Plurale Ökonomik Vorlesungsreihe Karlshochschule
Hallo, als neu berufener Professor für Plurale Ökonomik an der Karlshochschule in Karlsruhe freue ich mich, Sie auf diese erste Veranstaltung einer Reihe hinzuweisen, die ich am Lehrstuhl organisiere. Vielleicht ist diese für Sie von Interesse. Ich freue mich, wenn Sie diese Ankündigung an unserer Hochschule an Interessierte weiterleiten und sich in der Vorlesungsreihe registrieren. Den Anfang macht Prof Lisa Herzog mit einem Vortrag zu Workplace Democracy, danach gibt es weitere Vorträge zu Decolonising Economics mit Dr Surbhi Kesar (SOAS) und weitere andere!
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HIER REGISTRIEREN: https://bit.ly/3HCsZCP
Digital Talk: “Workplace Democracy and Epistemic Justice”
We welcome Professor Dr. Lisa Herzog (Professor of Political Philosophy, University of Groningen) at Karlshochschule on the 31st of March, 5 - 6.30 pm CET for a digital talk as part of the "Pluralist and Heterodox Economics" series organized by students of Karlshochschule with Professor Robert Lepenies. In her talk, Professor Herzog will discuss the idea of workplace democracy and some of the arguments for why workers should be given more voice. While this can be justified on functional grounds, it is also a matter of epistemic justice: workers are often wronged as knowers, and these forms of injustice often go hand in hand with sexist or racist prejudices. She also discusses some of the mechanisms of employee involvement and how they can lead to both higher epistemic functionality and greater epistemic justice. Please register here or contact rlepenies@karlshochschule.org to be added to future event mailings.
Lisa Herzog is professor at the Faculty of Philosophy and the Center for Philosophy, Politics and Economics of the University of Groningen. She studied philosophy, economics, political science and modern history at the universities of Munich (LMU) and Oxford. Between 2008 and 2011 she wrote her doctoral thesis, entitled “Inventing the Market. Smith, Hegel, and Political Theory” (OUP 2013, paperback 2016) as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University. Since then, she has worked at the universities of St. Gallen, Leuven, Frankfurt, Stanford, and Technical University Munich. She works at the intersection of political philosophy and economics, focusing on the history of political and economic ideas, normative questions around markets (especially financial markets), ethics in organizations, and political epistemology. She also writes for a broader public and participates in public debates about the ethics of finance, social justice, and workplace democracy. She is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards and honors, including the Tractatus Preis 2019 and the Deutscher Preis für Sozialphilosophie und Ethik, the Hans-Böckler-Preis der Stadt Köln and most recently, the 2022 Schader-Preis. She is also member of the Global Young Academy and the Dutch Young Academy. Recent books include: Reclaiming the System. Moral Responsibility, Divided Labour, and the Role of Organizations in Society. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018) and, in German, Die Rettung der Arbeit. Ein politischer Aufruf. Berlin: Hanser Berlin (2019).
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