Events
Thursday, June 15, 2023
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Bristol-Warwick Empirical IO workshop & masterclassRuns from Tuesday, June 13 to Thursday, June 15. Dates: Tuesday 13 June - Thursday 15 June 2023
14th June (Workshop)
15th June (Workshop)
Registrationpage-type: formsbuilder |
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COPR Event: Rethinking Policing: understanding the institution, embedding change in police practiceS0.17/OnlineThis will be a hybrid event, and you can choose to attend virtually via the registration form. The Microsoft Teams link will be sent to you before the event. With public trust and confidence in the UK police at a historic low, amplified by individual instances of police brutality and malpractice and by the findings of systemic racism and discrimination in the recent Casey Review, we ask firstly how we might understand policing – as an organisation, as a ‘culture,' as a set of practices and technologies; and secondly how we might seek to effect change in policing practice going forward - embedding learning, sharing best practice, and drawing on innovative arts-informed interventions. Register to attend! |
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Wiggins on EthicsS2.77 |
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Crafts Lecture 2023: The Rise of the Chinese Communist PartyScarman House Space 24 / Online via ZoomDate: Thursday 15th June 2023 Venue: Scarman House Space 24 / Online via Zoom The Crafts Lecture 2023 is delivered by Prof. James Kung (University of Hong Kong) We examine the historical rise of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) from a small reading group that aimed to spread Marxism among students and industrial workers to the world’s second largest political party that increasingly challenges the established hegemonic order. Using a spatial regression discontinuity design and a number of measures – middle-to-high-ranking cadres, martyr soldiers, and guerrilla bases – as proxies for the rise of the CCP during the Sino-Japanese War, we find that it grew significantly more in counties occupied by the Japanese Army. We identify three particular channels behind the CCP’s political ascendancy. First, the Communists took advantage of the militarily weaker “puppet troops”. Second, they built more grassroots party organizations inside the occupied areas to mobilize support and gain loyalty. Last, support for the CCP was powered by a strong nationalist sentiment spurred by war suffering of various kinds, including struggle for survival and humiliation and hatred. This event is hybrid and will be recorded for later for disseminated via the CAGE YouTube Channel and photography will take place. |
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PG Work in Progress SeminarS2.77/MS Teams |