Equal Opportunities not Photo Opportunities: The politics of representation in the age of 'diversity'

To make sense of a moment in which Latino men and white women voted for Donald Trump, and the Conservative party is on its second non-white leader in a row - all at a time of escalating inequality and intense racial animus - we must interrogate what we want both from diversity and representation. These lessons go beyond electoral politics. The aim should be to change the way a system works not simply the way that it looks; so we must recognise that it is possible for organisations to appear different and still act the same.

OSGA Annual Lecture "The politics of development: Sri Lanka and beyond"

We are honoured to welcome Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, Prime Minister of Sri Lanka, as our speaker to the OSGA Annual Lecture on 19 May 2026. Join us as the Prime Minister will speak about the development, governance and politics of Sri Lanka and reflect on what this experience teaches us about the politics of development more generally. The lecture will also dive deeper into the political context and the challenges of sustaining dynamic reform in complex contexts. Dr.

Looking back to look froward: building peace in Colomboa and beyond

In 2016, the former President of Colombia, Juan Manuel Santos, current Chair of the Elders, and featured speaker in this event, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize as he led the peace process in Colombia. After 50 years of conflict, Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement did not come easily – it required strategy, diplomacy, fearless determination, and timing. This event at the University of Oxford will mark the tenth anniversary of one of the most significant peace processes of recent decades, and do so from a world roiled by complex conflicts.

Can cultural life thrive under authoritarianism? Evidence from Greece, 1970-1973

Contrary to dominant narratives that portray cultural life in Greece under the Colonels’ dictatorship (1967–1974) as suppressed, this event features Stathis Kalyvas discussing his latest book, which reveals a surprising cultural “Big Bang.” Drawing on new evidence, he argues that, despite censorship and repression, artistic and intellectual activity flourished. The talk examines the conditions that made this possible, highlighting how cultural production can adapt under authoritarian rule.

BOOK TALK 'Needs That Bind: Materializing Nationality in Post-Ottoman Regimes'

Needs That Bind reconsiders the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire and the construction of new regimes in the decade after World War I, to understand the consequential connections that remained among the new republican regime in Turkey and neighboring French and British Mandates in Syria-Lebanon and Iraq. Orçun Can Okan examines how these new states and their people managed problems of state succession through diplomatic, administrative, and legal interactions with and between bureaucracies.

Dr Neli Frost: Law in the Age of AI

Digital and artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies are increasingly mediating our political and legal interactions. For example, in the ways in which judges and civil servants increasingly rely on algorithmic tools in their decision making, or in how political communications increasingly take place on, and are structured by, digital platforms, challenging legal scholarship to consider what we gain and lose from the penetration of digital and AI technologies into political and legal spheres.

The Hotels’ Republic: Elite Internationalisation and State Territorialisation in Wartime Yemen

This presentation introduces my book project, The Hotels’ Republic: Elite Internationalisation and State Territorialisation in Wartime Yemen. It analyses how the frontiers of the state are remapped in the midst of violence, by looking at how the ongoing war transforms Yemen’s ruling class. The book draws on a sociology of the political elite, many of whom are now based or in transit between Cairo, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Muscat, Amman, and Istanbul.
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