Coord.: Amélia POLÓNIA (Universidade do Porto), Ana PRATA (Universidade Nova de Lisboa), André FERNANDES (Universidade Nova de Lisboa), João FIGUEIRA DE SOUSA (Universidade Nova de Lisboa), Maria Fernanda ROLLO (Universidade Nova de Lisboa), Marta GARCÍA GARRALÓN (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia)
Org.: Universidade Nova de Lisboa, “La Gobernanza de los puertos Atlánticos. Siglos XIV-XXI” International Research Group, École des hautes études hispaniques et ibériques (Casa de Velázquez)
Coll.: Porto de Lisboa, Fundação Ciência e Tecnologia
Venue location:
Gare Marítima Rocha Conde d'Óbidos
Port of Lisbon
Cais da Rocha, Alcântara
Lisbon - Portugal
Presentation
Ports and port cities have stood out over time as important categories of historical analysis. The study of port systems and the internal dynamics of European ports, side by side with navigation circuits and international commerce has generated a vast literature.
In the contexts of the first and the second globalization processes it is essential to develop crossing studies to place ports within globally articulated networks. The relationships between European, African and American Atlantic seaports are fundamental to the understanding of overall dynamics related to the economy, population, policy and culture.
A wide European historiography confirms the importance of the seaport spaces and dynamics. This tends to be reinforced with innovative contributions, focused for the last decades upon port systems analysis. They stress the existence of intercontinental traffic networks that unite ports in an active trade system. This point of view based on a theoretical and functional conception of the existence of hierarchies and seaport complementarities
– defined and redefined in articulations with particular conjunctures – has resulted in renowned historiographical productions. Inter-port communications axes, the portuary networks and the interactions between ports had also been taken into account. This approach is up to be applied to analyses that go from medieval period to today’s containerization.
Ports themselves are seen as economic and logistic enterprises that require the mobilization of industries and economic activities. Their impact reaches far beyond the port cities and the surrounding areas. Through institutionalized policies and regulated and formal activities, but also through informal networks and activities, seaports become the epicenter of leading economic dynamics: industry, commerce, services, finances, naval logistics, and maritime transport, are just some of the areas that boost research around port areas.
Because ports are platforms of articulation with extended hinterlands and forelands and because their economy requires manpower and labor force, it is important that this strictly economical dimension should be linked with the agents and with the human networks that sustained them. Transcontinental
emigration circuits, emigrants transportation, slave trade and forced labor, legal and illegal migrations, as well as migration policies and their local implementation are also topics that will be debated in this meeting, allowing us to connect the economic dynamism of seaports with its social and political agents.
Program
8th SEPTEMBER 2014
9h-10h
Reception & Registration
Opening Remarks from the Scientific Committee
10h-13h
EUROPEAN PORTS 1
Gérard LE BOUEDEC
Université de Bretagne-Sud
Les Trajectoires Portuaires en Bretagne du XVéme au XXéme siécle
Guy SAUPIN
Université de Nantes
L’impact de la proto-mondialisation sur la hiérarchie portuaire. Une comparaison entre l’Espagne la France et le Royaume-Uni de Grande Bretagne, vers 1600 – vers 1850
Bernard MICHON
Université de Nantes
Les « Aires Portuaires » françaises au XVIIIéme siècle, approche comparative
Discussion
EUROPEAN PORTS 2
Michael LIMBERGER
Universiteit Gent
From Calicut to Cracovia. Trade and Trading Networks in Antwerp. Around 1500
Luis María BILBAO
and Ramón LANZA GARCIA
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Bilbao en el comércio español de mediados del siglo XVI
Juan GELABERT
Universidad de Cantabria
Inglaterra, las Provincias Unidas y los mercados ibéricos (1585-1609)
Discussion
15h-17h30
EUROPEAN PORTS 3
Ofelia REY CASTELAO
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
La superposición Jurisdicional en los puertos de Galícia en el tránsito de la Edad Moderna a la Contemporánea
Amândio BARROS
Universidade do Porto
A fortuna de um porto atlântico: Porto, Brasil e as Américas no século XVI
EUROPEAN PORTS 4
Sara PINTO
Universidade do Porto
Servir e conectar espaços económicos: o lugar dos portos numa rede de negócios no século XVI
António DE ABREU XAVIER
Universidad Central de Venezuela
O 101: O porto de Lisboa aberto à América. 1827
Discussion
9th SEPTEMBER 2014
10h-13h
ISLAND PORTS
José Damião RODRIGUES
Universidade dos Açores
Ponta Delgada (São Miguel, Açores): cidade portuária e agrotown
Catarina GARCIA
Universidade dos Açores
Angra e Funchal, dois portos atlânticos no contexto do império marítimo português. Análise comparativa sobre dinâmicas e estruturas
Sérgio REZENDES
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Dinâmicas históricas no centro geo-estratégico do Atlântico-Norte: a defesa dos portos açorianos
Discussion
BRAZILIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN PORTS 1
Thiago MANTUANO
and Cézar HONORATO
Universidade Federal Fluminense (Brasil)
A Economia da Região Portuária do Rio de Janeiro (1870-1900)
Laila BRICHTA
Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz
O Porto Fluvial de Ilhéus entre 1920 e 1942: assoreamento, economia e política
Flávio GONÇALVES DOS SANTOS
Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz
Baía do Pontal - Ilhéus: o porto, a legislação e a administração - 1911/1942
Discussion
15h-18h30
BRAZILIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN PORTS 2
Ângela DOMINGUES
Instituto de Investigação Científica Tropical
Contactos nas periferias imperiais. Salvador na Literatura de viagens de setecentos
Catalina BANKO
Universidad Central de Venezuela
La Dinâmica del comércio exterior Venezolano (siglo XIX)
Discussion
BRAZILIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN PORTS 3
Nora SIEGRIST
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET, Buenos Aires)
Puertos, barcos y sus conexiones. Consanguinidad y parentesco político en el ámbito de sus propietarios. Cádiz-Buenos Aires y el litoral mesopotámico: siglos XVIII-XIX
Miguel Ángel DE MARCO
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET, Buenos Aires)
La "Ciudad Puerto" como fundamento identitario de los actores del desarrollo institucional y económico regional frente las grandes crisis internacionales. El caso de Rosario (Argentina)
Discussion
Plenary Session La Governanza de los Puertos Atlanticos
10th SEPTEMBER 2014
10h-13h
MIGRATIONS AND PORT LABOUR
Torsten FEYS
Universiteit Gent
The Dual Role of Port Cities as Hubs for Global Migration and Bastons of Migration Control. New York versus San Francisco. 1870s-1920s
Yvette SANTOS
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Portos e emigração transatlântica: a gestão adminstrativa das saídas pela Junta Nacional de Emigração no pós-II Guerra Mundial
Daniel CASTILLO HIDALGO
and Miguel SUÁREZ BOSA
Universidad de las Palmas de Gran Canarias
The Evolution of Port Labour in Las Palmas during the "Container Age", 1960-2007
Discussion
PORT POLICIES AND STRATEGIES
Ana PRATA
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Quanto custaram os portos portugueses? O investimento público no sector portuário entre 1910 e 1930
António Carlos ALMEIDA
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
O porto de Sines: da ideia abstracta à exploração do terminal petroleiro
Margarida SCHIAPPA
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
A Plataforma E80 e o programa Marco Polo. Objectivo europeu de introdução da intermodalidade
15h-16h30
PORTS’ NEW ECONOMIC USES AND ROLES
André FERNANDES
and José PICAS DO VALE
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Estratégias de Valorização do Património Portuário: considerações sobre o caso do Porto de Lisboa
Rosana LOPES
Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz
A Carpintaria Naval como um bem cultural de Cajaíba, Camamu – Bahia
Discussion
Closing Remarks from the Scientific Committee