There are lots of exciting events happening within the Law School. Plus there are many other University and external events which may be of interest. We have therefore collated them all into one central calendar to help you choose which you would like to attend.


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Wed 29 Jan, '25
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Creating Greater Health Equity Using an Intersectional Lens in Health Law and Ethics
R0.14

Dr Germain’s lecture will examine how legal and ethical frameworks can be leveraged to address health inequalities affecting marginalised groups in the UK. Drawing on her ongoing research, she will argue that intersectionality must be used as a critical lens to create greater equity in health.

Wed 29 Jan, '25
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WLS Public Lecture: Flirting with Fascism: The Thin White Duke, Art and Ethical Limits
S0.21

Speaker: Professor Alex Sharpe, University of Warwick

This audio-visual lecture considers the relationship between the aesthetic evaluation of art and ethics. To do so, it draws on Bowie’s 1976 Isolar World tour, through which, as the Thin White Duke, Bowie performed his brilliant Station to Station album. Through this artwork (the performance, the music, the stagecraft), Bowie conjured up Nuremberg. He did so in order to explore in a more intense way a theme that had long interested him, the relationship between leader (star) and followers (audience), especially those moments when the latter give themselves over to the former, to power. This Bowie provides our focus for two reasons. First, during his Thin White Duke period, Rock Against Racism accused Bowie of flirting with fascism, and second, the music he produced, its artistic presentation and the sublime affect it had on his audience, make this period of Bowie’s creative output stand out as exceptional. In other words, some of Bowie’s greatest work drew on national socialism, or at least, its theatricality and other artistic props. That is, Bowie adopted a fascist icon character and built his 1976 world tour, at least in part, around national socialist stagecraft, the implications of which the lecture will explore.

This is an in-person event. It will be followed by a Q&A and drinks reception.

Thu 30 Jan, '25
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WLS Public Lecture: Getting Justice for women in a legal system designed by men
OC0.02

Harriet Wistrich, solicitor and director of Centre for Women’s Justice, and author of ‘Sister in Law’ will talk about some of the landmark legal cases she has fought aimed at getting justice for women failed by the state and challenging discrimination inherent in the criminal justice system. Her talk will feature discussions of:

  • the battles for justice by women who have killed violent partners, including acting for Emma Humphreys and Sally Challen
  • the story of the eight women, deceived into sexual relationships by undercover police officers, who sought to hold the police accountable
  • the battles by two survivors of rape by the notorious taxi driver John Worboys, to hold the police accountable for their failures to investigate him and their later judicial review challenge of the parole board’s decision to release him
  • the work of Centre for Women’s Justice to hold the state accountable and bring about lasting change for women subject to male violence.

Register to attend!

Wed 5 Mar, '25
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WLS Public Lecture: My Death Waits: David Bowie and Mortality
S0.20

Speaker: Professor Alex Sharpe, University of Warwick

This audio-visual lecture will consider the biggest of themes, death. More particularly, it will consider three ways of ‘being with death’ that are apparent in the life and work of the late David Bowie (religious transcendence, existential defiance, and acceptance). It draws, in particular, on the philosophy of Simon Critchley, Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin Heidegger and Tibetan Buddhism to explore these themes in Bowie’s work. Starting from Critchley’s premise that we should face down death, neither succumbing to escapism (oblivion) nor to the temptations of an afterlife (redemption), it argues, following Nietzsche, that we must, in order to avoid nihilism, make meaning in the world, and following Heidegger, that we must do so with others.

Freedom is understood as only taking shape once the inevitability of death is faced, and ideally when we live our life in readiness for it with others. David Bowie’s work can be viewed as a meditation on death. Importantly, he helped shape a meaningful experience of death, including his own, through a lifelong and open dialogue with fans about questions of alienation, anxiety, fear and mortality.

This is an in-person event. It will be followed by a Q&A and drinks reception.

Please register to attend!

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