Third World Oil Crises: Global Connections, Everyday Repercussions, and the 1970s

Third World Oil Crises: Global Connections, Everyday Repercussions, and the 1970s

Organizer
George Roberts (Kings College London), Emily Brownell (University of Edinburgh)
Funded by
Susan Manning Workshop, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) at the University of Edinburgh
ZIP
00000
Location
Edinburgh
Country
United Kingdom
From - Until
25.08.2021 - 27.08.2021
Deadline
01.07.2021
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This workshop will explore how the oil crisis and its aftermath reshaped livelihoods, environments, and politics across the Third World. Moving beyond macroeconomic and diplomatic narratives, it will address a more open-ended set of inquiries that examine the social, environmental, political, cultural, and intellectual histories of the oil crisis.

Third World Oil Crises: Global Connections, Everyday Repercussions, and the 1970s

The first ‘oil crisis’ of the mid-1970s is widely considered to be a key juncture in the global history of the twentieth century. However, scholarship on the crisis predominantly focuses on Europe, North America, and the Middle East. It also concentrates on its macroeconomic and diplomatic dimensions. Yet the consequences of the oil crisis were felt strongest by ordinary people across Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America. As the price of oil rose, many agricultural and primary commodity prices collapsed, confronting ‘Third World’ economies with a serious foreign exchange crisis and shortages of consumer goods. The oil shock forced a reckoning with post-colonial ideological and developmental agendas. In petroleum importing countries, it challenged the ability of the state to meet citizens’ needs and posed new questions of social contracts. Meanwhile, the sudden influx of petrodollars confronted oil producing states with upheavals of their own. Although these changes were near simultaneous and globally connected, their effects were diverse and even divergent, around the world and among societies. These transformations were not just experienced by communities, but actively shaped through their creative responses, whether at the level of the state, the family, or grassroots organisations.

This virtual workshop will explore how the oil crisis and its aftermath reshaped livelihoods, environments, and politics across the Third World. Moving beyond macroeconomic and diplomatic narratives, it will address a more open-ended set of inquiries that examine the social, environmental, political, cultural, and intellectual histories of the oil crisis. Suggested themes for papers may include (but are certainly not limited to):

changed notions of citizenship and the politics of deprivation, shortage, and austerity
the search for alternative forms of energy, materials, and commodities
altered conceptions of development, the future, and temporality
new forms of grassroots and transnational social movements
novel or fragmented transnational political solidarities
ideas of sustainability and ecological consciousness
the emergence of new economic practices
social consequences of the 'crisis' in petroleum-producing states

With the aim of constructing a more capacious history of the oil crisis, we hope to encourage conversations among historians across disciplinary sub-fields and regional specialisations, as well as from researchers working in adjacent disciplines whose work is of a historical nature. We envisage the workshop as an exploratory space for discussing work-in-progress and building future collaborations, rather than for the presentation of finished work. In view of the difficulties of conducting research over the past year due to the pandemic, we welcome work which remains in early stages of development, particularly from PhD students and Early Career Researchers. The workshop will take place online, with half-day sessions spread across three days, scheduled in such a way as to enable participation from researchers based around the world. We especially encourage submissions from scholars based at institutions in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America. An internet data allowance will be available to participants who require one.

We ask interested participants to send details of their name, affiliation, paper title, and 250 word abstract to george.m.roberts@kcl.ac.uk and emily.brownell@ed.ac.uk by 1 July 2021. Please also get in touch if you have any questions.

Contact (announcement)

George Roberts
george.m.roberts@kcl.ac.uk

https://www.iash.ed.ac.uk/news/call-papers-third-world-oil-crises-global-connections-everyday-repercussions-and-1970s
Editors Information
Published on
28.05.2021
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Language(s) of event
English
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