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Finnish Conference for Historical Research, University of Jyväskylä, 21-23 October 2010 For further information about conference´s whole program, please visit Conference website. Program, where our project participates: Friday 22 October 10.00 - 12.00 MaB 218 (outside the conference proper, Mattilanniemi Campus) Session 1: General Parliamentary History (Chair: Lecturer Satu Matikainen, Jyväskylä) Kari Palonen (Jyväskylä), The Fair Play with Parliamentary Times: A Rhetorical History of the Concept of Parliamentarism Onni Pekonen (Jyväskylä), The Speaker in the Eraly Procedural Debates of the Eduskunta - the Speaker as a Representative of the Assembly and the Referee of the Parliamentary Debate Pasi Ihalainen (Jyväskylä), The Spring of 1919: Alternative Visions of Future Politics in Swedish and Finnish Constitutional Debates in Comparative and Transnational Perspectives Ratih D. Adiputri (Jyväskylä), The Dutch Colonial Policy in Indonesia Anna Kronlund (Jyväskylä), Parliamentarism and the United States: A brief overview of the ongoing debates. Friday 22 October 14.00 - 16.00 H302 Session 2: British Parliamentary History (Chair: Pasi Ihalainen, Jyväskylä) Taru Haapala (Jyväskylä), Union Societes and the changing rhetoric in the nineteenth-century House of Commons: phenomena of a parliamentary culture Jonas Harvard (Mittuniversitetet/Södertörn), And the Press says? Media References in British Parliamentary Discourse Laura-Mari Manninen (Jyväskylä), Concepts of "Citizen" and "Citizenship" in British Parliamentary Debates on Women' Suffrage in 1910-1912 Satu Matikainen (Jyväskylä), Parliament and Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century: Methodological Remarks Matti Roitto (Jyväskylä), The Atomic Question in the British Parliament, 1945-1946 Teemu Häkkinen (Jyväskylä), THe House of Commons, the role of the British Parliament and the Gulf Crisis in 1990-1991 Saturday 23 October at 9.00 - 10.00 H320 Keynote lecture (Chair: Professor Pasi Ihalainen, Jyväskylä) Director Dr Paul Seaward (History of Parliament, London), The Idea of Parliament in British Political Culture, Bolingbroke to Brown |
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