INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Facing Foreigners in Urban Early Modern Europe: Legislation, Deliberation, Practice

We are proud to announce the upcomming


INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE


Facing Foreigners in Urban Early Modern Europe: Legislation, Deliberation, Practice


27–29 November 2024
University of Maribor, Faculty of Arts
Koroška cesta 160, 2000 Maribor, Slovenia



 

The conference is part of the COST Action CA22149 Research Network for Interdisciplinary Studies of Transhistorical Deliberative Democracy (CHANGECODE) funded by the European Union and the research project J6-4603 (A) Facing Foreigners Between the Medieval and Early Modern Period in the North Adriatic Towns, co-funded by the Slovene Research and Innovation Agency (ARIS).

Detailed programme of the conference.

 

Call for papers for a special issue on The History of Mining: Economy, Society, Culture

The high-impact journal Acta Histriae invites researchers from the fields of social sciences and
humanities to submit their papers, which will be published in 2025, as diamond open-access articles.
We welcome all papers presenting new findings on the topics addressed in this special issue.



 

This thematic issue of Acta Histriae aims to address legal, social, and economic aspects of
mining and mining regions: 1) How mining shaped societal structures and cultural practices; 2) what
kind of impact mining had on community development; 3) what was the role of immigration and how
it affected mining regions and towns; 4) how did cultural transfers reflect in mining regions; 5) what
are the opportunities for interdisciplinary research, such as sociology, social and cultural history,
archaeology, ethnography and literary history; 5) gender roles, especially the role of women and their
narratives; 6) perceptions in historical narratives.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:
i) the impact on societies, economies, and legal systems;
ii) societal structures and cultural practices;
iii) identity, labour relations and power dynamics;
iv) immigration;
v) interdisciplinary approaches;
vi) gender roles.

If you are interested to publish with us, please submit your abstracts (300 characters) by 01/12/2024 to
actahistriae.editor@gmail.com with only ‘Mining History’ and your full name in the email subject.
The abstracts will first undergo editorial review and those accepted will be invited to be published
as journal papers, with the deadline being 01/06/2025. All accepted papers will undergo thorough
double-blind peer-review, therefore editorial acceptance and submission alone do not guarantee
publication. We accept papers in English, Italian, Slovenian, and most other South Slavic languages:
Bosniak, Croatian, Montenegrin, and Serbian (Latin script only).
Papers have to adhere to submission guidelines, see here.

Tito. Sociološko-zgodovinska študija
978-961-6732-65-9

The book examines the political work and function of Josip Broz - Tito in a broader historico-sociological context. From a broader perspective, encompassing Tito's political culture and the authoritarian regime that was shaped in the spirit of the times, the perspective narrows to the period before the assumption of power (1937-1945) and thus the formative period of his rule. This is followed by a discussion of his political culture, which is then developed into an understanding of his national policy and, finally, his foreign policy. The author also takes a critical approach to the construction of a cult of personality and Tito's charisma, which led to an irrational attitude towards the Yugoslav leader, who was elevated to the status of an infallible individual, creating the illusion of his role as a saviour. The author then analyses the attitudes of Yugoslav intellectuals towards Tito, looking at the main patterns. The present work therefore focuses on a neglected aspect of Yugoslav socialism: its embeddedness in long historical processes, the meaning of Tito and the fundamental characteristics of political culture. The focus is therefore not on events, but on processes. Although Tito's image today depends on the space in which the interpretation is formed, the study shows well how this image is also time-dependent and constantly changing. After all, it is already quite different from that of 1998, when the study was first published. Therefore, as the author also notes, the content of this book will necessarily be received differently today in the community and in the memory culture of a new generation for whom Tito is only a symbol of the past and of whom they have no personal memories. In the Slovenian context, it will therefore certainly be a welcome addition to previous publications on Tito's history and biography, as it understands him in the broader social context of time and place.