Research Community Events
You can find details of IGSD Events here
Wed 13 Nov, '24- |
Interdisciplinarity in Practice: Methodologies and Perspectives in Contemporary ResearchSustainability is a process of change that is argued to enhance our potential to meet human needs and aspirations, thus underscoring the interconnectedness of societal well-being in fostering a resilient future. As such, it calls for interdisciplinarity in method and approach. Responding to this, we will consider examples from Francesco’s research in contributing to contemporary debates, exploring how no discipline sits outside sustainability. We will close with an informal round table discussion to identify potential points of research synergy across our School (and beyond!). |
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Tue 3 Dec, '24 - Wed 4 Dec, '24All-day |
International Conference on Multidisciplinary Research Bridging Knowledge Gaps for Global Solutions (ICMRBKGGS-24)Copenhagen, DenmarkRuns from Tuesday, December 03 to Wednesday, December 04. Science Society delighted to welcome academicians, students , researchers and industrial professionals to illustrious Conference dated 3rd - 4th Dec 2024 at Copenhagen under the theme Multidisciplinary Research Bridging Knowledge Gaps for Global Solutions The conference is for broad logical discourse, both intra-and interdisciplinary, among Universities, Colleges, Academicians and Department personnel through an assortment of Distinguished addresses, Plenary sessions, Workshops, Symposiums, Oral and Poster introductions, Virtual/Video presentations and Webinars. |
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Wed 4 Dec, '24- |
CCLS Reading Group: The Critique of Coloniality: Eight Essays by Rita SegatoS2.09 and Microsoft TeamsEmail Giselle.Bickley@warwick.ac.uk for meeting link This reading group will discuss Chapter 8 of Segato’s seminal book. |
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Tue 25 Feb, '25- |
Thinking Gender, History and International Law Seminar: Gender and International Criminal Law: History, Victimhood and Transitional JusticeOnlineThis session tackles the promises and pitfalls of the international criminal and transitional justice system in cases of war crimes and/or crimes against humanity from a gender and critical perspective. Starting from the consolidation of gender-based crimes in international law and following on problematising the notion of the ‘woman victim’, the aim of this session is to reveal problematic assumptions about how gender operates in conflict, which are embedded in the very foundations of legal imagination. The session will be of interest for those working on gender in international criminal legal history, but also to those interested in contemporary feminist approaches to law. Speakers: Sir Howard Andrew Clive Morrison, Solange Mouthaan, Loveday Hodson, Charlotte Higgs |
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Mon 17 Mar, '25- |
Thinking Gender, History and International Law Seminar: International Law and the Colour Line: Is Palestine a Feminist Issue?OnlineThis session takes its cue from the understanding that the dismantlement the Zionist settler colonial project in Palestine is, among other things, a project against gender and sexual violence and oppression. From both a historical and contemporary historical lens, the panel tackles the variety of gendered and sexualised abuses that have characterised the experiences of Palestinians from the mandate period to the contemporary genocide in Gaza. Reclaiming the term feminism beyond its middle class, white, western, liberal, and orientalist view on Palestinians, the panel also tackles the importance for Palestinian communities to self-determine the meaning of feminism that works for the conditions of the country, one that is rooted in grassroots resistance to imperialism and settler-colonialism, entailing an understanding that national liberation is incomplete without gender justice. Speakers: Paola Zichi, Christine Schwobel Patel, Michelle Burgis-Kashala and Nahed Samour |