Friday, March 12, 2010
 

Conference: Techniques of Hope

Another great conference coming up:

Techniques of Hope: How Professionals and Professionalism can Stabilize the Markets and Change the World

How do we sustain hope in the economy? Hope—usually indexed by terms like consumer confidence, or market optimism—is the engine of market stability and growth.  And yet most of the current techniques for producing confidence in the economy—from stimulus packages to new regulatory architectures—are at best limited solutions. How these policies translate into individual market participants’ hope in the market remains unclear, and most policy makers and market participants are at best uneasy about how effective existing approaches will be and what unintended consequences they might bring with them.  

This conference aims to set in motion what we call a “market movement”—an analog to recently successful social or political movements.  One of the hallmarks of recent political movements has been the understanding that each of our actions have larger consequences. “Think globally, act locally” is the slogan of the environmental movement, or “the personal is political” has been the slogan of the feminist movement. In the recent presidential campaign, Barack Obama called this move “hope”: hope for him is the realization that each of us has power to effectuate real change. So our question is, if this is true for politics and society, could it also be true for the market? 

The conference will bring together professionals and experts in the financial markets with social scientists and lawyers who have studied hope in other legal, political and social movements to define a new agenda for market stabilization and reform from the ground up.

The conference will take place on Friday, March 26, 2009, at The Levin Institute in New York City.

For more information and registration, please click here.

  • Share/Bookmark

Related posts:

  1. Futures of Criticism: Clancco at 2010 CAA Conference
  2. International Conference to Bolster Return of Nazi-looted Art
  3. Conference: International Developments in Libel, Privacy Newsgathering and New Media Law
  4. “Hope” in China or, Where Does Copyright Infringement End?
  5. “Oh boy, I hope they don’t find us”
 

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Comments

No comments so far.
 
About Clancco

Clancco.com is a website on art law. Clancco and Clancco.com are trademarks owned by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento. The views expressed on this site are those of Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento, Clancco and its staff, as well as of the artists and writers who submit to Clancco.com. They are not the views of any other entity or organization, legal or otherwise.

Website Terms of Use, Conditions, and Applicable Law.
Make a Tax-Deductible Donation

Making a small tax-deductible donation will help us continue to provide you with news articles and resources on art and law. Donating is easy and can be done safely online. Clancco.com is fiscally sponsored by Fractured Atlas, a 501(c)(3) public charity, and thus all donations are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.