George and Georgism: New Directions

May 8, 2026
The Wharton School, Department of Legal Studies and Business Ethics, University of Pennsylvania

3733 Spruce Street
Philadelphia 19104
United States

This will be an accessible event, including organized related activities

View the Call For Papers

Sponsor(s):

  • The Progress and Poverty Institute

Speakers:

West Virginia University
(unaffiliated)

Organisers:

University of Pennsylvania
Davidson College
New York University

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Henry George was arguably the most important American political economist of the nineteenth century. At the time of his death in 1898, his works could be found in hundreds of thousands of middle-class American households, and even mid-sized American cities could boast a range of associations devoted to his ideas, especially including his proposal for a single tax on the value of land. Today, however, his works and ideas are little studied and even less understood. This conference is part of a multi-pronged effort, funded by the Progress and Poverty Institute, to revive research on George and Georgism among political philosophers, political theorists, and scholars in adjacent disciplines.  


The conference will feature Billy Christmas (West Virginia) and Michael Otsuka (Rutgers) as invited speakers alongside three or four presenters chosen through this call. We invite contributions that explore George’s texts (or those of related authors), develop or critique Georgist ideas, or both. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:


Exegesis and analysis of the works of Henry George or related authors (e.g., Herbert Spencer, the American “labour republicans,” J.S. Mill (on political economy), John Francis Bray);


Comparative study of George and related authors, including major figures in nineteenth-century political economy (e.g., Ricardo, James Mill, Marx);


Development or critique of Georgist ideas as potential contributions to contemporary political philosophy or political theory;


Applications (supportive or critical) of Georgist ideas to contemporary economic problems policy questions.

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April 10, 2026, 9:00am EST

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