Symposium organisé par Nicolas Barreyre (EHESS) et Nicolas Delalande (Sciences Po).
Sous forme d'atelier, cette journée d'études explore, en croisant les approches, la dette publique comme lieu du débat et du conflit politiques en Europe et aux États-Unis depuis la fin du XVIIIe siècle. En rassemblant des études de cas sur ce nœud entre la politique (notamment dans sa dimension sociale) et l'endettement de l'État, elle propose de réinterroger certaines notions centrales à notre compréhension du fonctionnement politique du monde contemporain, et tout particulièrement la souveraineté, la citoyenneté, la démocratie et la solidarité.
Programme
9h-9:30am: Welcome and introduction (Nicolas Barreyre, Nicolas Delalande)
9:30-10:30am: Public Debt and the Making of Citizenship
- Patrik Winton (Uppsala Universitet), “Government borrowing and the growth of citizenship in Sweden, 1760-1776”
- Julia Ott (New School for Social Research), “‘Be a shareholder in victory’: the American citizen-investor in World War I”
11am-12pm: The State and Financial Markets
- Benjamin Lemoine (Sciences Po) and Roi Livne (Berkeley University), “Public debt management techniques and the making of state agency. France, Israel and the financialization of
government debts” - Noam Maggor (Vanderbilt University), “The ‘money machines’ revisited: urban public finance in the era of property taxation”
12-12:30pm: General discussion
2-3pm: Democracy, Authoritarianism and Public Debt
- Stephen Sawyer (American University of Paris), “Building the Liberal Democratic State in
Republican France: Adolphe Thiers and the Fiscal Construction of the Early Third Republic” - Adam Tooze (Yale University), “Hitler’s Third Reich and the puzzle of authoritarian public debt”
3-4pm: Foreign Bondholders and National Sovereignty
- Robert Radu (Rostock Universität), “Public debts and public opinion. The role of the European
Press in Italy’s late nineteenth century financial crisis (1889-1894)” - Tassos Anastassiadis (McGill University), “It’s all Greek to me! Foreign actors’ perceptions of
elites and democratic governance while dealing with debt control in three Greek crises (1898, 1922, 1947)”
4:30-5:30pm: Conclusion
- Nicolas Barreyre et Nicolas Delalande: “For a political history of public debts: Where are we at?”