Events
Tuesday, January 16, 2024
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Spring Term Reading Group: The Limits of BlameTBC |
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PG TipsPG Hub (Junction Building, Floor 2)Join the Library Team Tuesdays, 3pm-4pm in the PG Hub (Junction building, floor 2) for a break from your studies with free refreshments, to meet other postgrads, and to share tips on postgrad life. PG Tips will run every week throughout the term. This is an event which you can drop in and out of. PG Tips is an opportunity to ask questions outside of your department and supervisor on all aspects of postgraduate life, whether that's how to apply for a PhD, how to balance your study time and your social life, or simply where does the best coffee or food on campus. Whether your queries are academic or pastoral, our Library Student Partners will share their advice, or direct you to the appropriate service. |
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WMA reading group: Montaigne on MEEP (Mind, Epistemology, Ethics & Political Philosophy)S2.77Dear All, We're delighted to announce the WMA Reading Group schedule for this term - Eve Poirier will be leading the sessions. The details are below: Please note: in the run-up to this year's MindGrad conference, we will also be using this reading group to have some pre-reading sessions on the work of the keynote speakers. These will be valuable sessions for PG students to attend to familiarise themselves with the keynote speakers' work ahead of the conference. More details on this will be announced in due course. WMA reading group: Montaigne on MEEP (Mind, Epistemology, Ethics & Political Philosophy) Where/When: Cowling Room (S2.77), Tuesdays 16:00-17:00 in even weeks, starting in week 2. A message from Eve: This term in the WMA reading group we will look at some Montaignian takes on topics in Mind, Epistemology, Ethics and Politics. Suitable for Montaigne beginners and experts, everyone is welcome. I will be reading from Donald Frame’s translation, of which there are hard copies available in the library. Get in touch with me (eve.poirier@warwick.ac.uk) if you need help finding the readings or want a digital copy. We will meet in the Cowling Room (S2.77) at 16:00 on Tuesday in even weeks, starting on the 16th. I promise it will be relatively light-hearted and fun, so please don’t be afraid to come along and discover the joys of Montaigne 😊 Schedule: Week 2 – Intro to Montaigne: Judgement, Personality, Humankind (and Chess!) ‘To the Reader’ (p. 2 in the Frame translation) ‘Of Democritus and Heraclitus’ I. 50. (pp. 266-268) Week 4 – Knowing Facts, Learning Virtues ‘Of Pedantry’ I. 25. (pp. 118-129) Week 6 – Justice and Dirty Hands ‘Of the Useful and the Honourable’ III. 1 (pp. 726 at least up to p. 736) Week 8 – TBC Week 10 – TBC |
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EASG Talk on The Future of Multilateralism and Globalization in the Age of the U.S.–China RivalryOC1.02, The OculusThis EASG-CSGR-PAIS talk, delivered by Norbert Gaillard, Fumihito Gotoh and Rick Michalek is based on the recently published book, The Future of Multilateralism and Globalization in the Age of the U.S.–China Rivalry. It investigates how a new modus vivendi between China and the United States in the post-globalized world requires increased economic interdependence. This is because, despite the distrust between G20 economies, heightened international cooperation is required in order to avert a shift to nationalism and protectionism and to fight financial and climate crises. The seminar will discuss several topics: the respective characteristics of Chinese and U.S. capitalisms; the way China is reshaping the international financial architecture; and the initiatives to secure critical mineral supply chains and global value chains. A comparison of Chinese capitalism with American and Japanese models will be presented, along with a case study on China's vehicle electrification. Norbert Gaillard is an economist and independent consultant. He has taught at the Ecole Supérieure de Commerce de Paris, the University of Geneva, and the Graduate Institute. He has served as a consultant to various international institutions and financial firms. His main areas of expertise are public debt and sovereign risk, local government debt and subnational risk, credit rating agencies, country risk, and moral hazard. Fumihito (Fumi) Gotoh is a lecturer in East Asian Studies at the University of Sheffield. Previously, he was a teaching and research fellow in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick. His research interests include comparative capitalisms (particularly between Anglo-American countries, Japan, and China) and the politics of finance. Rick Michalek is an independent consultant and the senior partner of RJM Consulting, a legal and financial consulting group based in the New York area. A graduate of Columbia University with both a JD and an MBA, he worked as a former senior credit officer and legal analyst at Moody’s in the structured derivatives group. Rick has authored and co-authored and co-edited (with Norbert Gaillard) a number of academic articles and books as a part of their series, International Studies in Money and Banking. |
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CRPLA Seminar: Michael Thomas (Amsterdam), 'Towards a Social Aesthetics of Race'R0.03 (Ramphal Building) |