Informal mixer between students/faculty interested in International Affairs and mid-career students in Foreign Service Programme
Come to exchange ideas and network!
Meet at 1245 at the lodge of St Antony’s.
Lunch in Hall (if you are late, please proceed to hall where we will have a table reserved): 1245 to 13:15
Coffee and discussion in the Combined Common Room 13:15 to 14:15.
Meet at 1245 at the lodge of St Antony’s.
Lunch in Hall (if you are late, please proceed to hall where we will have a table reserved): 1245 to 13:15
Coffee and discussion in the Combined Common Room 13:15 to 14:15.
The Rise of Western Democracy: Why it Happened in Europe and Not China or the Middle East
Professor Stasavage will be presenting work from his exciting new book project that explores the history of government by consent in a global setting, charting the long rise of democracy in Europe in comparison with China, the Middle East, and other world regions.
A sandwich lunch will be available at the session and is booked according to numbers. If you would like to order lunch for this session, please reply to aoife.dudley@politics.ox.ac.uk no later than noon on Friday 2nd June.
A sandwich lunch will be available at the session and is booked according to numbers. If you would like to order lunch for this session, please reply to aoife.dudley@politics.ox.ac.uk no later than noon on Friday 2nd June.
Colonial Approaches to Governance in the Periphery
'Democracy and Dissent: Theorizing Political Agency from Sites of Difference' - 2017 Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference
For more information, please visit: https://oxfordpoliticaltheory.wordpress.com/
**Conference Schedule**
Friday, June 2
9 – 9:30 am | Manor Road Building Lobby
Registration + coffee & tea
* * * *
9:30 – 11 am | Seminar Room A
Panel 1: Emancipatory Possibilities under Late Capitalism
Discussant: Dr. Dan Butt (Oxford)
Helge Petersen (Glasgow) & Hannah Hecker (Goethe University Frankfurt)
“A Critique of Left-Wing Populism”
Leonardo Sias (Southampton)
**Conference Schedule**
Friday, June 2
9 – 9:30 am | Manor Road Building Lobby
Registration + coffee & tea
* * * *
9:30 – 11 am | Seminar Room A
Panel 1: Emancipatory Possibilities under Late Capitalism
Discussant: Dr. Dan Butt (Oxford)
Helge Petersen (Glasgow) & Hannah Hecker (Goethe University Frankfurt)
“A Critique of Left-Wing Populism”
Leonardo Sias (Southampton)
'Syria and the Battle of Ideas'
Ideological and political radicalisation in contemporary western democracies: Cross-theoretical and empirical perspectives
Political radicalism and extremism no longer constitute marginal phenomena in European societies and politics. The consecutive financial crises, the Eurozone crisis, the refugee crisis, religious terrorism and geopolitical uncertainties create a multifaceted setting that exacerbates insecurity, anxiety and fears among European citizens.
' "The Optician of Lampedusa" - Opening the World's Eyes to the Human Story Behind Mass Migration'
'The More Things Change: How Whites Maintain the Racial Status Quo in a Louisiana City'
‘Fake Sites and Fake News’
There’s no clear dividing line between bad journalism and what is often called “fake news”. It’s futile to expect regulators or tech companies to be able to make editorial judgments. But what we can determine easily is the “realness” of a site. Does it have a real-world address, phone number, WhoIs, named contributors – in short, a colophon or impressum. Furthermore, does it adopt basic procedures indicating fairness – does it ever publish apologies, corrections etc? These tests are binary and easy to automate – and would make life much harder for the peddlers of disinformation.