Empires and Bureaucracy

Empires and Bureaucracy

Organizer
Peter Crooks, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Venue
Trinity College Dublin
Location
Dublin
Country
Ireland
From - Until
16.06.2011 - 18.06.2011
Deadline
01.06.2011
By
Crooks, Peter

Empires and Bureaucracy - A Colloquium Exploring the Comparative History of European Empires From Late Antiquity to the Modern World

This colloquium brings together a stellar cast of historians and theorists of empire who will explore the role of bureaucracy in European empires from late antiquity to the modern world.

Bureaucracies provided empires with a means of articulating power and marshalling resources in regions remote from the imperial core. But while the growth of bureaucracy underpinned much of Europe’s expansionist dynamic, it also served in certain cases as a drag on imperial power, creating tensions that led ineluctably to fragmentation and colonial independence.

The colloquium seeks to move investigation of the concept of ‘bureaucracy’ beyond its narrow institutional sense (an aspect of the subject closely investigated by an older school of imperial historians). Instead it sets out to explore how bureaucracy operated as an aspect of the social systems and political cultures of empires.

Imperial bureaucracies varied enormously in terms of complexity and ‘rationality’ across the millennium and a half to be explored by the speakers. The colloquium will stimulate cross-chronological comparisons while simultaneously throwing up instructive contrasts and evidence of change over time. In particular it offers a unique opportunity to challenge the abiding association of bureaucratic rationality with modernity and the so-called ‘rise of the West’. To frame that debate, the speakers include sociologists and political scientists, while responses by historians of non-Western and non-literate empires will place the case studies from European history in world-historical perspective. Collectively the papers will make a major contribution to the diachronic study of European empires.

Among the subjects to be addressed by the participants are the following:

The utility of Max Weber’s concept of bureaucracy for historians of empire from Late Antiquity to the twentieth century.

How the growth of bureaucracy served to knit empires together and/or break them apart.

The tension in empires between centralized and devolved rule.

The success of certain empires despite (or because of) their limited bureaucratic apparatus.

The equation made between bureaucracy and civility in the literature and apologetics of empires.

The role of bureaucrats in disseminating metropolitan political culture throughout empires and in encouraging the growth of ‘colonial nationalism’.

The assimilation of native bureaucratic practices and the imposition of central models (including systems of law) on the peripheries.

To register for this colloquium, please fill out the provided form and return it before 1 June 2011. The form may be returned by email or in hard copy, as follows:

Email attachment to be sent to empires.bureaucracy@gmail.com (please put Registration Form and your own name in the subject line)

Hard copy to be posted to Dr Peter Crooks, Empires and Bureaucracy Conference, Department of History, Trinity College, Dublin 2

Registration Fee
The Registration Fee is €140 (includes lunches, refreshments and conference dinner). Payment details are provided in the Registration Form.

Accommodation
Accommodation is not included in the registration fee. Special rates will be available to delegates at hotels in Dublin city centre. To avail of these rates, please contact the conference organizers and ask for a hotel booking form.

Student Bursaries
A limited number of bursaries (comprising a contribution towards travel expenses + registration fee) are available for postgraduate and postdoctoral students. The deadline for receipt of applications is 1 April 2011.

Programm

Contact (announcement)

Dr Peter Crooks
empires.bureaucracy@gmail.com
Empires and Bureaucracy Conference
Department of History
Trinity College
Dublin 2

http://www.tcd.ie/history/empires/index.php
Editors Information
Published on
25.02.2011
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