OPEN CALL - Capital Volume 1 Reading Group
Call to form a Capital Volume 1 Reading Group
3 June 2026, 09:30h
Leiden University
More info about the programme here
Leiden Centre for Continental Philosophy
Institutional Inertia and Transformation - Interdisciplinary conference
3–4 June 2026
‘Alongside the modern evils, we are oppressed by a whole series of inherited evils, arising from the passive survival of… anachronistic social and political relations. We suffer not only from the living, but from the dead.’ (K. Marx)
We can criticize institutions, ideas and practices because they are exploitative, violent, oppressive, racist or unjust. But the problem can also be that they just don’t work anymore. Fossil-fuel based economies, centuries-old political institutions and constitutions, or the patriarchal nuclear family might have made sense in the context in which they emerged, but today, they have become outdated, either because they no longer correspond to changed social norms, or because they no longer successfully exercise the function for which they were once instituted, or both. As Adorno wrote, ‘modes of conduct which were once rational, but have now become obsolete, are evoked unchanged by the logic of history.’
There seems to be a kind of inertia inherent in institutions: once they are established, institutions start to live a life of their own; they are reproduced without conscious reflection or design and they resist attempts to change them, even when change is sorely needed. But this inertia is inherent to the way institutions function: institutions provide stability by fixing rules, laws, social roles and hierarchies, protocols, definitions and patterns of behaviour, and this is what makes them function effectively. Institutional inertia, as Sartre suggests, can also be ‘enriching’: it opens up new possible courses of action and provides the background stability without which a meaningful understanding of the world would not be possible at all.
This conference brings together scholars working on questions relating to institutions, institutional persistence and institutional change from a variety of perspectives and disciplines, in order to address the following questions: how do we distinguish between normal or legitimate institutional reproduction and ‘irrational’ institutional inertia? How can we judge institutions to be obsolete? How do institutions resist change or perpetuate themselves even though they no longer correspond to changing social norms, or are no longer effective, or have even become destructive? How can we resist, escape, or make use of institutional inertia, and what are the preconditions for institutional transformation?
Speakers:
Thomas Bedorf (Fernuniversität Hagen)
Lucie Middlemiss (Leeds University)
Maeve Cooke (University College Dublin)
Nick Psomas (University of Amsterdam)
Matthew Delhey (University of Toronto)
Gregor Schäfer (University of London)
Vangelis Giannakakis (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt)
Peter Sutoris (Leeds University)
Frank Hindriks (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen)
Xenophon Tenezakis (University of Strasbourg)
Jeroen Hopster (Universiteit Utrecht)
Julie van der Wielen (University of Antwerpen)
Daniil Koloskov (University of Hradec Kralove)
Julia Wittmayer (EUR/DRIFT)
Programme and registration:
For more information on the programme and speakers, visit the conference website.
If you would like to attend, please register here.
Contact: Bart Zantvoort via f.w.zantvoort@phil.leidenuniv.nl
This conference is funded by NWO (Dutch Research Council) project ‘Institutional Obsolescence: A Critical Phenomenological Approach’
Call to form a Capital Volume 1 Reading Group
International Institute of Social History - IISH
Cruquiusweg 31,
1019 AT Amsterdam
(room to be confirmed)
January-June 2026
Time: 15h-17h
Dates:
21 January 2026
11 February 2026
4 March 2026
30 March 2026
15 April 2026
6 May 2026
3 June 2026
24 June 2026
Amsterdam – UvA
December 2025-May 2026
https://asca.uva.nl/programme/seminars/political-ecologies/political-ecologies.html
Location tbc
starting March 2026
Amsterdam - University of Amsterdam / hybrid
Grundrisse from March, preparatory reading of Proudhon from January.
Fortnightly sessions, Tuesday 5-7 starting date 13th January
Reading Group for Marx's Capital Volume 2
First session Monday the 23rd of February 11:00-13:00 at the University of Groningen or online.
If you are interested please reach out to Eden: e.m.young@rug.nl
The next 4 sessions will take place every two weeks (Monday 11h-13h)
You’re a student in the Netherlands and you can’t find a course on Marxist theory, political economy or history of the labor movement in your program? Or are you a researcher who would like to break through the isolation and connect with others who work with Marxist approaches? Or an activist that would like to know what Marxists have to offer for your politics these days?
Join marxism-nl.org!
Amid global turmoil, the rise of far-right and fascist politics around the world, university budget cuts and political attacks on our institutions during the protests in solidarity with Palestine, we came together as a group of Marxist students, researchers, and teachers active in the Netherlands, to unite and defend our trenches.
We created a platform (marxism-nl.org) and a network (Marxist Research Group), to connect existing initiatives, share resources, and collaborate on new activities.
This website presents the network and the initiatives of the Marxist Research Group.
marxism-nl.org promotes both academic and non-academic events such as public lectures, societal and political debates, reading groups, book launches by members or affiliated groups. It is open to whoever is interested and aims at fostering strategic and practical collaborations within and outside academia.
If you are interested in Marxist research or teaching and active in the Netherlands get involved!
If you would like to become part of the network or organize something yourself don’t hesitate to get in touch directly under contact@marxism-nl.org
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Description: Marxism-NL
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