We are pleased to announce the launch a new faculty-driven interdisciplinary workshop series to explore the global institutional stability with input from invited speakers who study various dimensions of institutional failure and success. Through these conversations, we hope to better understand how and in what ways, institutions shape our society and future prosperity.

Abstract: Human life is structured by institutions – the rules that create patterns of incentives and expectations which condition how we behave and coordinate with others. Institutions can create the conditions for prosperity and human flourishing, providing individual freedoms, economic opportunity and the capacity for innovation. As history has long shown, they are not guaranteed to do so, but why?

Institutions Workshop

April 15, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Speaker: Ruth Bloch Rubin, University of Chicago

Location: TBA

Ruth Bloch Rubin studies American politics, with a substantive focus on legislative institutions, political parties, and American political development. Combining archival and interview data, her current work explores how divisions within political parties drive congressional development and structure lawmaking. Challenging existing theories of party power in Congress, she highlights the role of intraparty organizations in shaping both substantive and procedural change. Bloch Rubin is also working on a project that examines Congress’s provision of health services to American Indians in the early nineteenth century. She joins the University of Chicago from Harvard University, where she was Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research. She earned her PhD in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley in 2014.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/yc6npb4w

 

Institutions Workshop

April 29, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Speaker: Ruixue Jia, University of California San Diego

Location: TBA

Ruixue Jia is a professor of economics at the School of Global Policy and Strategy at UC San Diego. She also serves as co-director of the China Data Lab, executive secretary of the Association of Comparative Economic Studies (ACES) and co-chair of the China Economic Summer Institute (CESI). Jia’s research lies at the intersections of economics, history and politics, with a focus on how power structures evolve and shape economic development. Her recent work examines the political economy of idea formation and diffusion, including the interplay between the state, education, science and technology. She is the co-author of “The Highest Exam,” a book that explores how China’s education system both mirrors and molds its society.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/yueayfpn 

 

Institutions Workshop

May 6, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Speaker: Noah Rosenblum, New York University

Location: TBA

Noah A. Rosenblum is an Associate Professor of Law at New York University School of Law and faculty director of the Vanderbilt Scholars Program and Katzmann Symposium. He is also a faculty affiliate of the Department of History. Rosenblum works primarily in administrative law, constitutional law, and legal history. His research takes a historical approach to the study of state institutions, seeking to understand how law can be used to promote democratic accountability. He is currently pursuing several projects on the history of the place of the president in the administrative state. His academic writing has appeared in the Harvard Law Review, Columbia Law Review, and Yale Law Journal, among other venues, and has been awarded the Joseph Parker Prize in Legal History and the Fred C. Zacharias Award in Legal Ethics, among other honors. Rosenblum is also a frequent commentator on public law and New York State courts. Rosenblum pursued his undergraduate studies at Deep Springs and Harvard College. He received his JD from Yale Law School and his PhD in history from Columbia University, where his studies were supported by a Jacob K. Javits Fellowship. After law school, he clerked for Judge Jenny Rivera of the New York Court of Appeals and Judge Guido Calabresi of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Rosenblum is a member of the New York Bar.

Register here:  https://tinyurl.com/mufracuf 

 

Institutions Workshop

May 13, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Speaker: Kathryn Takabvirwa, University of Chicago

Location: TBA

Kathryn Takabvirwa is a social and cultural anthropologist. Her research centers on policing, citizenship, migration and mobility, governance, and the state in Southern Africa. She is interested in the ways people reconcile themselves to the idea of the state and of citizenship in light of histories of state violence. She is currently working on a book manuscript on police roadblocks in Zimbabwe. The ethnography presents a close examination of encounters between the police and those they stopped along Zimbabwe’s roads between 2012 and 2017, the period during which official police roadblocks proliferated throughout the country. Tentatively titled How to Ask for a Bribe, the book also explores experiences of commuting, as well as the policing of street vendors. She is also interested in the politics of representation, and in the role of African fiction in interrogating and generating Africanist theories of power, intimacy, and citizenship. This summer, she will begin preliminary fieldwork on her second project, on marriage and mobility in contemporary Southern Africa. Takabvirwa has also written on xenophobic violence in South Africa, following research on local governance and migration with scholars at the African Center for Migration and Society, in Johannesburg.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/3u9cytnv

 

Institutions Workshop

May 20, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Speaker: Julia Cagé, Sciences Po

Location: Social Sciences Tea Room #201

Social Sciences Research Building, 

1126 East 59th Street, 201

Julia Cagé is Full Professor of Economics since 2024 - she joined the Department in 2014 and was tenured in 2021. She is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), where she also leads the CEPR Research and Policy Network on “Media Plurality”, and a Research Fellow at the CESifo Research Network. From 2018 to 2023, she was the co-director of the Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Evaluation of Public Policies (LIEPP)’s “Evaluation of Democracy” research group, and from 2015 to 2022, a Board member of the Agence France Presse (third largest international news agency in the world).  Her research focuses on political economy, industrial organization and economic history. She is particularly interested in media economics, political participation and political attitudes. Her research has been published in a number of peer-reviewed international journals such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Public Economics, the Review of Economic Studies, the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, the American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, Explorations in Economic History, the Journal of International Economics, and the European Economic Review. 

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/mr2s4h58

February 11, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: SSD Tea Room #201
1126 East 59th Street

Speaker: Peter Bang 

Title: Beyond the Postcolonial Moment? Empire and the Problem of World Order

Professor Peter Bang’s research is situated at the interface of ancient and world history. It is focused on exploring historical comparisons between the Roman and other pre-colonial land-empires, especially the Mughal Empire of India, to suggest new ways of conceptualizing the anatomy of Roman power. Topics include taxation and tribute, patrimonial lordship and the notion of Universal Empire, cosmopolitan high-culture as well as trade and economy. His most recent book was published this October 2025 by Cambridge University Press, The Roman Empire and World History. The book traces surprising cultural connections and societal similarities between Rome and the other vast empires of Afro-Eurasia. Whether we look at war-making, slavery, empire formation, literary culture or intercontinental trade and rebellion, Rome is best approached in its Afro-Eurasian context.

Register here: https://bit.ly/482qSZt

Paper Link: https://uchicago.app.box.com/s/fgcov3c2g1gdk2f2v1cphazo8t7dmwfl

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251691-institutions-workshop

 

February 18, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: SSD Tea Room #201 1126 East 59th Street

Speaker: Hye Young You

Title: Lobbying and Legislative Representation

Hye Young You holds a joint appointment in the Department of Politics and the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. Her primary research focuses on how interest groups influence democratic representation in the United States. By focusing on the role of interest group lobbying in American politics, her research examines the specific mechanisms and strategies that interest groups use to lobby and sheds light on groups that play a crucial role, but have been understudied, in policymaking. She also studies how politicians are informed and how interest groups can control the provision of information to policymakers. In addition to her core research agenda on lobbying, she is interested in federalism and local political economy, focusing on how local government finances affect the provision of local public goods and intergovernmental relations. Her research has appeared in the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, and other outlets. Professor You’s work has been recognized by five discipline-wide Best Paper awards from the American Political Science Association. Hye Young You received her B.A. at Seoul National University in South Korea, her M.A. at The University of Chicago, and her PhD at Harvard University.

Register here: https://bit.ly/3LTu4OC

Paper Link: coming soon

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251692-institutions-workshop

 

March 4, 2026

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: Neubauer Center The Forum 5701 S Woodlawn Ave

Speaker: Elizabeth Chatterjee

Title: Democracy and Depletion: Electricity in India’s Green Revolution

Elizabeth Chatterjee is a historian of energy and the environment, with a focus on India from 1900 to the present. Her research explores how non-Western energy histories disrupt conventional understandings of capitalist development and the social dynamics of climate change. Chatterjee’s first book manuscript, Electric Democracy: An Energy History of India from Colonialism to Climate Change (under contract with the University of Chicago Press), traces the flows of electricity to provide an energy-centered history of India’s transforming political economy since the late colonial period. In so doing, it seeks to trace the very different dynamics underlying the later, Asian-centric phase of the Great Acceleration in human impacts on the planet. In place of the conventional emphasis on North Atlantic industrialists and private multinationals, it locates the postcolonial state and popular pressures for cheap energy at the heart of our contemporary environmental predicament. Chatterjee’s second book-length project will provide a novel perspective on the worldwide environmental and energy crisis of the early 1970s as seen from the oil-importing global South, experimenting with how historians might deploy the multisystemic lens of Earth System Science as a methodological approach. She is exploring the links between this crisis and India’s turn to both authoritarianism and fossil fuels during this decade. At the same time, she continues to work on a wide variety of other topics in energy history, including the “infrastructural turn” in environmental history, dams that cause earthquakes, and the twentieth-century history of cow dung energy.

Register here: https://bit.ly/48GejSX

Paper Link: https://uchicago.app.box.com/s/nzmsp3722qfk3hewo9pfyynmeug9hunh

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251694-institutions-workshop

October 8, 2025

4:30 - 7:00pm CT 

Location: Social Sciences Division Tea Room, SSRB 201, 1126 E. 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637

The Cost of State Building: Evidence from Germany

Speaker: Leander Heldring, Northwestern University

Leander Heldring joined Kellogg in 2020 after receiving his PhD in economics from the University of Oxford. His research interests are in economic development, political economy and economic history, with a particular focus on the role of government in facilitating or stifling innovation, entrepreneurship and growth.

Register here: https://uchicagosocialsciencesdivision.wufoo.com/forms/p745b211ru0mgf/

Paper Link: https://uchicago.box.com/s/j08cg7l0fv927npv3lznlczuzn41jjtp (please do not circulate beyond workshop)

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251683-institutions-workshop-and-kickoff-reception

Please note - Francesco Guala is no longer speaking on October 8 - his talk is being rescheduled for a later date.

 

October 22, 2025

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: Neubauer Collegium, 5701 S Woodlawn Ave, Chicago, IL 60637

Constructing a colonial state: The land rights debate in 18th-century Bengal

Speaker: Tirthankar Roy, Professor of Economic History, at the London School of Economics

Abstract

“The principle on which [Akbar, Mughal Emperor] secured his conquest was [to show regard] to the right of the Zemindars, the ancient proprietors of the soil,” said Philip Francis in 1777. Disagreeing radically, his rival Warren Hastings said, “much the greatest part of the Zemindars .. are incapable of judging or acting for themselves, being either minors, or men of weak understandings, or absolute idiots.”

Two colonial administrators in charge of building a European-ruled state in India made these comments about a magnate in the countryside. Their debate reveals the (possibly) universal dilemma of a colonial state project: limited trust in indigenous institutions and limited power to supersede these. How was the problem solved so that a strong empire could grow?

Speaker Biography

I teach South Asia and Global History at the LSE and am the author of Monsoon Economies: India’s History in a Changing Climate, besides other books and articles. My work on economic history tries to answer these questions. Is there a long-term pattern in Indian capitalism? Does history help us understand how capitalism in India works today? How do climatic conditions shape economic change in the long run? 

My recent publications include Law and the Economy in Colonial India (with Anand V. Swamy, University of Chicago Press, 2016). The book discusses the diverse influences that shaped British Indian law and shows why it delivered rather poor value to the users. A sequel, Law and the Economy in a Young Democracy (with Anand V. Swamy, University of Chicago Press, 2022) studies the historical roots of modern Indian laws and the persistence of a colonial legacy. Currently in press, Water and Development: The Troubled Economic History of the Arid Tropics (Oxford University Press) explores the idea that the economic emergence of societies in arid and semi-arid tropical regions depended on their ability to extract and recycle water and, in turn, on manipulating the environment in certain ways. The process has been politically tense and has tested federal democracies. 

Register here: bit.ly/4nFknAF

Paper Link: https://uchicago.box.com/s/luiucnqcmfoytmbq8idy6pyo6pr0rgad (please do not circulate beyond workshop)

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251684-institutions-workshop-with-tirthankar-roy

 

November 12, 2025

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: SSD Tea Room, SSRB 201, 1126 E. 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637

Explaining Democratic Erosion

Speaker: Sue Stokes, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago

Speaker Biography

Susan Stokes is the Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor and Director of the Chicago Center on Democracy. Her research and teaching interests include democratic theory and how democracy functions in developing societies, distributive politics, and comparative political behavior. Her single and co-authored books include Mandates and Democracy: Neoliberalism by Surprise in Latin America (2001), Brokers, Voters, and Clientelism: The Puzzle of Distributive Politics (2013), and Why Bother? Rethinking Participation in Elections and Protests (2019). She is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 

Register here: bit.ly/4gFbQeU

Paper Link: https://uchicago.app.box.com/s/yz92c6trsu67ids3wv2bssklez3b173o

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251685-institutions-workshop-with-susan-stokes

 

November 19, 2025

4:30 - 6:30pm CT 

Location: SSD Tea Room, SSRB 201, 1126 E. 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637

South Asian origins of American Independence: Political Economy and Imperial Civil War. 

Speaker: Steve Pincus 

I am a historian of Britain and its Empire, of comparative revolutions, comparative empires, and of northern Europe more broadly. I am both a deeply committed archival historian and a scholar who believes profoundly that historians should engage with the social sciences. 

Register here: bit.ly/3W4Blg4

Paper Link: https://uchicago.app.box.com/s/n591b59p7ih72oh0j08pb57gwg5t3ck4

Event Listing: https://events.uchicago.edu/event/251686-institutions-workshop