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The ethics of numbers, the ethics of growth

Professor Diane Coyle will have a conversation with you on the 4th March at 5 pm in the Keynes Hall, King's College, Cambridge. Abstract: On March 4th (5 pm-6:30 pm) MaxCam Centre Coordinator Johannes Lenhard will host Prof Diane Coyle at Keynes Hall, King’s College, Cambridge for an open conversation. Lenhard and Coyle, who was […]

Indebted: Student Finance, Social Speculation, and the Future of the US Family

McCrum Lecture Theatre Benet Street, Cambridge

Professpor Caitlin Zaloom will give a lecture entitled "Indebted:  Student Finance, Social Speculation, and the Future of the US Family" on 14th October at 5:30 p.m. in the McCrum Lecture Theatre, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.  Abstract: The struggle to pay for college is one of the defining features of middle-class experience in the United States today. As […]

Max Cam Conference “Work, Ethics and Freedom”

Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle Advokatenweg 36, Halle

The first Max Cam conference, organised by the Max Planck – Cambridge Centre for Ethics, Economy and Social Change (Max-Cam), will be held from 11 to 13 December 2019.  It examines labour relations in the twenty-first century and how they conflict with or strengthen the ethics of human freedom. Social discourses on this topic are […]

Investing in Values – key note announcement

MAX CAM EVENT: “INVESTING IN VALUES” – TWO KEYNOTE SPEECHES Bordering the surplus population across the Mediterranean: war, borders, and labour Lucia Pradella, Kings College London 13.00-14.00, Tuesday 18 February New Combination Room, Corpus Christi College The military and the business of border control are two expanding investment sectors. But what is their link to […]

What’s kinship got to do with it? Two-day online workshop

This workshop aims to explore and untangle various configurations of three anthropological categories: kinship, ethics, and economics. While kinship was once the defining topic of study for anthropology, it has fallen out of fashion in recent years. Anthropology may have lost analytical sight of kinship, but this aspect of human life is still very salient in the lives of people everywhere. With this workshop, we reintroduce kinship as a dynamic factor in ethical and economic life in the pursuit of anthropological theory that more accurately captures the complexities of the world.

The Moral Affordances and Social Changes of Mobility

Zoom

Presentation abstracts Frank Ngo Pilgrims of the peripheral – Centers and peripheries between Japan and Christendom Pilgrimage shares many traits with tourism, and much of the anthropologies of the two realize both forms of mobility draw from one another to fulfill religious, economic, or leisurely ends. In this paper I inquire what social changes come […]

Daromir Rudnyckyj – The Protestantism of Neoliberalism

Corpus Christi College, Cambridge Cambridge

A Max-Cam public and virtual lecture In an interview with the Sunday Times two years after her stunning electoral triumph, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher proclaimed “Economics are the method; the object is to change the heart and soul.” This lecture contends that the deployment of religious notion of the soul and Thatcher’s well-documented commitment […]