Here's a conference that looks interesting:
Morals and the limits of markets, WZB Berlin, 11 - 12 July 2024
Organizers: Hande Erkut and Dorothea Kübler
"The workshop will focus on the limits of markets, the morality of decisions in markets, and paternalism. It will bring together scholars from different disciplines (mainly economics, political science, and philosophy) who are working on these topics. The workshop aims to foster discussions across disciplines on the ethical considerations surrounding market activities, repugnant markets, and the government’s role in regulating such markets."
Preliminary Program:Preliminary Program:
Thursday, July 11, 2024
9:00 – 9.30 Registration/ Workshop Opening
9:30 – 10.50 Sandro Ambühl (University of Zurich) Interventionist Preferences and the Welfare State: The Case of In-Kind Nutrition Assistance
Tammy Harel Ben Shahar (University of Haifa), Lean Out: On the Morality of Participating in Positional Competitions
10:50 – 11:10 Coffee Break
11:10 – 12:30 Benjamin Sachs-Cobbe (University of St Andrews) Taking Jobs and Doing Harm
Colin Sullivan (Purdue University) Paternalistic Discrimination
12.30 – 13:20 Lunch
13:20 – 15:20 Hande Erkut (WZB), Repugnant Transactions: The Role of Agency and Severe Consequences
Erik Malmqvist (Univeristy of Gothenburg) How Exploitation Harms
Constanze Binder (Erasmus University Rotterdam) Universities and Markets: New Challenges to Academic Freedom
15:20 – 15:50 Coffee Break
15.50 – 17:10 Robert Stüber (NYU Abu Dhabi) Why High Incentives Cause Repugnance: A Framed Field Experiment + Do Prices Erode Values
Aksel Sterri (Oslo Metropolitan University) Bodily Justice
17:30 Visit to Neue Nationalgalerie
19:00 Conference Dinner
Friday, July 12, 2024
9.30 – 10:50 Axel Ockenfels (University of Cologne) The Demand and Supply of Paternalism
Søren Flinch Midtgaard (Aarhus University) Reaction Qualifications and Paternalism
10:50 – 11.10 Coffee Break
11:10 – 12:30 Roberto Weber (University of Zurich) What Money Shouldn’t Buy: Aversion to Monetary Incentives for Health Behaviors
Amy Thompson (Oxford University) Defending a Moral Limit to Markets: Beyond a Singular Asymmetry Thesis
12.30 – 13:30 Lunch
13:30 – 15:30 Sili Zhang (LMU Munich) What Money Can Buy: How Market Exchange Promotes Values
Peter Dietsch (University of Victoria) The Centrifugal Nature of the Labour Market, Justice, and Public Policy
Rahel Jaeggi (Humboldt University Berlin) TBA
15:30 – 16:40 Coffee Break / Poster Session
Miguel Abellán (University Lüneburg) Timo Heinrich (TU Hamburg)
Victor Chung (University of Toronto) Iliana Melero (University of Zaragoza)
Denise Feigl (University of Regensburg) Brandon Long (University at Buffalo)
Ben Grodeck (University of Exeter) Reha Tuncer (LISER)
16:40 – 18:00 Nicola Lacetera (University of Toronto) Save and Let Die? Economic Factors and the Support of Medically Assisted Death
Stefan Gosepath (Frei University Berlin) Containment of the Market
19:00 Farewell Dinner
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