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Anthony Amato is a professor in the Social Science Department at Southwest Minnesota State University. He is interested in many forms of microhistory. Over the years, his scholarship and publications have addressed convergences of economy, environment, and culture.
Steven Parker is a lecturer in the Department for Public Leadership and Social Enterprise at the Open University Business School, UK. He originally trained as a historian where he studied microhistory in Early Modern Europe. After working in local government as a social worker and manager he studied for a doctorate at the School for Policy Studies, Bristol University. Steve specialises in local public management and is interested in how microhistory research and theory can be applied to local governance and policy settings.
Liv Egholm is PhD in History, anthropology, and semiotics and an associate professor at Copenhagen Business School. works from an interdisciplinary approach, bridging organizational, historical, moral, legal, political, and economic domains. Her research spans from notions and practices of “the common good”, the constituting elements of gift-giving practices, philanthropy, and the blurred lines of state, market, and civil society from the mid-19th century till our present day. Furthermore, she is also engaged in theoretical and methodological discussions pushing both microhistories, the relational-processual approach, and the studies of temporalities forward.