Call for Papers
Invisible Finance: Women and Money in History
(Middle Ages to the 20th Century)
International Conference
11–12 September 2026, Milan
University of Milan,
Facoltà di Scienze politiche. Economiche e sociali, Sala Lauree
Via Conservatorio 7, Milan
Despite increased female participation in economic education and greater access to financial markets, in the contemporary financial system women remain underrepresented in top positions, decision-making processes, and among major capital operators. This imbalance is not a recent phenomenon, but the continuation of long-term historical dynamics rooted in cultural, legal, and economic structures that have marginalized women in the financial sphere. The international conference Invisible Finance: Women and Money in History aims to examine the actual roles played by women in financial systems from the Middle Ages to the Twentieth Century. The conference lies at the crossroads between the fields of economic and financial history, gender history, legal history, and related disciplines.
Confined to the margins of high finance, large-scale trade, and public institutions, which have historically been dominated by male actors, women nevertheless acted as key figures within “informal” and shadow credit systems. In recent decades, historiography has highlighted women’s participation, particularly in more advanced economies, in stock markets and joint-stock companies, such as the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the British East India Company (EIC). Despite these historiographical advances, significant chronological and geographical gaps remain in our understanding of how women engaged with money, credit, and financial institutions.
The conference seeks to further explore women’s participation in the various spheres of finance and credit, paying particular attention to the roles they occupied within these networks; their access to information, financial instruments, and expertise; the resources available to them and the ways in which these were used; and the legal contexts within which such practices took place.
The conference welcomes contributions addressing, though not limited to, the following themes:
The conference aims to:
The conference will be conducted in English.
Scholars at any stage in their career are invited to submit a proposal in the form of an extended abstract (up to 350 words).
Proposals must be submitted by 15 May 2026. Applicants will be notified of the outcome of the selection process by 15 June 2026.
Please send a copy of your proposal to all of the following:
Marcella Lorenzini
University of Milan
Helen Paul
University of Southampton
H.J.Paul@soton.ac.uk
Matteo Pompermaier
University of Brescia
Please include:
The conference will be conducted in person. Further details regarding the final programme will be communicated to those whose papers are accepted.
iDEE Association offers four participation grants for non-tenured researchers (PhD candidates, research fellows, and postdoctoral scholars). The grants can be applied to travel, food, and lodging costs to a maximum of €300.
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Under the patronage of ARiSE – Italian Association for research in Economic History