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Ann Stewart to give Annual Law Lecture at the British Institute in Eastern Africa

'Caring about Care in a Global Market Place'

5pm - 8pm, Thu, 19 Sep '13
Location: Nairobi, Kenya
THU SEP 19
We are delighted to inform you that Ann Stewart, Reader in law/Associate Professor at the School of Law, University of Warwick is visiting Nairobi to give the Annual Lecture at the British Institute in Eastern Africa
The title of her lecture is Caring about care in a global market place.
More details relating to the lecture can be found on the BIEA website
 
Event Details
Entry to the lecture is free and all are very welcome.
Date: Thursday, 19 September 2013
Time: 5.00pm, followed by a drinks reception
Venue: British Institute in Eastern Africa, Laikipia Road, Kileleshwa, Nairobi

Kimberley Brownlee awarded a £70,000 Philip Leverhulme Prize

Kimberley Brownlee

Kimberley was awarded a £37,000 Philip Leverhulme Prize. These prizes are designed to recognise and facilitate the work of outstanding young research scholars, who are making original and significant contributions to knowledge in their field with an international impact, and whose greatest achievements are expected to be still to come.

Kimberley Brownlee's research during her fellowship will focus on social human rights, and in particular the idea of a human right against social deprivation. The term ‘social deprivation’ refers to a persisting lack of minimally adequate opportunities for decent human contact and social inclusion. Social deprivation is a common experience in arenas of institutional segregation such as long-term medical quarantine and solitary confinement. It is also the most extreme variant of a more general, pervasive phenomenon of social isolation that includes people, many of whom are elderly or disabled, who are chronically, acutely lonely and unable to remedy their situation. This kind of deprivation is an important concern, particularly in western societies, given the individualistic bent of western culture, aging populations, and the ongoing use of isolating procedures in medicine, immigration, and criminal justice.


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