The Black Revolution: The Urgent Need for Radical Politics
Kehinde Andrews is a Professor of Black Studies at Birmingham City University’s School of Social Sciences. Andrews is currently engaged in a project examining the role of Black radicalism in contemporary organising against racial oppression. At Birmingham, he has led the development of the Black Studies degree and is director of the Centre for Critical Social Research; founder of the Harambee Organisation of Black Unity; and co-chair of the Black Studies Association.
Self-Trust and Discriminatory Speech
Income, Insurance and Support for Redistribution
Most distributive theories in political economy understand individuals to be motivated by material self-interest, often approximated by their current positions in the income distribution. It has become increasingly common, however, to also conceptualise material self-interest inter-temporally.
The French Parliament and the European Union: Backbenchers' Blues
Whose Security is Cybersecurity? Authority, Responsibility, and Power in Cyberspace
To what extent has the emergence of cyber technologies affected how we think, and should think, about international relations? Has there been fundamental change, or are we simply seeing a continuation of existing trends? The dynamics of cyberspace seemingly challenge traditional approaches to the study of world politics. They raise important questions regarding what the potential sources of threats are, who is responsible for addressing them, and who or what is most vulnerable. In short, whose security is cyber security?
The Lost Art of Strategic Thinking
The talk will explore why modern governments find it so hard to make grand strategic choices. It will give a practitioner's insight into the forces which pull political leaders towards short-term crisis management and consider whether the nature of democratic politics in a digital age is a constraint on longer-term policymaking.
The failure of political journalism
Being a Part of the Problem: Innovation Within Government
There is much focus on innovation currently, both in industry and within government. There exist buzzwords, bean bags, and open spaces in which to innovate. Yet innovation is not necessarily a creative process those words conjure. Our organization argues innovation must be disciplined, evidence-based, and rigorous.
Black British Feminist Organising: Politics, Practice and Influence in a New Era
Chardine Taylor-Stone is an award-winning cultural producer and feminist activist. She is the founder of Black Girls Picnic a global movement in collective self care for Black women and girls and Stop Rainbow Racism. In 2015 she was featured in The Voice newspaper as one of the 'Women Who Rocked the World', Diva Magazine’s LGBT Power List 2016 and Buzzfeed’s ‘The Most Inspiring British LGBT People Of 2016‘ and the 'Pride Power List 2017'. In 2017 she was awarded the British LGBTQ award for Contribution to LGBTQ life.