING AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY IN COMPARATIVE CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES Marcia Sawyer University of Washington (American Ethnic Studies)
SURVEY WITHOUT SEQUEL: AN INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN HISTORY Jan Reiff University of California, Los Angeles (History)
WRITING OUR WAY TO HISTORICAL LITERACY IN A FRESHMAN WORLD HISTORY COURSE Paul V. Adams Shippensburg Univ. (History and Philosophy)
Commentator: Harvey J. Graff University of Texas at Dallas (School of Arts and Humanities)
6G Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Hanover Suite B
PANEL: FAMILY RECONSTITUTION, AGE BIAS AND MIGRATION. PART TWO: NEW EVIDENCE
Chair: Leslie Page Moch University of Michigan, Flint (History)
BIAS IN AGE AT VITAL EVENTS IN FAMILY RECONSTITUTIONS: EVIDENCE FROM FRENCH-CANADIAN DATA Bertrand Desjardins University of Montreal (Demography) Hubert Charbonneau University de Montreal (Demography)
AGE AT MARRIAGE AND MIGRATION IN LATE L9TH CENTURY CENTRAL EUROPE Josef Ehmer Universitat Wien (Institut f r Wirtschafs und Sozialgeschichte, Vienna)
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN STAYERS AND MOVERS IN AGE AT VITAL EVENTS: THE AMERICAN NORTH, 1650-1880 Alice Bee Kasakoff University of South Carolina (Anthropology)
John W. Adams University of South Carolina (Anthropology)
Commentators: Leslie Page Moch University of Michigan, Flint (History)
Edward Anthony Wrigley Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure Steven Ruggles University of Minnesota (History)
6H Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Hanover Suite A
PANEL: LABOR MOVEMENTS AND CAPITAL MOBILITY IN GLOBAL INDUSTRIES Chair: Erica Schoenberger Johns Hopkins University (Geography and Environmental Engineering)
LABOR UNREST AND THE SUCCESSIVE GEOGRAPHICAL RESTRUCTURING OF THE WORLD AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY, 1930'S TO THE PRESENT Beverly Silver Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
LABOR PROTEST AND CAPITAL RELOCATION IN A LABOR-INTENSIVE INDUSTRY: TEXTILES IN THE 20TH-CENTURY WORLD-ECONOMY Mahua Sarkar Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
WORKERS' MOVEMENTS AND TRANSFORMATIONS IN THE LOCATION AND ORGANIZATION OF PRODUCTION IN THE GLOBAL MINING INDUSTRY Bruce Podobnik Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
EDUCATIONAL EXPANSION AND TEACHER LABOR UNREST: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL DIMENSIONS Nettie Legters Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
Commentator: Erica Schoenberger Johns Hopkins University (Geography and Environmental Engineering)
6I Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am International
PANEL: LABOR HISTORIANS AND THE DECLINE OF ORGANIZED LABOR
Chair: Dorothee Schneider University of Illinois - Urbana (Labor and Industrial Relations)
UNIONS AND THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN WORKING CLASS Howard Kimeldorf University of Michigan (Sociology)
AFRICAN-AMERICAN WORKERS AND THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE OF LABOR HISTORY Eric Arnesen University of Illinois at Chicago (African-American Studies)
WOMEN IN UNIONS AND LABOR HISTORY Nancy Gabin Purdue University (History)
OUR GREAT EVASION: SAMUEL GOMPERS, THE AFL, AND WORKERS' POWER IN THE UNITED STATES Michael Merrill Rutgers University -- The State University of New Jersey (Labor Education)
Commentator: Marianne Debouzy University of Paris - VIII (American Social History)
6J Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Charles Suite
PANEL: SOCIAL SCIENCE AND THE LOGIC OF DIFFERENCE
Chair: Sharon Lee University of Richmond (Sociology and Anthropology)
CATHOLICISM IN THE AMERICAN INTELLECTUAL IMAGINATION, 1935-1955 John McGreevy Harvard University (History)
WHEN DIFFERENCE DOESN'T STRATIFY: RECENT SOCIAL TRENDS AND THE UNITED STATES, 1933 William A. Tobin Stanford University (History)
CONSTRUCTING ETHNIC IDENTITIES IN THE HISTORY OF SOCIOLOGICAL THOUGHT Suzanne Shanahan Stanford University (Sociology)
Commentators: Timothy Kelly Chatham College (History) Madeline Goodman Carnegie Mellon University (History)
6K Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Salon B
PANEL: GOVERNMENT MANAGEMENT OF LARGE SCALE TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
Chair: Kenneth Finegold Rutgers University (Political Science)
CONFISCATING A CHEMICAL INDUSTRY: THE ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN IN WORLD WAR I Kathryn Steen University of Delaware (History)
BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS AND THE GOLDEN AGE OF AVIATION Hadd Jones U.S. Air Force Academy (History)
LEADERSHIP AND COMPETITION: DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MANAGEMENT OF MILITARY TECHNOLOGY DURING THE COLD WAR David Milobsky Johns Hopkins University (History)
POLITICS AND TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT: THE U.S. SPACE PROGRAM W.D. Kay Northeastern University (Political Science)
Commentator: Kenneth Finegold Rutgers University (Political Science)
6L Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Salon A
PANEL: THE RED SCARE: THE ANTI COMMUNIST IMPULSE
Chair: Ellen Schrecker Yeshiva University (History)
THE POLITICAL INCORPORATION OF WOMEN DURING THE SECOND RED SCARE Abby Scher New School for Social Research (Sociology)
ANTI COMMUNISM AND THE POLITICS OF DRUGS, 1949-71 John C. McWilliams Pennsylvania State University, DuBois Campus (History)
PASSAGE OF THE 1935 TEACHERS LOYALTY OATH IN MASSACHUSETTS: BRAHAMIN PREROGATIVES, CATHOLIC SENSIBILITIES AND THE COMMUNIST THREAT Judith Larrabee Holmes University of Massachusetts at Amherst (History)
CATHOLIC ANTICOMMUNISM IN THE 1936 ELECTION: THE PERIPHERY DOMINATED CENTER Thomas M. Moriarty University of Massachusetts at Amherst (History)
Commentator: Ellen Schrecker Yeshiva University (History)
6M Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Versailles Room
PANEL: CONFLICT, MOBILIZATION, AND ELECTORAL VOTING PATTERNS IN THE AMERICAN STATE
Chair: William Flanigan University of Minnesota (Political Science)
THE ELECTION OF 1992: THE MIDLIFE CRISIS OF AN ELECTORAL ORDER Walter Dean Burnham University of Texas at Austin (Government)
THE CHANGING RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CONFLICT AND MOBILIZATION IN AMERICAN POLITICS Benjamin Ginsberg Johns Hopkins University (Political Science) Martin Shefter Cornell University (Government) Walter Mebane Cornell University (Government)
FUNCTIONAL CHANGE IN THE CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN PARTY SYSTEM William Crotty Northwestern University (Political Science)
THE POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OF ELECTORAL EXCLUSION: COMPARING BLACK AND FEMALE ENFRANCHISEMENT Anna L. Harvey Princeton University (Politics)
Commentators: Nancy Zingale College of St. Thomas (Political Science) Richard Valelly Swarthmore College (Political Science)
6N Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: RELIGION AND PHILANTHROPHY
Chair: Marthe A. Chandler DePauw University (Philosophy and Religion)
SWEET CHARITY: WOMEN'S ROLE IN 19TH CENTURY CATHOLIC PHILANTHROPY Mary J. Oates Regis College (Economics)
DETERMINANTS OF RELIGIOUS GIVING BY AMERICAN DENOMINATIONS: DATA FROM THE GENERAL SOCIAL SURVEY Dean Hoge Catholic University of America (Sociology)
THE RECEIPTS AND BENEVOLENCES OF PRESBYTERIAN CONGREGATIONS, 1973-1988 Gregory Krohn Bucknell University (Economics)
Commentators: Roland Gunn Georgetown University (Government) Marthe A. Chandler DePauw University (Philosophy and Religion)
6O Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Maestro
PANEL: AMERICAN AGRICULTURE IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Chair: Mary Neth American University/National Museum of American History, Smithsonian (History)
'KEEP ON A-GOIN': MIGRANT WORKERS IN NEW DEAL FARM LABOR CAMPS Brian Q. Cannon Brigham Young University (History)
THE GREAT DEPRESSION FROM THE INSIDE OUT: FAMILY FARM SURVIVAL IN HAMILTON COUNTY, KANSAS Pamela Riney-Kehrberg Illinois State University (History)
THE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION EDUCATION FOR WOMEN
Katherine Hempstead Catholic University (History)
Commentators: Mary Neth American University/National Museum of American History, Smithsonian (History)
Jane Pederson University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (History)
6P Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Royale Board Room
PANEL: COMPARING WORLD-SYSTEMS
Chair: Christopher Chase-Dunn Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
UNEVEN DEVELOPMENT IN THE WEST AFRICAN WORLD-SYSTEM: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE SUDANNIC EMPIRES Alice Willard Johns Hopkins University (Sociology)
THE SOUTHERN PLAINS MACROECONOMY: THE ROLE OF SEMIPERIPHERIES IN PRECAPITALIST WORLD-SYSTEMS Timothy Baugh Smithsonian Institution (Repatriation Office)
CLASSIC PERIOD MESOAMERICA: A PRE-COLUMBIAN WORLD SYSTEM? Robert Santley University of New Mexico (Anthropology) Roni T. Alexander University of New Mexico (Anthropology)
NEAR EASTERN BRONZE AGE AND NORTH AMERICAN MISSISSIPPIAN WORLD-SYSTEMS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS Peter Peregrine Juniata College (Anthropology)
Commentator: Glenn Schwartz Johns Hopkins University (Near Eastern Studies)
6Q Saturday, 8:20-10:20 am Salon C
PANEL: 'MEET THE AUTHOR' ROUNDTABLE: PROTECTING SOLIDERS AND MOTHERS: THE POLITICAL ORIGINS OF SOCIAL POLICY IN THE UNITED STATES BY THEDA SKOCPOL
Winner of the American Political Science Association's Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award.
Chair: Eileen McDonagh Northeastern University (Political Science)
Panelist: Alan Dawley Trenton State College (History)
Panelist: Barbara Laslett University of Minnesota (Sociology)
Panelist: Robert Putnam Harvard University (Government)
Panelist: Theda Skocpol Harvard University (Sociology)
SPECIAL EVENT: Saturday, 11:30-2:00 pm
PRESIDENT'S LUNCHEON PANEL INSTITUTIONS: METHODS, STRUCTURES, IDEAS
Moderator: Eric Monkkonen, SSHA President University of California at Los Angeles (History)
Initiator: Morris Fiorina Harvard University (Government)
Initiator: Karen Orren University of California--Los Angeles (Political Science)
Initiator: Dorothy Ross Johns Hopkins University (History)
Initiator: Theda Skocpol Harvard University (Sociology)
Initiator: Stephen Skowronek Yale University (Political Science)
Discussants: James Kloppenberg Brandeis University (History) Terrence McDonald University of Michigan (History) Rogers Smith Yale University (Political Science) Lunch: Box lunches are available for those who have pre-purchased them or can be purchased at the door. Participants also are welcome to bring in their own lunches.
Proceedings will be taped and transcribed for possible publication in Studies in American Political Development
7A Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Maestro
PANEL: WOMEN, CRIME AND POLICING IN THE MODERN ERA
Chair: Barbara Hanawalt University of Minnesota (History)
WOMEN, CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN LATE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY DUBLIN Brian Henry Northwestern University (Modern History)
THE CASE OF MADAME RESTELL: ABORTION, PRIVACY AND THE CRIMINALIZATION OF SEXUALITY IN ANTEBELLUM NEW YORK Amy Gilman Srebnick Montclair State College (History)
WOMEN POLICE AND POLICING CRIMES AGAINST WOMEN IN THE U.S. SINCE 1890 Donna Hale Shippensburg University (Criminal Justice)
Commentator: Mary Gibson John Jay College of Criminal Justice (History)
7B Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE IMPERIAL IMAGINATION: ENGLAND
Chair: Thomas Metcalf University of California--Berkeley (History)
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK: MISSIONARY PROPAGANDA AS CIVIC EDUCATION Susan Thorne Duke University (History)
AN EMPIRE OF ONE'S OWN: BRITISH HOMEMAKERS IN COLONIAL INDIA Rosemary Marangoly George University of California, San Diego (Literature)
ORIENTALISM UNHINGED: INDIAN NATIONALISM AND THE REFORMATION OF BRITISH IMPERIAL IDEOLOGY Joselyn Zivin Duke University (History)
Commentator: Patty Seleski California State University, San Marcos (History)
7C Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Founders Suite
PANEL: LESSONS FROM THE HISTORY OF STOCK EXCHANGES
Chair: Larry Neal University of Illinois (Economics)
THE LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE: THE MINING BOOM, THE RAILROAD BOOM, THE EMPIRE Larry Neal University of Illinois (Economics)
THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE: THE INDEPENDENT COUNTRY, THE CIVIL WAR, THE RISE OF BIG BUSINESS Richard Sylla New York University (Business School)
THE PARIS BOURSE: THE REVOLUTION, THE MINES, THE RAILROADS, THE EMPIRE Eugene White Rutgers University (Economics)
THE PARIS BOURSE BEFORE 1815 Emmanuel Thiveaud Rutgers University
Commentators: Charles Calomiris University of Illinois (Economics) Kenneth Snowden University of North Carolina -- Greensboro (Economics)
7D Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: ANIMALS: FOR WORK, FOOD, AND STATUS
Chair: Jonathan J. Liebowitz University of Massachusetts -- Lowell (History)
THE BUSINESS OF BREEDING: CATTLE BREEDING AND THE GENTRIFICATION OF THE TEXAS COUNTRYSIDE, 1940-1990 Mark Friedberger Texas Tech (History)
THE ECONOMICS OF DRAFT ANIMAL CHOICE IN ITALIAN AGRICULTURE Francesco L. Galassi Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (Economics (Dept. de Economia)) Kyle Kauffmann Wellesley College (Economics)
THE DIET OF A HUNTING AND GATHERING PEOPLE: TRANSFORMATIONS AMONG THE NINETEENTH CENTURY LAKE SUPERIOR OJIBWAYS James W. Oberly University of Wisconsin -- Eau Claire (History)
Commentator: Jonathan Liebowitz University of Massachusetts -- Lowell (History)
7E Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Charles Suite
PANEL: CHOICES AND IDENTITIES: UNMARRIED WOMEN IN EIGHTEENTH AND NINETEENTH CENTURY AMERICA, FRANCE, AND THE NETHERLANDS
Chair: Toby Ditz Johns Hopkins University (History)
AN ALTERNATE CHOICE: UNMARRIED SISTERS IN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE Christine Adams St. Mary's College (History and Social Sciences)
"LIVEING TO GETHER IN THE MANER WE DED": THREE GENERATIONS OF EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SPINSTERS IN THE NORRIS FAMILY OF PHILADELPHIA AND FAIRHILL Karin Wulf Old Dominion University (History)
REMARRIAGE OF WIDOWS AND WIDOWERS IN NINETEENTH CENTURY NETHERLANDS Frans van Poppel Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute
Commentator: Toby Ditz Johns Hopkins University (History)
7F Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: METROPOLITAN INDUSTRIAL COMPLEXES
Chair: Carville V. Earle Louisiana State University (Geography and Anthropolgy)
INDUSTRIAL COMPLEXES IN METROPOLITAN FORMATION, 1870-1920 Edward K. Muller University of Pittsburgh (History)
FORGING NEW CULTURES: THE CAPITAL NETWORKS OF PITTSBURGH'S INDUSTRIALIZATION, 1865-1919 Mark David Samber Carnegie Mellon University (History)
IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE GIANT: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PRIMARY AND SECONDARY CLUSTERS IN THE PITTSBURGH INDUSTRIAL DISTRICT, 1900-1960 David R. Jardini Carnegie Mellon University (History)
GIRDING FOR REGIONAL AND NATIONAL COMPETITION: THE CLEVELAND INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX, 1860-1880 David R. Meyer Brown University (Sociology)
Commentator: Carville V. Earle Louisiana State University (Geography and Anthropology)
7G Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: DECONSTRUCTING PRODUCTION/CONSUMPTION IN LABOR HISTORY
Chair: Richard Butsch Rider College (Sociology)
Panelist: Joy Parr Simon Fraser University (History)
Panelist: Leora Auslander University of Chicago (History)
Panelist: Lawrence Glickman University of South Carolina (History)
Panelist: Ben Hunnicut University of Iowa (Leisure Studies)
Panelist: Jeanne Boydston University of Wisconsin - Madison (History)
7H Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm International
PANEL: BETWEEN MEMORY AND REALITY: A ROUNDTABLE ON JANE PEDERSON'S "FAMILY AND COMMUNITY IN RURAL WISCONSIN, 1870-1970"
Chair: Mary Neth Virginia Polytechnic Institute (History)
Panelist: James A. Henretta University of Maryland - College Park (History)
Panelist: Shaw Livermore University of Michigan (History)
Commentator: Jane Pederson University of Wisconsin - Eau Clire (History)
7I Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Salon B
PANEL: WORKING CLASS INTERNATIONALISM
Chair: Stanley Nadel Winona State University (History)
INTERPLAY OF CLASS AND ETHNICITY IN POLISH-AMERICAN RADICALISM Thad Radzilowski Southwest State University (History)
ETHNICITY AND WORKING CLASS INTERNATIONALIZATION: ITALIAN-AMERICAN RADICALS IN THE INTERWAR PERIOD Fraser Ottanelli University of South Florida (History)
ANTHROPOLOGICAL MODEL TO INCORPORATE BOTH CLASS AND ETHNICITY INTO A SINGLE FRAMEWORK OF IDENTITY Stan Nadel Winona State University (History)
Commentators: Donna Gabaccia UNC Charlotte (History) Pierre Bouvier Universit de Paris (Sociology)
7J Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Salon D
PANEL: NORTHERN POLITICS IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA
Chair: James Mohr University of Oregon (History)
ISSUE-VOTING AND THE POLICYMAKING DIMENSIONS OF ELECTORAL ALIGNMENTS Lex Renda University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (History)
ELECTIONS AND PUBLIC POLICY IN NEW YORK STATE DURING THE CIVIL WAR ERA John F. Kirn, Jr. University of Virginia (History)
A COLLECTIVE PROFILE OF UNION ARMY VOLUNTEERS IN WEST-CENTRAL INDIANA Thomas E. Rodgers University of Southern Indiana (History)
FRANK BLAIR AND THE ORIGINS OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IN ST. LOUIS Scott Barton East Central University (History)
Commentator: James Mohr University of Oregon (History)
7K Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Salon A
PANEL: MASS MOVEMENTS, PRESSURE GROUPS AND PUBLIC POLICY
Chair: Christopher J. Bosso Northeastern University (Political Science)
MASS MOVEMENTS AND INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN AMERICAN GOVERNMENT Richard Harris Rutgers University (Political Science)
POPULAR VALUES AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY WELFARE POLICY Margaret Orelup University of Massachusetts at Amherst (History)
HOUSE VOTING BEHAVIOR AND LOCAL POLITICS IN THE 1920'S Jay Brigham University of California at Riverside (History)
KLAN POLITICS IN TEXAS Ihor Bemko University of Pennsylvania at Edinboro (History)
Commentator: Christopher J. Bosso Northeastern University (Political Science)
7L Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Versailles Room
PANEL: POLS ON POLLS
Chair: William Flanigan University of Minnesota (Political Science)
THE PRESIDENT'S STETHOSCOPE: HOW DID EARLIER PRESIDENTS USE PUBLIC OPINION POLLS? Robert M. Eisinger University of Chicago (Political Science)
PEROT, PIZAZZ AND THE POLLS Melissa Line Goucher College (Political Science)
THE IMPACT OF POLLS ON REPORTERS E. J. Dionne, Jr. Washington Post
Commentators: Kathleen Frankovic CBS News William Flanigan University of Minnesota (Political Science)
7M Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL J20: DEMOCRATIZATION: LIMITLESS POSSIBILITIES OR LIMITS?
Chair: Donald E. Sherblom Cedar Crest College (History and Political Science)
DEMOCRATIZATION AND THE NEW RUSSIA William Martel Northeastern University (Political Science)
DEMOCRATIZATION GONE WRONG: ANGOLA 1991-1993 Anthony Pereira New School for Social Research (Political Science)
OBSTACLES TO FURTHER DEMOCRATIZATION IN EAST AND CENTRAL EUROPE Blaine McBurney New School for Social Research (Sociology)
Discussant: Laurie Salitan Johns Hopkins University (Political Science)
7N Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: ETHNICITY AND MULTIETHNICITY
Chair: Mary Waters Harvard University (Sociology)
MULITIPLE ETHNICITIES, VARIABLE CONTENT, AND THE PROBLEM OF IDENTITY MANAGEMENT Stephen Cornell University of California--San Diego (Sociology)
ETHNICITY AND RACE RELATIONS RECONSIDERED: PEOPLE OF MIXED RACE, MIXING THINGS UP Cynthia Nakashima University of California--Berkeley (Ethnic Studies)
PACIFIC ISLANDERS AND MULTIETHNICITY: A VISION OF AMERICA'S FUTURE? Paul Spickard 2 Brigham Young University--Hawaii (History)
Commentator: Mary Waters Harvard University (Sociology)
7P Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: STATE FORCE: INFRASTRUCTURES OF PERSONS, TECHNOLOGIES, AND IDEAS
Chair: Dara Szyliowicz University of Illinois (Business Administration)
THE CONTINGENCIES OF CONSENT: MILITARY SERVICE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Margaret Levi University of Washington (Political Science)
CROSS-NATIONAL TRENDS IN WEAPONS PROLIFERATION AND MILITARY KNOWLEDGE Dana Eyre Naval Postgraduate School (National Security Affairs)
SOCIOLOGIES OF WAR: REALIST AND INSTITUTIONAL ARGUMENTS IN CONFLICT, IN COOPERATION Ann Hironaka Stanford University (Sociology)
CONSTRUCTING DESTRUCTION: HOW WW2 SHAPED EXPERTS AND KNOWLEDGE ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS Lynn Edden Stanford University (Sociology/CISAC) Margaret R. Bates Harvard University (Budget Office)
Commentators: Martha Finnemore George Washington University (Political Science)
7Q Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Salon C
PANEL: SOCIAL WELFARE AND GENDER: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Chair: Kathryn Kish Sklar SUNY, Binghamton (History)
A 'REVOLT OF THE DAUGHTERS' OR A 'HOLY BATTLEFIELD'? GENDER AND SETTLEMENT WORK IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY, 1890-1933 Anja Sch ler Freie Universit t Berlin (History)
MOMMY STATE, DADDY STATE: DUTCH WOMEN AND SOCIAL WELFARE IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Suzanne M. Sinke Clemson University (History)
Commentators: Kathryn Kish Sklar SUNY, Binghamton (History)
Marilyn Lake La Trove University (History)
7R Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Salon E
PANEL: NEW MODELS OF PROGRESSIVE ERA URBAN POLICIES: INSTITUTIONS, CONSTITUENCIES, AND POLICIES
Chair: Clarence Stone University of Maryland (Government and Politics)
PROGRESSIVISM AND POLITICAL SCIENCE Kenneth Finegold Rutgers University (Political Science)
RECONSTITUTING ETHNIC POLITICS: BOSTON, 1909-1925 James Connolly Brandeis University (History)
CUT CASH, KEEP COAL: TAMMANY HALL PARTY DISCIPLINE AND SOCIAL POLICIES Adonica Y. Lui Harvard University (Sociology)
Discussants: Clarence Stone (Government and University of Maryland Politics)
Allan Lichtman American University (History)
7S Saturday, 2:15-4:15 pm Caswell Suite
PANEL: IN THE VIEW OF OTHERS: GENDERED ENCOUNTERS ACROSS THE RACE/CLASS DIVIDE
Chair: Alida C. Metcalf Trinity University (History)
THE POWER OF A PARADOX: WOMEN SOCIAL REFORMERS AND THE CULT OF DOMESTICITY, 1880-1920 Julie Goldsmith University of Pennsylvania (Sociology)
WIDOWS AS OBSTACLES TO BUSINESS: BRITISH VIEWS OF BRAZILIAN MARRIAGE AND INHERITANCE LAWS, 1810-1875 Muriel Nazzari Indiana University (History)
Commentator: Ruth Crocker Auburn University (History)
8A Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: CRIME IN THE MAKING: PATHWAYS AND TURNING POINTS THROUGH LIFE, BY ROBERT SAMPSON AND JOHN LAUB
Chair: Eric Schneider University of Pennslyvania, College of Arts and Sciences (Assistant Dean)
Panelist: Mary Odem Emory University (History)
Panelist: Rosemary Gartner University of Toronto (Sociology)
Panelist: Robert J. Sampson University of Chicago (Sociology)
Panelist: John H. Laub Northeastern University (College of Criminal Justice)
8B Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Salon D
PANEL: NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE IMPERIAL IMAGINATION: FRANCE
Chair: Herman Lobovics SUNY--Stonybrook (History)
THE COLONIAL GAZE: SEX AND GENDER IN THE DISCOURSES OF FRENCH NORTH AFRICA Julia Clancy-Smith University of Virginia (History)
FRANCE AND ITS NORTH AFRICAN OTHERS: WHITE BLINDSPOTS, MALE FANTASIES AND COLLONIAL MYTHS 1900-1962 David Slavin Temple University (History)
THE IMPRISONED MIND: FRENCH SURVEILLANCE AND NATIONALIST THOUGHT IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY VIETNAM Peter Zinoman Cornell University (History)
Commentator: Herman Lobovics SUNY--Stonybrook (History)
8C Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Salon B
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: PRICE FISHBACK`S SOFT COAL, HARD CHOICES
Chair: Robert Whaples Wake Forest University (Economics)
Panelist: William Boal Ohio State University (Economics)
Panelist: David Buffum College of the Holy Cross (Economics)
Panelist: Michael Dintenfass University of Wisconsin -- Milwaukee (History)
Panelist: Melvyn Dubofsky SUNY -- Binghamton (History)
Panelist: Gavin Wright Stanford University (Economics)
Panelist: Price Fishback University of Arizona (Economics)
8D Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Charles Suite
PANEL: FAMILY, DEMOGRAPHY AND THE FRONTIER
Chair: Daniel Scott Smith University of Illinois at Chicago (History)
LAND, CLIMATE AND SETTLEMENT ON THE SOUTHWESTERN U.S. FRONTIER Myron Gutmann University of Texas (History)
MEN, MIGRATION AND MARRIAGE: FAMILY STRATEGIES AND THE BRAZILIAN FRONTIER Alida C. Metcalf Trinity University (History)
FERTILITY, POPULATION GROWTH AND FAMILY ON THE FINNISH FRONTIER, 1750-1860 Beatrice Moring University of Helsinki (Renvall Institute of Historical Research)
HAJNAL'S APPROACH TO THE PEASANT HOUSEHOLD IN THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD Andrejs Plakans Iowa State University (History) Charles Wetherell University of California (History)
Commentator: Daniel Scott Smith University of Illinois at Chicago (History)
8E Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm International
PANEL: DEMOGRAPHIC ATTRIBUTES OF LIFE AND DEATH IN SCANDINAVIA
Chair: Paul Laxton University of Liverpool (Geography)
INDIVIDUAL LIFE CHANCES WITHIN THE RURAL NORWEGIAN-AMERICAN FAMILY, 1850-1910 Jon Gjerde University of California -- Berkeley (History)
THE REGIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE EPIDEMIOLOGIC TRANSITION IN SWEDEN Marie Nelson Uppsala University (History)
OVERCROWDING AND AIRBORNE INFECTIOUS DISEASE: CHILD MORTALITY IN STOCKHOLM 1895-1925 Eva M. Bernhardt Stockholm University (Demography)
Commentator: Paul Laxton University of Liverpool (Geography)
8F Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Maestro
PANEL: GEOGRAPHICAL PERSPECTIVES ON NAZIISM
Chair: John Agnew Syracuse University (Geography)
THE POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE NSDAP VOTE, 1930 John O'Loughlin University of Colorado (Institute of Behavioral Science) Colin Flint University of Colorado (Geography) Luc Anselin West Virginia University (Geography)
THE GEOGRAPHY OF NSDAP MEMBERSHIP, 1925-1933: AN INTEREST-BASED MODEL OF POLITICAL BEHAVIOR William Brustein University of Minnesota (Sociology and Center for European Studies) A. Brian Ault University of Minnesota (Sociology)
GERMANS, JEWS AND QUAKERS: THE CARL SCHURZ FOUNDATION AND "THE AMERICAN-GERMAN REVIEW," 1934-1937 Hans J. Fabian University of Michigan (Germanic Languages and Literatures)
Commentator: John Agnew Syracuse University (Geography)
8H Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Baltimore Audiovisual Theatre
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE ON FREDERICK JACKSON TURNER ON THE OCCASION OF THE ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS DELIVERY OF "THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE FRONTIER IN AMERICAN HISTORY"*
Chair: John Mack Faragher Yale University (History)
Panelist: Kathleen Neils Conzen University of Chicago (History)
Panelist: Robert P. Swierenga Kent State University (History)
Panelist: Steve Aron Princeton University (History)
Panelist: Michael Steiner California State University, Fullerton (American Studies)
Panelist: Allan Bogue University of Wisconsin--Madison (History)
Panelist: Judith Allen Indiana University (History)
* American Historical Association Meeting in Chicago at the Chicago World's Columbian Exhibition in 1893
8I Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Salon E
PANEL: ETHNICITY AND CULTURE IN LABOR ORGANIZING
Chair: Dirk Hoerder Universitat Bremen (Labor Migration Project)
WORK TRADITIONS, IDEOLOGY, AND CULTURE: ORGANIZING GERMAN IMMIGRANT WORKERS IN 19TH CENTURY AMERICA Hartmut Keil German Historical Institute
ARMENIANS IN ST. CATHARINES, ONTARIO: WORK, UNIONS AND POLITICS: 1920-1950 Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill Ontario Institute for Studies in Education
SECOND GENERATION POLISH AND SLOVAK WORKERS AND THE ASSOCIATION OF CATHOLIC TRADE UNIONISTS IN CLEVELAND, OHIO, 1938-42 David Bernatowicz Cuyahoga Community College (Labor Studies)
Commentators: Dirk Hoerder Universitat Bremen (Labor Migration Project)
Janice Reiff University of California, Los Angeles (History)
8J Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: POLITICS WITHOUT LIMITS: CONGRESSIONAL CAREERS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Chair: Elaine K. Swift Dartmouth College (Government)
CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN THE POLITICS OF RUNNING FOR CONGRESS: WRIGHT PATMAN AND THE CAMPAIGNS OF 1928, 1938, 1962 AND 1972 Nancy C. Beck University of Texas at Austin (History)
CAMPAIGNING WITHOUT CASH: THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS OF MARGARET CHASE SMITH Janann Sherman Margaret Chase Smith Library (Scholar in Residence)
DOUBLING UP ON SENATE COMMITTEES IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY: THE ADVANTAGES OF MIXED PARTY DELEGATION Catherine R. Shapiro Dartmouth College (Government)
Commentators: Elaine K. Swift Dartmouth College (Government)
Phil VanderMeer Arizona State University (History)
8K Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Salon A
PANEL: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF SEXUAL IDENTITY
Chair: Sharon Rena Ullman Bryn Mawr College (History)
CONSTRUCTING ONE'S OWN IDENTITY IN EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND: JOHN CHURCH AND ANNE LISTER Anna K. Clark University of North Carolina, Charlotte (History)
TRUTH, SEX, AND PERVERSE SEXUAL IDENTITY Carolyn J. Dean Brown University (History)
SAPPHIC SLASHERS: THE SCIENTIFIC CONSTRUCTION OF LESBIAN DESIRE Lisa Duggan Brown University (American Civilization)
PAULI MURRAY'S "MANY MOODS AND FACETS": RACE, GENDER, AND SEXUAL IDENTITIES IN THE 1930'S Doreen M. Drury Boston College (History)
Commentator: Sharon Rena Ullman Bryn Mawr College (History)
8L Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: THE CURRENT STATUS OF THE TECHNIQUE OF ECOLOGICAL REGRESSION IN POLITICAL HISTORY RESEARCH
Chair: Gudmund R. Iversen Swarthmore College (Mathematics and Statistics)
BIAS IN ECOLOGICAL REGRESSION ESTIMATES Douglas Rivers Stanford University (Political Science)
ECOLOGICAL REGRESSION: TESTING THE EFFECT OF AGGREGATION IN 19TH CENTURY VOTING James L. Huston Oklahoma State Universtiy (History)
ECOLOGICAL REGRESSION AND FRIENDS: A SURVEY OF METHODS OF ANALYZING AGGREGATE ELECTION DATA J. Morgan Kousser California Institute of Technology (History)
Commentator: Gudmund R. Iversen Swarthmore College (Mathematics)
8M Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Royal Board Room
PANEL: CHRISTIAN POLITICAL ACTIVISM
Chair: Matthew C. Moen University of Maine (Political Science)
SUPPORT FOR THE CHRISTIAN LEFT IN THE 1960 Mary Bendyna Georgetown University (Government)
IDEOLOGY AND POLITICAL SOPHISTICATION: BOZELL, BUCKELY, AND THE EDITORIAL POLICY OF THE NATIONAL REVIEW IN THE EARLY 1960S Roland Gunn Georgetown University (Government)
Commentator: Matthew C. Moen University of Maine (Political Science)
8N Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: TOURISM IN EUROPE AND NORTH AMERICA: CULTURE, ECONOMICS, AND SOCIAL RELATIONS
Chair: Anne Farrar Hyde Colorado College (History)
INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM, LEISURE MIGRATION, AND REPRESENTATION: AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY, 1870-1985 Jozsef Borocz University of Cal-Irvine (Sociology)
SOCIAL RELATIONS IN THE EMERGENCE OF A TOURISM INDUSTRY: NORTHERN MINNESOTA, 1900-1950 Eileen Walsh University of Minnesota--Twin Cities (History)
EVERYDAY LIFE IN A SUMMER COMMUNITY, 1905-1985: THE MEANING OF PLACE Carol Ryan Metropolitan State University (History)
Commentators: Anne Farrar Hyde Colorado College (History)
Jo Ann Parkerson Methodist College (Education)
8O Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: BOOK SESSION: ROBERT COLE'S WORLD: ECONOMIC GROWTH, AGRICULTURE, AND DOMESTIC LIFE IN THE COLONIAL CHESAPEAKE
Chair: Jean Russo Historic Annapolis Foundation
Panelist: Robert Gallman University of North Carolina (Economics)
Panelist: Julia King Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum (Director of Research)
Panelist: Gloria Main University of Colorado (History)
Panelist: Paul G. E. Clemens Rutgers University (History)
Commentators: Lois Green Carr Historic St. Mary's City Russel R. Menard University of Minnesota--Twin Cities (History) Lorena S. Walsh Colonial Williamsburg Foundation (History Museum)
8P Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Salon C
PANEL: THE POLITICS OF POVERTY: GENDER, CLASS AND THE ORGANIZATION OF CHARITY, A RECONSIDERATION
Chair: Michael Katz University of Pennsylvania (History)
JOSEPHINE SHAW LOWELL AND THE CHARITY ORGANIZATION SOCIETY OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, THE FIRST DECADE Joan Waugh University of California -- Los Angeles (History)
PHILANTROPISTS, CLIENTS, AND CHARITY WORKERS: THE CHANGING DYNAMICS OF CHARITY IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY, THE CASE OF THE NEW YORK COS Dawn M. Greeley SUNY -- Stony Brook (History)
CAUSES OF POVERTY IN 19TH CENTURY AMERICA: A COMPARISON OF SCIENTIFIC AND INTERPRETIVE ARTICLES Carolyn Thompson University of North Carolina -- Charlotte (Political Science)
Commentator: Michael Katz University of Pennsylvania (History)
8Q Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Mount Vernon Suite
PANEL: REGIONAL SYSTEMS AND SOVEREIGNTY
Chair: William Martel Northeastern University (Political Science)
CHANGING CONTOURS OF UNITED STATES POWER IN THE AMERICAN HEMISPHERE IN THE 1980S Donald E. Sherblom New School for Social Research (Political Science)
STATE, CITZENSHIP AND THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITY - SOVEREIGNITY UNDER TRANSFORMATION IN POSTWAR EUROPE: TOWARD A EUROPEAN CITIZENSHIP? Lars B. Kaspersen University of Aarhus (Institute of Political Science)
Commentators: William Martel Northeastern University (Political Science)
Anthony Pereira New School for Social Research (Political Science)
8R Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Founders Suite
PANEL: URBAN CULTURE AND URBAN SPACE IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Chair: Lynn Lees University of Pennsylvania (History)
NATIONAL AND CIVIC CEREMONY IN LONDON'S PUBLIC PARKS: CHANGING CREATING A NEW PUBLIC CULTURE, 1870-1920 Nan H. Dreher University of Pennsylvania (History)
DEFINING THE PUBLIC IN COLONIAL SOUTH ASIA Douglas E. Haynes Dartmouth College (History)
VERTICALITY: RETHINKING DIMENSIONS OF URBAN PUBLIC SPACE AND CONFLICT Gary McDonogh Bryn Mawr College (Growth/Structure Cities)
Discussants: Lynn Lees University of Pennsylvania (History)
Elaine Simon University of Pennsylvania (Urban Studies Program)
8S Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Versailles Room
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE: LABOR, CITIZENSHIP, AND THE CONCEPT OF RIGHTS
Chair: Ava Baron Institute for Advanced Study (Social Sciences)
Britain - Panelist: Keith McClelland University of Reading (History)
U.S. 20th Century - Panelist: Gwendolyn Mink University of California - Santa Cruz (Political Science)
U.S. 19th Century - Panelist: Martha Achlesberg Smith College (Government)
Peru - Panelist: RIGHTS WITHOUT 'INDIVIDUALS,' INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT RIGHTS: CITIZENS, SUBALTERNS AND THE STATE IN 'MODERN' PERU David Nugent Yale University (Agrarian Studies)
Francophone Africa - Panelist: Fred Cooper University of Michigan (History)
8T Saturday, 4:30-6:30 pm Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: SOUTHERN POLITICS IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA
Chair: Marc Kruman Wayne State University (History)
NORTH CAROLINA RECONSTRUCTED Robin Baker John Brown University (History)
SOUTHERN WHIGS AND THE POLITICS OF CONSERVATISM: UNIONISM IN THE ANTEBLLUM SOUTH, 1845-1854 Larry K. Menna State University of New York, Farmingdale (History)
THE PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION OF THE LAW OF SLAVERY Karen Orren UCLA (Political Science)
Commentators: Marc Kruman Wayne State University (History)
Thomas E. Jeffrey Rutgers University (Thomas A. Edison Papers) Thomas B. Alexander University of Missouri--Columbia (History)
9A Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Salon D
PANEL: POLITICAL POLICING AND THE PEOPLE IN THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY
Chair: Mary Gibson CUNY John Jay College of Criminal Justice (History)
POLITICAL POLICING IN THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE: THE POLISH EXPERIENCE Elzbieta Kaczynska University of Warsaw (Social Sciences Applied)
THE ORIGINS OF THE BRAZILIAN POLITICAL POLICE IN THE 1920S Marcos Bretas The Open University (History)
POLITICAL IDEOLOGY AND THE POLITICAL POLICE IN AMERICA, 1850-1920 Wilbur Miller SUNY Stonybrook (History)
NINETEENTH CENTURY EUROPEAN POLITICAL POLICE SYSTEMS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Clive Emsley The Open University (History)
Commentators: Mary Gibson CUNY John Jay College of Criminal Justice (History)
Ricardo D. Salvatore Yale University (Program in Agrarian Studies)
9B Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: THE PRISON EXPERIENCE: DISCIPLINARY INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR INMATES IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE BY PIETER SPIERENBURG
Chair: Gerda W. Ray University of Missouri, St. Louis (History)
Panelist: Lee Beier Illinois State University (History)
Panelist: Adam Hirsch Florida State University (Law Department)
Panelist: Thomas Adams National Endowment for the Humanities (Division of Education Programs)
Panelist: Larry Goldsmith University of Pennsylvania (History)
Reply: Pieter Spierenburg Erasmus University (History)
9C Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Salon E
PANEL: NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE IMPERIAL IMAGINATION: NETHERLANDS
Chair: Karl Trocki Georgetown University (History)
DUTCH COLONIAL POLICY AND THE EMERGENCE OF ETHNIC IDENTITY AMONG THE MINANGKABAU Jeffrey Hadler Cornell University (History)
SPACE AND NATIONAL IDENTITY IN THE POST COLONIAL ERA OF INDONESIA Gerald Macdonald Villanova University (Geography)
NATIONAL IDENTITY IN DIASPORA: DUTCH BURGHERS AS COLONIAL RULERS IN INDONESIA Frances Gouda The American University (History)
Commentator: Joel Kuipers George Washington University (Anthropology)
9D Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Maestro
PANEL: BIOLOGICAL LIVING STANDARDS AND STRUCTUAL ECONOMIC CHANGE IN EUROPE AND AMERICA
Chair: John Lyons Miami University (Economics)
HEIGHT AND HEALTH DURING THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN W RTTEMBERG, GERMANY Gyula Benda ELTE University of Budapest (Economic History)
HEALTH, INCOME, AND RETIRMENT: EVIDENCE FROM NINETEENTH CENTURY AMERICA Dora Costa Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Economics)
HOW THE DETERMINANTS OF SICKNESS TIMES AND MORTALITY DIFFERED IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY BRITAIN James Riley Indiana University (History)
BIOLOGICAL DETERMINANTS OF THE PROFITABILITY OF SLAVERY IN THE NEW WORLD Philip R. P. Coelho Ball State University (Economics) Robert A. McGuire University of Akron (Economics)
Commentator: John Lyons Miami University (Economics)
Commentator: Timothy Cuff University of Pittsburgh (History)
9E Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Salon B
PANEL: THE NATURE OF INVENTIVE ACTIVITY IN ECONOMIC GROWTH
Chair: Joel Mokyr Northwestern University (Economics)
CENTRIFUGAL FORCES IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: PATENTING IN THE SOUTHERN COTTON GIN INDUSTRY William Phillips University of South Carolina (Business Administration)
CAPITAL SCARCITY AND CAPITAL SAVING INNOVATIONS Alexander Field Santa Clara University (Economics)
MACHINE INVENTION DURING THE ENGLISH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: EVIDENCE FROM THE PATENT ROLLS, 1711-1850 Richard Sullivan College of the Holy Cross (Economics)
EFFICIENCY, POWER AND AFFILIATION IN THE AMERICAN TOBACCO INDUSTRY, 1880-1913 William Roy University of California (Sociology)
Commentator: Joel Mokyr Northwestern University (Economics)
9F Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Royale Board Room
PANEL: TAXATION, POLITICS, AND THE LAW: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Chair: Christopher Howard College of William and Mary (Government)
TECHNOLOGY, EFFICIENCY, AND LEGAL CHANGE: STATE-LEVEL CORPORATE LAW AND ECONOMIC CHANGE IN THE UNITED STATES, 1890-1903 Rachel R. Parker Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Sociology)
BANK CREDIT AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM: BANK LENDING IN THE CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY OF MASSACHUSETTS, 1813-1860 Paul Lockard University of Massachusetts (Economics)
A TALE OF TWO DECADES: TAXATION AND POLITICAL AUTHORITY IN THE 1780s AND 1980s James Curtis Pennsylvania State University (Political Science)
CIVIL SOCIETY AND BUSINESS INTEREST GROUPS: THE ISRAELI CASE David Levi University of Haifa (Political Science)
Commentator: Christopher Howard College of William and Mary (Government)
9G Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am International
PANEL: REGULATION AND MARKETS: A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Chair: W.D. Kay Northeastern University (Political Science)
THE CANADIAN REACTION TO SMOOT-HAWLEY Judith A. McDonald Lehigh University (Economics) Anthony Patrick O'Brien Lehigh University (Economics) Colleen M. Callahan Lehigh University (Economics)
REGIONAL LABOR MARKETS IN ENGLAND AND WALES, 1850-1914 George R. Boyer Cornell University (Labor Economics) Timothy J. Hatton University of Essex (Economics) Humphrey Southall Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London (Geography)
IF IT'S YELLOW, IT MUST BE BUTTER: A CANADA-U.S. COMPARISON OF MARGARINE REGULATION SINCE 1886 Ruth Dupr cole des Hautes tudes Commerciales de Montr al
GENDER-SPECIFIC MORTALITY IN VICTORIAN LONDON Graham Mooney University of Liverpool (Geography)
Commentator: W.D. Kay Northeastern University (Political Science)
9H Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Hanover Suite B
PANEL: ROUNDTABLE ON CARVILLE EARLE'S GEOGRAPHICAL INQUIRY AND AMERICAN HISTORICAL PROBLEMS
Chair: Leonard Hochberg Stanford University (Sociology)
Panelist: John Agnew Syracuse University (Geography)
Panelist: Albert Bergesen University of Arizona (Sociology)
Panelist: Richard Bensel New School for Social Research (Center for Studies of Social Change)
Commentator: Carville V. Earle Louisiana State University (Geography and Anthropology)
9I Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Mount Vernon Suite
PANEL: THE TEXT ENCODING INITIATIVE (TEI)
Chair: C.M. Sperberg-McQueen University of Illinois at Chicago (Editor, Text Encoding Intitiative Computer Center)
SPEAKING WITH ONE VOICE Lou Burnard Oxford University (Editor, Text Encoding Initiative) Daniel Greenstein Glasgow University (Modern History)
THE TEI AND THE AMERICAN MEMORY PROJECT B. Tommie Usdin The ATLIS Consulting Group
ENTERING THE DIGITAL AGE OF EDITING: THE PAPERS OF HENRY LAURENS David R. Chesnutt University of South Carolina (History)
Commentator: C.M. Sperberg-McQueen University of Illinois at Chicago (Editor, Text Encoding Intitiative Computer Center)
9J Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Fairmont Suite
PANEL: ETHNICITY, LANGUAGE, AND CULTURE IN 20TH CENTURY AMERICA
Chair: Joel Perlman Harvard University (Graduate School of Education)
LEARNING TO SPEAK ENGLISH: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF CENSUS DATA ON IMMIGRANTS, 1900-1910 Zvia Segal Naphtali New York University (Metropolitan Studies Program) Richard Maisel New York University (Sociology) Christina Spellman New York University (Gallatin Division)
THE POLITICS OF LANGUAGE: FASCISM AND ITALIAN-AMERICAN ETHNICITY IN THE 1920S AND 1930S Madeline Goodman Carnegie Mellon University (History)
THE SOCIOECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF BILINGUALISM: 2ND GENERATION GERMANS IN 1940 Walter D. Kamphoefner Texas A & M University (History)
COUNTING CULTURE: FAMILISM AMONG HISPANICS AND AFRICAN-AMERICANS, 1940-1950 Brian Gratton Arizona State University (History) Rodney M. Ito, II Arizona State University (History)
Commentators: Joel Perlman Harvard University (Graduate School of Education)
Stacy Churchill Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (Modern Language Center, OISE)
9K Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Salon C
PANEL: MODELS OF POLITICAL CHANGE IN THE LONG DUREE: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Chair: Ballard Campbell Northeastern University (History)
Panelist: Randolph A. Roth Ohio State University (History)
Panelist: Wayne Te Brake SUNY Purchase (History)
Panelist: A.E.R. Woodcock Synectics Corporation
Panelist: Stephen Skowronek Yale University (Political Science)
9L Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Versailles Room
PANEL: EDUCATION IN BLACK AND WHITE
Chair: June Patton National Endowment for the Humanities (Preservation and Access)
"ANGELS OF PEACE IN A SMITTEN LAND": THE CRUSADE OF NORTHERN WHITE WOMEN WHO WENT SOUTH TO TEACH BLACKS DURING RECONSTRUCTION Perry Chang New School for Social Research (Historical Studies/Sociology)
VISIBLE CLASS, INVISIBLE ETHNICITY: THE RISE OF THE WHITE MIDDLE CLASS IN BALTIMORE SCHOOLS, 1875-1920 Robert S. Wolff University of Minnesota (History)
Commentator: June Patton National Endowment for the Humanities (Preservation and Access)
9M Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES OF INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN AMERICAN RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS
Chair: Fred Kniss Loyola University, Chicago (Sociology)
CHANGING RESOURCES, CHANGING STRATEGIES: THE DYNAMICS OF INTRADENOMINATIONAL CONFLICT Fred Kniss Loyola University, Chicago (Sociology)
ORDAINING WOMEN: THE DIFFUSION OF AN ORGANIZATIONAL INNOVATION Mark Chaves University of Notre Dame (Sociology)
AN INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE EVOLUTION OF THE DENOMINATIONAL SYSTEM IN AMERICAN PROTESTANTISM Patricia M. Y. Chang Hartford Seminary (Center for Social and Religious Research)
Commentator: Robert C. Liebman Portland State University (Sociology)
9N Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Charles Suite
PANEL: RURAL INDUSTRIALIZATION AND CLASS CONFLICT, 1840-1945
Chair: Rich Hogan Purdue University (Sociology and American Studies)
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND CLASS CONFLICT IN THE WESTERN METAL MINING AND EASTERN COAL MINING INDUSTRIES, 1880-1910 Sharon Reitman University of Washington (Sociology)
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION AND EXPROPRIATION IN PENNSYLVANIA'S ANTHRACITE COAL INDUSTRY, 1925-1945 Michael Kozura University of Michigan (Sociology)
INDUSTRIALIZATION, DOMESTIC INDUSTRY AND OVERSEAS MIGRATION IN EASTERN WESTPHALIA, GERMANY, 1840-1880 Timothy Anderson Texas A & M (Geography)
Commentators: Susan Hirsch Loyola University Chicago (History) Yda Schreuder University of Delaware (Geography)
9O Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Lafayette Suite
PANEL: MARKETING THE TWENTIETH CENTURY TO THE COUNTRYSIDE
Chair: Anne B. W. Effland U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (Agricultural and Rural History Section, Economic Research Service)
'PUTTING JEHOVAH ACROSS': THE ADVERTISING MAN TALKS TO THE PREACHER Melissa Kirkpatrick American University (History)
'JUST LIKE HOMEMADE' VS. 'LOOKS STORE-BOUGHT': MARKETING MODERN VIRTUES TO RURAL WOMEN Sarah Larson Historical Society of Washington, D.C.
Commentator: Anne B. W. Effland U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (Agricultural and Rural History Section)
9P Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Salon A
PANEL: COLONIAL STATE FORMATION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Chair: Janet Hart University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (Sociology)
COLONIAL STATE FORMATION IN THE NETHERLANDS INDIES Julia Adams University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (Sociology)
STATE FORMATION IN THE GERMAN COLONIES BEFORE 1914 George Steinmetz University of Chicago (Sociology)
THE PATERNALIST ORIGINS OF `NATIVE ADMINISTRATION' IDEOLOGY IN SOUTH AFRICA Ivan Evans University of California-San Diego (Sociology)
PASSAGES OF PATRIMONIALISM IN POST-INDEPENDENCE BRAZIL: FIRST REFLECTIONS ON CULTURAL STRUCTURALISM AS AN APPROACH TO POLITICAL ECONOMY John R. Hall University of California-Davis (Sociology)
Commentators: Janet Hart University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (Sociology)
Fred Cooper University of Michigan (History)
9Q Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Hanover Suite A
PANEL: COMPARATIVE URBAN CLASS FORMATIONS: MILAN'S BOURGEOISIE, PETTY BOURGEOISIE, AND WORKERS, 1880-1920
Chair: David I. Kertzer Brown University (Anthropology and History)
THE BOURGEOISIE IN MILAN AND ITALY AT THE END OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Marco Meriggi Universita degli Studi di Trieste (History)
MOBILIZATION AND IDENTITY AMONGST THE PETITE BOURGEOISIE IN MILAN, 1880-1920 Jonathan Morris University College, University of London (History)
STRUCTURE AND AGENCY IN THE MAKING OF MILAN'S WORKING CLASS Louise Tilly New School for Social Research (History)
Commentator: David I. Kertzer Brown University (Anthropology and History)
9R Sunday, 8:30-10:30 am Founders Suite
PANEL: GENDER AND CLASS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE: THE U.S., ENGLAND, AND FRANCE
Chair: Patricia Cooper University of Kentucky (History)
GENDER, PARTIES, AND ORGANIZED LABOR IN INTERWAR FRANCE Laura Frader Northeastern University (History)
MUTUALITY AND MARGINALITY: GENDER RELATIONS AND THE NINETEENTH CENTURY ENGLISH WORKING CLASSES Carol E. Morgan University of Northern Iowa (History)
THE SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE WHITE COLLAR: GENDER, CLASS, AND CULTURE IN THE U.S. IN THE LATE NINETEENTH TO THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY Carole Turbin Empire State College, SUNY (Sociology and History)
Commentators: Elizabeth Faue Wayne State University (History) Sonya Rose University of Michigan (History and Sociology)
10A Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Federal Hill Suite
PANEL: POLITICAL POLICING AND THE PEOPLE UNDER TOTALIST REGIMES
Chair: Rene Levy CESDIP (Sociology)
POLITICAL POLICING IN FASCIST ITALY: HISTORY AND ARCHIVAL EVIDENCES Brunello Mantelli University of Turin (History)
POLITICAL POLICING AND THE PEOPLE IN NAZI GERMANY: ARCHIVAL EVIDENCE Robert Gellately Huron College of the University of Western Ontario (History)
POLITICAL POLICING AND THE PEOPLE IN NAZI GERMANY: ORAL HISTORY AND STATISTICAL EVIDENCE Eric Johnson ZHSF, University of Cologne (History) Karl-Heinz Reuband University of Dresden (Sociology)
POLITICAL POLICING AND THE PEOPLE: THE STASI AND COMMUNIST EAST GERMANY Herbert Reinke STASI Archives Berlin (History and Sociology)
Commentator: Rene Levy CESDIP (Sociology)
10B Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Salon C
PANEL: CULTURAL CITIZENSHIP: THE CONSTRUCTION AND RECONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITY IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Chair: Mabel Berezin University of Pennsylvania (Sociology)
CONSTRUCTION OF BOUNDARIES: IMMIGRANT IDENTITIES IN EUROPE Yasemin Soysal Harvard University (Sociology)
BOUNDARIES AND IDENTITY: RACE AND CLASS IN FRANCE AND THE UNITED STATES Michele Lamont Princeton University (Sociology)
DRAMATIZING CITIZENSHIP: IDENTITY AND POLITICS IN COLOMBIAN STREET THEATER Anne Hornsby Tulane University (Sociology and Latin American Studies)
Commentators: Mabel Berezin University of Pennsylvania (Sociology)
Gail Kligman Georgetown University (Government)
10C Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Royale Board Room
PANEL: POVERTY AND WEALTH ON TWO CONTINENTS
Chair: George R. Boyer Cornell University (School of Industrial and Labor Relations)
WEALTH HOLDING IN THE NIAGARA PENINSULA 1892 Livio Di Matteo Lakehead University (Economics)
WHO PAYS FOR THE POOR? AN ESTIMATE OF INCOME TRANSFER IN AMSTERDAM 1800-1854 Marco H.D. van Leeuwen Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences (Sociology)
DURATION OF DOWNTURNS AND SELF-INSURANCE: CUMULATIVE DISTRESS AND INFORMAL ASSISTANCE IN VICTORIAN LANCASHIRE Lynne Kiesling College of William and Mary (Economics)
NEW DATA ON CASTILIAN MINTING AND SEIGNIORAGE, 1597-1643 Akira Motomura Albion College (Economics)
Commentator: George R. Boyer Cornell University (School of Industrial and Labor Relations)
10D Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Salon E
PANEL: THE DEMOGRAPHY OF INSTITUTIONALIZED CARE
Chair: Anders Br ndstr m Umea University (Historical Demography)
CHILDHOOD MORTALITY IN THE AMSTERDAM ORPHANAGE: SOME 18TH CENTURY EVIDENCE Anne McCants Massachusetts Institute of Technology (History)
PROBLEMS OF ANALYZING HOSPITAL DATA FOR THE EVALUATION OF INSTITUTIONAL HEALTH CARE IN BREMEN, 1860-1890 Peter Marschalck University at Bremen (History) Barbara Leidinger-Sommer Universitat Bremen (History)
PATTERNING INSTITUTIONALIZATION: RECONSTRUCTING THE HISTORIES OF PATIENTS AT THE GLASGOW ROYAL ASYLUM Jonathan Andrews University of Glasgow (Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine)
Commentators: Marguerite Dupree University of Glasgow (Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine) Richard M. Smith Oxford University (Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine)
10E Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Hanover Suite A
PANEL: RE-ESTIMATING U.S. NATIONAL ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION STATISTICS
Chair: Peter C. Mancall University of Kansas (History)
RECONSIDERING ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION IN THE EARLY REPUBLIC, 1790-1830 Ron Roizen Southwest Regional Laboratory Gregory Austin Southwest Regional Laboratory
CONSUMPTION AND AVAILABILITY OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES IN THE UNITED STATES, 1865-1920 Jack S. Blocker Huron College (History)
Commentators: Peter C. Mancall University of Kansas (History)
W.J. Rorabaugh University of Washington (History)
10F Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm International
PANEL: "MEET THE AUTHOR" ROUNDTABLE: BEYOND THE COMING WAR WITH JAPAN: GEORGE FRIEDMAN ON THE FATE OF WAR
Chair: Leonard Hochberg Stanford University (Sociology)
GLOBAL TRADE, ECONOMIC INTERESTS, AND GEOPOLITICS George Friedman American University (Political Science)
Panelist: Elizabeth Saunders Cornell University (Government)
Panelist: Leonard Hochberg Stanford University (Sociology)
Panelist: Lynn Eden Stanford University (Center for International Security and Arms Control)
10G Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Fairmont Suite
PANEL: CRAFT LABOR AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
Chair: Stephen Meyer University of Wisconsin - Parkside (History)
STYLISH STRATEGIES: TRENTON'S CHINA DECORATORS AND THE AESTHETIC MARKETPLACE, 1876-1915 Regina Lee Blaszczyk University of Delaware (History)
"CUPID'S MANUFACTORY": FROM SENTIMENT TO PROFIT, THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE VALENTINE INDUSTRY IN 19TH CENTURY AMERICA Elizabeth Alice White Yale University (American Studies)
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND CRAFT LABOR IN THE PHILADELPHIA SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY, 1890-1900 Thomas Heinrich University of Pennsylvania (History)
Commentator: David Bensman Rutgers University (Labor Studies)
10H Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Salon D
PANEL: WELFARE AND WORK: ISSUES OF GENDER INEQUALITY
Chair: Janet Hutchison Appalachian State University (History)
FALLEN ANGELS: GENDER, THE STATE, AND THE FATE OF AID TO DEPENDENT CHILDREN VERSUS UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE IN THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT OF 1935 Suzanne B. Mettler Syracuse University (Political Science)
NEGOTIATING DIFFERENCE: PROTECTING WOMEN WORKERS Ren e Goldsmith Kasinsky Radcliffe College (Schlesinger Library)
WOMEN AND WORK DURING WORLD WAR II: A COMPARISON OF WOMEN STEEL WORKERS AND CLERICAL WORKERS Elizabeth Jones California University of Pennsylvania (Social Science) Muriel Goldsman Cantor American University (Sociology)
Commentator: Janet Hutchison Appalachian State University (History)
10I Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Mount Vernon Suite
PANEL: WORKSHOP ON TEI
This hour will be used to explore in more depth the Text Encoding Initiative (the subject of the earlier panel session) and to elicit historians' advice on specific applications in their work. The audience will be asked to actively participate, and will be advised of additional means of participating in the Text Encoding Initiative on an on-going basis. Those interested in participating in the Text Encoding Initiative but unable to attend the previous panel session or the roundtable discussion may contact Daniel Greenstein, Modern History, Glasgow University 2 University Gardern, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom for additional information on the Text Encoding Initiative.
Chair: C.M. Sperberg-McQueen University of Illinois at Chicago (Editor, Text Encoding Intitiative Computer Center)
10J Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Maestro
PANEL: FIRST LADIES AS POLICY MAKERS
Chair: Jean H. Baker Goucher College (History)
CASTING THEIR OWN SHADOW: ELEANOR ROOSEVELT, HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON AND THE POLITICS OF EXPECTATIONS Allida M. Black Penn State, Harrisburg (American Studies)
FIRST LADY: POLICY AND REPRESENTATION Kathy B. Smith Wake Forest University (Politics)
BETTY FORD, NANCY REAGAN AND MARILYN QUALE: CANCER EDUCATORS Gaylord Neely Gallaudet University (Anthropology)
1992: THE YEAR OF THE WOMAN? Dan Amundson Center for Media and Public Affairs
Commentator: Jean H. Baker Goucher College (History)
10K Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Charles Suite
PANEL: THE EMERGENCE OF THE AMERICAN RELIGIOUS SECTOR: NETWORKS AND ORGANIZATIONS
Chair: Mark Chaves University of Notre Dame (Sociology)
RELIGION AND THE RISE OF NATIONAL VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1780-1900 Peter Dobkin Hall Yale University (Center for Non-Profit Studies)
THE DENOMINATIONAL SECTOR: THE ORGANIZATIONAL ENVIRONMENT OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS D. Scott Cormode Yale University (Religious Studies)
MERGERS IN AMERICAN PROTESTANTISM: ECOLOGICAL AND NETWORK APPROACHES Robert C. Liebman Portland State University (Sociology)
Commentator: Patricia M. Y. Chang Hartford Seminary (Center for Social and Religious Research)
10L Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Lafayette Suite
PANEL: DEMOCRACY AND RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY
Chair: Bruce C. Wearne Monash University (Anthropology and Sociology)
SOCIAL ORDER AND RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY: A PHILOSOPHICAL ANGLE Roy A. Clouser Trenton State College (Philosophy and Religion)
THE MELTING POT AND RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY: THE CURRENT CRISIS IN THE PUBLIC LEGAL ORDER James W. Skillen Center for Public Justice (Director)
LEGAL PERSPECTIVES PERSPECTIVES ON PUBLIC POLICY AND RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY Julia Stronks University of Maryland (Government and Politics)
GENDER BIAS AND RELIGIOUS NEUTRALITY: SOME THOUGHTS ON CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC EXPERIENCE IN THE NETHERLANDS IN THE 20TH CENTURY Hillie J. van de Streek Utrecht University (History)
Commentators: Bruce C. Wearne Monash University (Anthropology and Sociology)
Marthe A. Chandler DePauw University (Philosophy and Religion)
10M Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Salon B
PANEL: THE U.S. STATE AS AUDIENCE FOR PROFESSIONAL CLAIMS
Chair: Lisa Brush University of Wisconsin -- Madison (Sociology)
FROM A SCIENTISTS' WAR TO A SCIENTISTS' AGENCY: STATE BUILDING, PROFESSIONAL GROUP ADVANCEMENT, AND THE GENESIS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION Daniel Kleinman University of Houston - Clear Lake (School of Human Sciences and Humanities)
THE CHANGING FORM OF CONTRACT LAW: HOW LAWYERS HAVE USED LEGISLATION AND JUDICIAL DECISION TO INSTITUTIONALIZE INDUSTRY AND TO AUTHORIZE THEIR OWN PROFESSION John Esser University of Wisconsin -- Madison (Sociology)
PRENATAL CARE AND THE MEDICALIZATION OF CHILDBIRTH: BUREAUCRATIC WOMEN'S STATEBUILDING AGENDA Kristin K. Barker Linfield College (Sociology and Anthropology)
"TO TRANSLATE OUR ZEAL INTO LEGISLATION": GENDER, PROFESSIONALIZATION, AND STATE-BUILDING Lisa D. Brush University of Wisconsin -- Madison (Sociology)
Commentator: Andrew Abbott University of Chicago (Sociology)
10N Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Salon A
PANEL: STUDYING STATES: CULTURAL, INSTITUTIONAL, AND SOCIETAL APPROACHES
Chair: Ann Hironaka Stanford University (Sociology)
RATIONALITY AS A CULTURAL SYSTEM: THE STATE AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF INDUSTRY Frank Dobbin Princeton University (Sociology)
STUDYING STATES, STUDYING EMPIRES: A STATE-SOCIETY APPROACH Karen Barkey Columbia University (Sociology)
THE DISCOURSE OF CORRUPTION, THE CULTURE OF POLITICS, AND THE IMAGINED STATE Akhil Gupta Stanford University (Anthropology)
CLASSIFYING STATES AND THE PRODUCTION OF VALUE Marc Ventresca University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (Commerce)
Commentator: Ann Hironaka Stanford University (Sociology)
10O Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Versailles Room
PANEL: ALTERNATIVE CONSTRUCTS FOR INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY
Chair: Victoria Hattam Yale University (Political Science)
INSURRECTION AND URBAN SPACE IN PARIS, 1848-1871 Roger Gould University of Chicago (Sociology)
METHOD AND CONTEXT: A NEW LOOK AT THE GREAT STRIKES OF 1877 David O. Stowell SUNY -- Buffalo (History)
CONSTRUCTING ALTERNATIVES TO CAPITALIST PRODUCTION: COOPERATION AND THE U.S. LABOR MOVEMENT Steve Leikin Claremont Graduate School
Commentator: Victoria Hattam Yale University (Political Science)
10P Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Royale Conference Foyer
PANEL: RACE AND CLASS FOUNDATIONS OF GENDERED IDENTITIES
Chair: Eleanor D. Shelton-Bullock Michigan State University (Afro-American History)
SURVIVING STATE RAPE: LIFE HISTORIES OF 'COMFORT WOMEN' Hyun Sook Kim Wheaton College (Sociology and Anthropology)
INDUSTRIALIZATION OF CULTURE IN EVERYDAY LIFE: THE CASE OF THE KOREAN HOUSEWIFE Dennis Hart Western Illinois University (Political Science)
Commentator: Eleanor D. Shelton-Bullock Michigan State University (Afro-American History)
10Q Sunday, 10:45-12:45 pm Hanover Suite B
PANEL: THE MAKING OF IDENTITY IN NON-WESTERN CONTEXTS: THE CASES OF EGYPT, POLAND AND THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
Chair: Fatma Muge Gocek University of Michigan (Sociology)
THE VEILING MOVEMENT IN EGYPT: A CONTEMPORARY WOMEN'S MOVEMENT Dana M. Greene University of Michigan (Center for research on Social Organization)
POST-WAR POLISH IMPOTENCE, THE RISE OF SOLIDARITY AND THE ERECTION OF DEMOCRACY IN POST-COMMUNIST POLAND: AN ANALYSIS OF THREE MODERN CULTURAL PRODUCTS Pauline Gianoplus University of Michigan (Center for research on Social Organization)
SOURCES OF GENDER SEGREGATION: WOMEN AND WORK IN THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC Jennifer Sell University of Michigan (Center for research on Social Organization)
Commentator: Fatma Muge Gocek University of Michigan (Sociology)
---end of program!---