The Changing Nature of Participation and Solidarity: Voluntary Action, Volunteering, and NGOs in Contemporary History

The Changing Nature of Participation and Solidarity: Voluntary Action, Volunteering, and NGOs in Contemporary History

Veranstalter
Dr. Nicole Kramer, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Historisches Seminar, Lehrstuhl für Neueste Geschichte Priv.-Doz. Dr. Christine G. Krüger, Universität Gießen, Historisches Institut, Neuere Geschichte, SFB/TRR 138 "Dynamiken der Sicherheit"
Veranstaltungsort
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Campus Westend, Seminarhaus, Raum 1.109
Ort
Frankfurt am Main
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
10.09.2015 - 11.09.2015
Website
Von
Nicole Kramer

There is a remarkable difference between German and British historiography of the post-World-War-II period. In Britain (as well as in other English-speaking countries) voluntary action and volunteering history have developed into a lively discussed field of investigation. German historiography, however, has paid little attention to this field until now. Among other things, this was due to the fact that for a long time it was the prevailing conviction that the expansion of the German welfare state has considerably diminished the significance of the voluntary sector or has even rendered it superfluous. Only in the last years, in face of the crisis of the welfare state, this conviction has been undermined. Furthermore, German historical research was mainly focused on social movements and their political actions. In contrast, organisations providing social welfare and dealing with day-today concerns of people in need, were mostly overlooked. While associations and philanthropy is a common scope for historians interested in 19th century, Contemporary History doesn’t pay much attention to it.

It now seems to be an adequate moment to bring together scholars from English and German speaking countries for a critical discussion of approaches to voluntary action history. Doing this, the workshop aims at a debate of historiographical concepts for the study of voluntary action and of volunteering. Furthermore, its target is to strengthen the transnational and comparative perspective for this field of historiography, which is all the more important as many voluntary organizations became increasingly transnational in their outlook and action during the second half of the twentieth century.

The workshop will set its sights on the development, forms and significance of voluntary action and volunteering since 1945. With this approach it sheds light on how the political and social order was negotiated in different national, societal and political contexts. Its main interest is the changing relationship between the voluntary sector and the state. At the same time it will analyse the transformation of concepts of solidarity and participation. A special focus is on voluntary organizations and on volunteers themselves.

One of the targets of the workshop will be to evaluate the role of the voluntary sector in society. Some key questions are: What consequences did World-War II have on the development of voluntary organisations and the voluntary action after 1945? How did the voluntary sector adjust to the expanding welfare state in the following decades? In what respects and to what extend did it change though or in reaction to the new social movements of the sixties and seventies? And how did the crises of the welfare state and of the labour society since the 1970s shift the balance between statutory and voluntary sectors?

Moreover, the workshop aims to yield insights into how the changes in the voluntary sector influenced the lives of individuals: In how far did the transformation of labour society modify conditions for the social or civic commitment of individuals? Did voluntary work open up new ways of participation or could it also set new boundaries? To what extend did voluntary organisations allow questioning social norms, as for example gender roles, family patterns or concepts of normality and otherness? We will discuss in how far voluntary action organisations are sites of social change allowing historians to study transformation processes within society beyond the political and scientific elite.

We are grateful to the Fritz Thyssen Stiftung for the generous support.

Programm

Thursday, 10th September 2015

13.00-13.30 h
Welcome and Introduction (Nicole Kramer and Christine Krüger)

Keynotes: Voluntary action and voluntarism in Contemporary History
Chair: Christoph Cornelißen (Frankfurt a.M.)

13.30-15.00 h
• Nicholas Crowson (Birmingham): Voluntary action history: concepts and state of research

• Melanie Oppenheimer (Adelaide): Gender and voluntary work

15.00-15.30 h coffee break

Session 1: Voluntary bodies as agents of political and social change
Chair: N.N.

15.30-18.45 h
• George Gosling (Warwick): Payment and Philanthropy: Economic Sociology and the History of Voluntary Action in Modern Britain

• Alex Mold (London): Voluntarism and health in post-war Britain

• Matthias Ruoss (Bern): Voluntary action and the origins of the active aging paradigm after WW II

• Nicole Kramer (Frankfurt a.M.): Carers united. Voluntary action and women’s rights in an ageing society

20.00 h Conference dinner

Friday, 11th September 2015

Session 2: Rethinking philanthropy and volunteering
Chair: Verena Steller (Frankfurt a.M.)

9.15-12.00 h
• Christine Krüger (Gießen): “The volunteer upsurge”: mobilizing youths for voluntary work

• Ana Kladnik/Thomas Lindenberger (Potsdam): Traditional Volunteering from State Socialism to Post-Communism: Comparing Voluntary Fire Departments in Central and South Eastern Europe

• Lucy Robinson (Brighton): When George and Elton sang together': AIDS, Community and the Charity Single

12.00 -13.30 h lunch break

Session 3: Transnational and global histories of voluntarism
Chair: Florian M. Schmitz (Frankfurt a.M./Bern)

13.30-16.00 h
• Kate Bradley (London): Global realignments, domestic adjustments: Deindustrialisation and voluntary action in East London and the Medway Towns

• Benjamin Möckel (Köln): Selling Global Solidarity: Volunteers in West German “Third World Shops”

• Freda Wagner (Gießen): Children of the World – Humanitarian Child Sponsorship schemes and transnational solidarity

16.00-16.30 h
Concluding remarks and final discussion

Kontakt

Dr. Nicole Kramer
n.kramer@em.uni-frankfurt.de

Priv.-Doz. Dr. Christine G. Krüger
Christine.Krueger@geschichte.uni-giessen.de