FINAL PROGRAMME - BIEN CONGRESS 2008

 

Theme: Inequality and Development in a Globalised Economy -

The Basic Income Option

 

All papers supplied to the organising committee have been uploaded and can be accessed by clicking here.

  

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

 

 

9.15 -17.00

 

IRELAND DAY CONFERENCE

The Ireland day conference has been organised by CORI Justice in association with the Congress 2008 Organising Committee and BIEN Ireland. It is also being held at UCD and is open to all participants at a discounted rate – see details on the registration section of this website.

 

BIEN CONFERENCE REGISTRATION (open throughout the day)

 

 

  

 

 

9.15 -17.00

 

IRELAND DAY CONFERENCE

'MAKING CHOICES - CHOOSING FUTURES'

  

Part One: Making Choices - Choosing Futures

             - An economist’s perspective

            Speaker: George Lee, Economics Editor, RTE

            - A trade union perspective

            Speaker: David Begg, 

  General Secretary, Irish Congress of Trade Unions

             - A business perspective

            Speaker: Danny McCoy

            Director, Irish Business and Employers Confederation

             - A community and voluntary perspective

            Speakers: Seán Healy and Brigid Reynolds

            Directors, CORI Justice

 

Part Two: Securing an Adequate Income

             - What is an appropriate level of minimum income?

            Speaker: Micheál L Collins

            Department of Economics, Trinity College Dublin

             - The Case for a Universal State Pension: Lessons from New

               Zealand for Ireland's Green Paper on Pensions

            Speaker: Gerry Hughes

            Pensions Policy Research Group, Trinity College Dublin

             - Basic Income in Ireland: surveying three decades

            Speaker: Seán Ward

            Public sector analyst

  

Meeting BIEN Ireland

Chairperson: John Baker

  

 

  

  

Friday, June 20th, 2008

 

 

8.30 onwards

 

CONFERENCE REGISTRATION

 

 

 

 

 

 

9.30 -11.00

 

 

 

OPENING PLENARY

 

Theme: Inequality and Development in a Globalised Economy - WHY Basic Income is a major part of the answer

 

Welcome

 

  1. Peter Townsend (LSE and Bristol University)

 

  1. Carole Pateman (UCLA and Cardiff University)

 

  1. Pablo Yanes (Social Development Secretariat of the Government of Mexico City)

 

 

  

 

11.00 –11.30

 

 

COFFEE/TEA

 

 

 

 

11.30 –13.00

 

PARALLEL SESSION 1

 

 

1a. Pensions and Basic Income

(i) Armando Barrientos (University of Manchester) Role of non-contributory pensions as a form of securing a basic income in developing countries

(ii) John Macnicol (London School of Economics) The politics of non-contributory pensions

(iii) Brian Nolan (University College Dublin) Providing Basic Income for Older Persons: What can be Learned from the Performance of the Irish Pension System?

 

1b. Global and Regional Issues

(i) Ian Gareth Orton (La Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) Eliminating Child Labour: The Promise of Unconditional Cash Transfers 

(ii) Heiner Michel (University of  Frankfurt) Is a Global Basic Income a Remedy for Poverty?

 

1c. Gender and Care I: Should Feminists Embrace Basic Income? (Roundtable - open to all)

(i) John Baker (University College Dublin, Ireland)

(ii) Julieta Elgarte (Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina)

(iii) Anca Gheaus (Université Catholique de Lille, France)

(iv) Almaz Zelleke (The New School, New York, USA)

(v) Orla O’Connor (National Women’s Council of Ireland)

(vi) Cathleen O'Neill (Kilbarrack Community Development, Dublin, Ireland)

 

1d. An Institutional Perspective on Basic Income I

(i) Louise Haagh (University of York) Basic Income, Labour Market and Occupational Freedom

(ii) Bill Jordan (University of Plymouth) Basic Income and Social Value

(iii) Rubén M. Lo Vuolo (Ciepp) Labour markets informality and welfare regimes in Latin America. Why Basic Income is better

 

1e. Social Justice and the Meaning of Life

(i) Michèle Billoré  (France) Noospheric Ethical/Ecological Constitution for Mankind

(ii) Manuel Franzmann (Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität) An Unconditional Basic Income from the Perspective of the Sociology of Religion

(iii) Johannes Hanel (Germany) Basic Income and Social Jusitce 

 

 

13.00 –14.00

 

 

LUNCH

 

 

 

14.00 –15.30

 

PARALLEL SESSION 2

 

 

2a. Routes to Basic Income I

(i) Francisco Jose Martinez Martinez (Universidad Nacional de Distancia, Madrid) Debate on Basic Income in the Spanish Parliament

(ii) Al Sheahan (USBIG) The Rise and Fall of a Basic Income Guarantee Bill in the U.S. Congress

(iii) Daniel Raventós (University of Barcelona) and Julie Wark How to Implement Universal Human Rights: the Monterrey Declaration

 

2b. Case Studies – Countries

(i) John Tomlinson (Queensland University of Technology) Timor Leste: Minimum Wages, Job Guarantees, Social Welfare Payments or Basic Income?

(ii) Sergio Luiz de Moraes Pinto (São Paulo Municipality Government) Basic Income and Stakeholder Grants: Jointly Breaking the Long History of Endemic Poverty and Economic Inequality in Brazil

 

2c. Gender and Care II: Is Basic Income Good for Women?

(i) Áine Uí Ghiollagáin (la Fédération Européenne des Femmes Actives au Foyer) Basic income and caring: Why aren’t all caregivers interested in basic income?

(ii) Mary Murphy (NUI, Maynooth) and Orla O’Connor (National Women’s Council of Ireland) Is basic income the answer to the feminist demand to individualise Irish social security?

(iii) Margot Young (University of British Columbia) Women, Work and Basic Income

 

2d. An Institutional Perspective on Basic Income II

(i) Lindsay Stirton (University of Manchester) Rethinking Universal Welfare and Administration

(ii) Jurgen De Wispelaere (Trinity College Dublin/University of Oxford) and José A. Noguera (Autonomous University of Barcelona) The Political Feasibility of Basic Income: Towards an Analytical Framework

 

2e. Theoretical Perspectives on Basic Income

(i) Ian Gareth Orton (La Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa)  Why we Ought to Listen to Zygmunt Bauman.

(ii) Andrea Fumagalli (University of Pavia) and Stefano Lucarelli (University of Bergamo) Basic Income and Counter-power in Cognitive Capitalism

 

 

15.30 – 16.00

 

COFFEE/TEA

 

  

 

 

 

16.00 – 17.30

 

 

 

PLENARY

 

Theme: HOW can a Basic Income system be operationalised and achieved (politically, institutionally and technically)?

 

  1. Moving to Basic Income - A left-wing political perspective

Speaker: Katja Kipping - Member of German Parliament

               (The Left Party)

 

  1. Moving to Basic Income - A right-wing political perspective

Speaker: Hugh D. Segal, - Senator in the Canadian Parliament  

               (Conservative Party)

 

  1. Addressing the Institutional and Technical Challenges

Speaker: Charles M.A. Clark (St John’s University, New York)

 

 

 

18.30

 

 

OFFICIAL EVENT – Official event hosted by Mr John Gormley T.D. , Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government, on behalf of the Irish Government at his offices: Customs House, Dublin City Centre.

    Bus Transport from congress venue provided, departure 17.45

    (Click here for Map of Location)

  

  

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

 

 

9.30 – 11.00

 

PARALLEL SESSION 3

 

 

3a. Routes to Basic Income II

(i) Richard Lawson (Green Party England and Wales) Introducing Basic Income by the Back Door in a Recession

(ii) Gösta Melander (Swedish Senior Party) How a basic income may be achieved politically

(iii) Marc Meuris (Belgium) A Basic Income Allowance as a solution for the social unification of the EU

 

3b. The Bolsa Familia in Brazil I

(i) Maria Ozanira da Silva e Silva (Universidade Federal do Maranhão, Brazil) The Bolsa Família Program and the Reduction of Poverty and Inequality in Brazil

(ii) Clóvis Roberto  Zimmermann (Universidade Estadual de Montes Claros) The Citizenship Principle in Income Transfer Programs in Brazil

 

3c. Basic Income and the Environment

(i) Borja Barragué (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) Pigovian Taxes, Cap-and-Trade System, or Environmental Adders? A Green Financial Model for a Basic Income

(ii) Celia Kerstenetzky (Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro) and Lionello Punzo (Università di Siena)  Sustainable tourism: basic income for poor communities

(iii) Erik Christensen (Aalborg University, Denmark) A Global Ecological Argument for a Basic Income

 

3d. Freedom and Reciprocity I: Basic Income and the Institutions of a Property-Owning Democracy

(i) Simon Birnbaum (University of Stockholm) Freedom, Reciprocity and the Ethos of Work

(ii) David Casassas (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)  Freedom as Personal Independence: From the Claim for Reciprocity to the Struggle for Equity Among Peers

(iii) François Hudon (Université Catholique de Louvain) Basic Income and Property-Owning Democracy: Toward a Free and Equal Society

  

3e. Basic Income and Guaranteed Income in Canada

(i) Pat Evans (Carleton University, Ottawa) Challenging Income (In)security: Women and Precarious Employment

(ii) Luann Good Gingrich (York University, Ontario) Double jeopardy, social exclusion, and lone mothers in the market-state social field

(iii) Robert Arnold and Rob Rainer (National Anti-Poverty Organisation, Canada) Working Towards Guaranteed Adequate Income in Canada: the NAPO Initiative

(iv) James Mulvale (University of Regina, Canada) The Debate on Basic Income / Guaranteed Adequate Income in Canada: Perils and Possibilities

 

 

11.00 – 11.30

 

 

COFFEE/TEA

 

 

 

11.30 – 12.15

 

CONFERENCE ADDRESS

 

Peter Power T.D., Minister for Overseas Aid, Department of Foreign Affairs, Ireland.

Rosani Cunha, National Secretary of Citizen's Income, Ministry of Social Development and Fight Against Hunger, Brazil.

Dr Jean Swanson-Jacobs, Deputy Minister for Social Development, Republic of South Africa

 

 

 

12.15 – 13.45

 

PARALLEL SESSION 4

 

 

4a. Funding Basic Income I

(i) Francisco Javier Alonso Madrigal and José Luis Rey Pérez (University Pontificia Comillas of Madrid) What Type of Taxes Demands Basic Income?

(ii) Annie Miller (Citizens Income UK) Designing and Costing Simple Basic Income Schemes

 

4b. The Bolsa Familia in Brazil II: the Transition from BF to Basic Income

(i) Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy (Brazilian Federal Senate) The Transition from the Bolsa Família Program to the Citizen’s Basic Income in Brazil

(ii) Carolina Raquel D. Mello Justo (Universidade Estadual de Campinas) Basic Income X Minimum Income:How the Political-Ideological Dispute has advanced in Brazilian Concrete Programs

  

4c. The Debate in Europe

(i) Gianluca Busilacchi (University of Camerino, Italy) The different regimes of minimum income policies in the enlarged Europe

(ii) Sascha Liebermann (UBI, Germany) The German experience of bringing Basic Income into the National Debate

(iii) Eric Patry (University of St. Gallen, Switzerland) The Basic Income Debate in Switzerland: Experiences and Perspectives

(iv) Markku Ikkala (Jyväskylä University, Finland)  Basic Income Discussion in Finland

 

4d. Freedom and Reciprocity II: The Case for Basic Income

(i) Karl Widerquist (University of Reading) Status Freedom

(ii) Almaz Zelleke (New School, New York) Reconsidering Independence: Foundations of a Feminist Theory of Distributive Justice

(iii) David Casassas (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona) and  Daniel Raventós (Universitat de Barcelona)  Property and Freedom: Theses on the Republican Case for Basic Income

 

4e. Economic Security in Canada

(i) Ernie Lightman (University of Toronto)  Towards Economic Security for New Immigrants: Beyond Workfare

(ii) Anita Vaillancourt (University of Northern British Columbia/University of Toronto) More than a Northern Living Allowance: Considerations and Strategies for Designing and Implementing Basic Income in Rural Northern Contexts

(iii) William Clegg (National Anti-Poverty Organisation, Canada)  Basic Income-Greater Freedom of Choice Through Greater Economic Security of the Person in a Globalized Economy

 

 

13.45 – 14.45

 

LUNCH

 

  

 

14.00 – 14.30

 

Video Presentation by Eduardo Suplicy (Brazilian Federal Senator)

(All Welcome - running during lunch time in the main conference hall - Room a)

 

 

  

 

14.45 – 16.15

 

PARALLEL SESSION 5

 

 

5a. Funding Basic Income II

(i) Al Sheahen (USBIG) How the U.S. Can Afford a Poverty-Level Basic Income Guarantee

(ii) Jörg Drescher (Projekt Jovialismus) Economic view of model proposals for funding a basic income on the basis of the value creation of goods and services

(iii) Paul Segal (University of Oxford) The Resource Dividend: How to (Nearly) Eliminate Global Poverty using Resource Rents

5b. Approaches to Costing a Basic Income for Ireland (Roundtable - open to all)

(i) Micheál L Collins (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland)

(ii) Sean Healy (CORI Justice, Ireland)

(iii) Brigid Reynolds (CORI Justice, Ireland)

(iv) Sean Ward (Public Sector Analyst, Ireland)

(v) Charles M.A. Clark (St John’s University, New York)

  

5c. Making Basic Income Happen

(i) Wim Van Lancker (University of Antwerp)   Basic income, an alternative for neo-liberal pension reforms?

(ii) Steven Shafarman (Citizens Policies Institutes, USA) Basic Income and the 2008 Campaign in the United States

  

5d. Global Justice

(i) Michael W. Howard (University of Maine) Cosmopolitanism, Trade and Gloabl (or Regional) Transfers

(ii) Celia Kerstenetzky (Universidade Federal Fluminense) and Gary Dymski (University of California) Global Basic Income and Financial Globalisation

(iii) Myron J. Frankman (McGill University) Justice, Sustainability and Progressive Taxation and Redistribution: The Case for a World-Wide Basic Income

 

5e. Basic Income in Changing Contexts

(i) Maria Oleynik (Ireland) Basic Income in a Changing Ireland

(iii) Alexander Varshavsky (Russian Academy of Sciences) Basic income and increasing income inequality in Russia

(iii) Emer O Siochru (Feasta, Ireland) Basic Income and Environmental Challenges

 

 

16.15 – 16.45

 

 

COFFEE/TEA

 

 

 

 

 

 

16.45 – 18.00

 

 

 

CLOSING PLENARY

 

Theme: Basic Income: The Way Forward

 

A roundtable with a number of short presentations from people reflecting on the main themes of the Congress and what they have heard followed by an open forum.  The speakers:

 

1.  The Way Forward - the political dimension

Speaker: Richard Caputo (Yeshiva University, New York)

  

2.  Report from Developing World strand

Speaker: Lorna Gold (Programme Leader, Torcaire)

  

3.  What's new? What's next?

Speaker: Philippe Van Parijs (Catholic University of Louvain and Harvard University)

  

4. "Reviving Egalitarianism in Full Freedom: Why Basic Income will       define progressive politics"

Speaker: Guy Standing (University of Bath and Monash University)

 

Open Forum

 

Thanks and Farewell

 

 

18.30 - 20.00

 

 

BIEN General Assembly – elections etc.

Montrose Hotel (across the road from the congress venue)  

 

 

 

19.00

 

INFORMAL SOCIAL EVENT - Montrose Hotel (across the road from the congress venue)

 

 

© 2008 BIEN Ireland