Some face-to-face events are returning. Check carefully for any requirements.

May
12
Tue
Which crowdfunding platform should we choose to present our project? @ Oxford Launchpad
May 12 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Which crowdfunding platform should we choose to present our project? @ Oxford Launchpad | Oxford | United Kingdom

The presenter will introduce different crowdfunding platforms which serve different purposes, for instance education-related initiatives, charitable works, new products and start-ups.

Presenter: Shan Huang, D.Phil student at Department of Education, Founder of OxFund

May
26
Tue
Speak Out Your Financial Needs and Let Your College, the University and the Crowdfunding Platform Know @ Oxford Launchpad, Saïd Business School
May 26 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Speak Out Your Financial Needs and Let Your College, the University and the Crowdfunding Platform Know @ Oxford Launchpad, Saïd Business School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Have you thought about using crowdfunding to fund your next degree, innovation, entrepreneurial project, charitable work, creative arts or sports club? What support you need from your college, the university and the crowdfunding platform? Speak out and let them know.

OxFund invited Jonathan May – the CEO and Co-founder of Hubbub, the representatives from the Development Offices at Green Templeton College, Keble College, Merton College, Regent’s Park, St Hugh’s College, Somerville College (the only Oxford college has its own branded crowdfunding platform) and University College, and the staff from ISIS Innovation who are working with Hubbub to build a Oxford-branded crowdfunding platform for Oxford staff and students to raise money for their entrepreneurial projects to form a panel to listen your needs.

More college’s development offices may join, as we are still in the process of confirming. Please check the Facebook event for the updates. Even your college’s development office is not in the panel, speak out your needs and we will pass them to the development office of your college.

May
27
Wed
“Sudden justice: America’s secret drone wars” by Chris Woods @ Oxford Martin School
May 27 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

This book talk is a joint event between the Oxford Martin School and the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict

This book talk will see author Chris Woods discuss his new book Sudden Justice: America’s Secret Drone Wars, an exposé of the little-understood yet extremely significant world of drone warfare. His work is based on insights from many of those intimately involved – the pilots and analysts, US and UK intelligence officials, Special Forces and Pentagon commanders.

Chris Woods is an award-wining investigative journalist who specialises in conflict and national security issues. During almost a decade at the BBC, he was a senior producer for both Panorama and Newsnight.

The event will be introduced by Dr Alex Leveringhaus, a James Martin Fellow at the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict and lead author of the recent Oxford Martin Policy Paper Robo-Wars: The Regulation of Robotic Weapons.

The book talk will be followed by a book signing, all welcome

This book talk will be live webcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdE9AJrZ_Fk

Jun
9
Tue
How I Raised 1 Million for Natural Disaster Victims – Michael Maher King, Founder of Smile Kids Japan @ Oxford Launchpad
Jun 9 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
How I Raised 1 Million for Natural Disaster Victims - Michael Maher King, Founder of Smile Kids Japan @ Oxford Launchpad | Oxford | United Kingdom

• Mike set up the volunteer organisation Smile Kids Japan (website under reconstruction…) in 2007 to promote sustainable and local volunteering at institutional care facilities (sometimes called orphanages) in Japan. This grew and has helped volunteers set up visits in 25 of the 47 prefectures in Japan, seeing several thousand people volunteer their friendship to kids in care. Following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that struck Tohoku, Smile Kids Japan joined up with another NPO, Living Dreams, and Mike moved to the area to work full time on this project. Mike and the team raised over $900,000 in the months after the disaster, working with large corporate donors and setting up smaller events, including a 5 kilometre fun run that was carried out in 12 countries on the same day and raised over $100,000. The work was featured on the ITV ‘Tonight’ documentary news program, and in national papers. After giving a talk at TEDxTokyo and returning to the UK to study the alternative care system in Japan, Mike was invited by the Japanese Ambassador to meet and talk with the Emperor and Empress of Japan along with other Brits, including Lord Patten, who had been involved in the relief work.

• Mike is going to speak about fundraising strategies and will suggest (at least) three concrete ideas for fundraising that can be done before the end of term. These can be used for any charity fundraising, however the focus will be on post disaster, specifically on the situation in Nepal.

• The meeting aims to form a small team who can work on a flash fundraising event before the end of term, though you do not have to participate further if you just want to listen to the talk and learn more about fundraising.

To Book a place, click ‘going’ on our Facebook Event https://www.facebook.com/events/467192280115835/

OxFund — the Crowdfunding Society for Oxford Students
Email: hello.oxfund@gmail.com
Website: http://oxfund.wix.com/oxfund
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/OxFund/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/OxFund
Fund OxFund to run events: https://hubbub.net/p/oxfundsociety/

Jun
15
Mon
Non-violence in Palestine – Impossible to Possible @ Friends Meeting House
Jun 15 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Evening with Sami Awad of the Holyland Trust http://www.holylandtrust.org
Monday 15th June – Impossible to Possible: what does nonviolence mean in Palestine today?
Palestinian Christian Sami Awad, the Executive Director of the Holy Land Trust will lead discussions about nonviolence and its role in bringing a just and lasting peace to all who live in the Holy Land.
Holy Land Trust exists to lead in creating an environment that fosters understanding, healing, transformation, and empowerment of individuals and communities, locally and globally, to address core challenges that are preventing the achievement of a true and just peace in the Holy Land.
6.30pm for 7.00pm start; Friends Meeting House, 43 St. Giles, Oxford.
“It is encouraging for us to know that people have realised that you can stand up for the human rights of the Palestinians without compromising the rights of Israelis to also live in peace. You do not have to pick a side. I invite you ..to continue praying for peace for both communities that live in what we all call the Holy Land.”
Sami Awad.
“We have to not only understand those people who are oppressing us, but try to walk in their shoes, and ultimately to really engage with what it means to follow Jesus’ call to love our enemies.”
Sami Awad.
Sami will be visiting the UK with the Amos Trust. As well as the event on 15th June, Sami will also give a sermon in St Giles Church on Sunday 14th June. These events contribute to the Oxford Palestine Unlocked festival (4th – 20th June) . More details on the website http://palestineunlocked.com and also http://www.amostrust.org

Jun
19
Fri
Refuge in Europe: Syrian Aspirations | Special Workshop @ Seminar Room 3, Department of International Development
Jun 19 @ 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm
Refuge in Europe: Syrian Aspirations | Special Workshop @ Seminar Room 3, Department of International Development | Oxford | United Kingdom

This is a special workshop hosted by the Refugee Studies Centre as part of Oxford Refugee Week.

Programme:

Chair: Professor Dawn Chatty, Professor of Anthropology and Forced Migration and former Director of the RSC

Speakers:
Dr Jeff Crisp, independent consultant, RSC Research Associate, and former Head of Policy Development & Evaluation at UNHCR

Dr Maria Kastrinou, Lecturer, Brunel University

Dr Sara Pantuliano, Director of Humanitarian Policy Group, Overseas Development Institute

Dr Patricia Sellick, Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Trust, Peace & Social Relations, Coventry University

Professor Roger Zetter, Professor Emeritus of Refugee Studies, RSC

Since 2011, the on-going conflict in Syria has had an enduring and devastating impact. According to the latest inter-country report of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the humanitarian crisis has reached an unprecedented scale: 7.6 million people are internally displaced in Syria, while more than 3.9 million are seeking protection in neighbouring Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

Against the background of this unprecedented humanitarian crisis, what are Syrians’ aspirations for their futures? What kind of futures do they want to build? And what measures have EU Member States taken in response to the crisis?

This workshop will draw on ethnographic accounts from work directly with Syrian communities in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. The workshop will bring together experts and academics that have had direct fieldwork experience and can speak about the concerns, needs and aspirations of Syrians who have fled Syria.

This event is open to all. No registration is required.

A wine reception will follow afterward.

Jun
25
Thu
Working and understanding the behaviors of young people @ South Oxfordshire Food and Education Alliance
Jun 25 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Working and understanding the behaviors of young people @ South Oxfordshire Food and Education Alliance  | United Kingdom

SOFEA are holding an educational event involving working and understanding the behaviors of young people. It is happening on Thursday 25th June 2015 and all details are attached. You will need to RSVP

Jul
22
Wed
Fundraising Through Digital @ Lecture Theatre 2, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter
Jul 22 @ 5:45 pm – 7:00 pm
Fundraising Through Digital @ Lecture Theatre 2, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter | United Kingdom

*How clicktivists, slacktivists and hacktivists are helping us beat cancer sooner*
Michael Docherty, Digital & Strategic Marketing Planning Director, Cancer Research UK

Cancer Research UK is the world’s leading cancer charity dedicated to saving lives through research. Our vision is to bring forward the day when all cancers are cured. Our work into preventing, diagnosing and treating cancer has helped double UK survival rates in the last forty years. Our ambition is to accelerate that progress so we see at least 3 in 4 patients survive cancer by 2034; the digital revolution playing an important role in helping us get us there.

We will explore the work we’re doing to increase our fundraising impact through digital, how we’re opening up our research for the digital world to engage with, and what might come next!

Free and all welcome, there will be a drinks reception after the talk.

Michael Docherty is Cancer Research UK’s Digital & Strategic Marketing Planning director. He’s been with the charity since late 2007, joining as Head of Online Marketing and later becoming Head of Digital before moving into the director role. In the last year Michael has continued to build digital capability into CRUK and drive the transformation of CRUK’s websites to make them robust, responsive, and above all, user-centric. Prior to CRUK Michael was a Group Marketing Manager at Telstra, Australia’s leading communications company, and has held various product and brand marketing roles at Yahoo!, Hutchison Telecoms & Fairfax Digital.

Image: Cancer Research UK / Wikimedia Commons

Aug
14
Fri
Sketches of Oppression: @ Ertegun House
Aug 14 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sketches of Oppression: @ Ertegun House | Oxford | United Kingdom

A one-day free exhibit featuring powerful children’s drawings from Burma and Sudan.

The event is co-sponsored by Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART) and Waging Peace. The drawings from Burma were collected on visits by HART to their partners. HART works with these partners and others in conflict or post-conflict areas, often facing persecution and oppression and trapped behind closed borders. The areas in which HART’s partners work are often not reached by larger organisations and Government support.

The pictures from Sudan were collected by Waging Peace, from Darfuri children living in refugee camps in Chad. Waging Peace is a non-governmental organisation that campaigns against genocide and systematic human rights abuses and seeks the full implementation of international human rights treaties.

These drawings are commanding and moving, providing an insight into the lives and minds of children living in these contexts.

Sep
1
Tue
British Red Cross Annual Lecture 2015 @ Corpus Christi College Oxford
Sep 1 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

A lecture in aid of the British red Cross services in Oxfordshire and beyond kindly given by award winning journalist Peter Taylor and entitled ‘Terrorism from IRA to Al Quaeda and ISIL.’ In his lecture Peter will describe his 40 year journey from reporting the IRA to investigating Al Qaeda and, latterly, assessing the Islamic State. He will discuss how successful – or otherwise – governments and states have been in countering the threats and addressing their root causes.

Sep
22
Tue
Conflict in the DRC and fairtrade technology @ Regent's Park College
Sep 22 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Conflict in the DRC and fairtrade technology @ Regent's Park College | Oxford | United Kingdom

In conjunction with The Angus Library and Archive’s exhibition, ‘Navigating the Congo’, Bandi Mbubi, will be joining us to speak about conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo and his work in demanding the development of fairtrade technology which uses conflict-free minerals.

Bandi Mbubi is a founder and director of Congo Calling, an organisation who are working to bring the world’s attention to the atrocities being committed in the Congo and for a peaceful resolution to the ongoing war. Bandi writes and speaks nationally and internationally to create a mass movement of consumers who demand the development of fair trade technology which uses ethically-sourced, conflict-free minerals from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

The exhibition will be open to visitors before the talk from 1pm-5.30pm on 22nd September.

Oct
24
Sat
‘Why Doctors Don’t Do Much Good and How You Can Do More’ – Dr Gregory Lewis @ Blue Boar Lecture Theatre
Oct 24 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
'Why Doctors Don't Do Much Good and How You Can Do More' - Dr Gregory Lewis @ Blue Boar Lecture Theatre | Oxford | United Kingdom

The Oxford Forum for Medical Humanities presents a talk on effective altruism and the true impact of a doctor, by (medical doctor) Dr Gregory Lewis.

Doctors have a pretty solid reputation as do-gooders, and many students go into medicine for altruistic reasons. But how much good do doctors do? If you are deciding whether to become a doctor in the UK, how many lives can you expect to save over the course of your career?

Dr Gregory Lewis, a full-time doctor and ex-Cambridge medical student, will present some of his research into these very questions. This talk should be of interest to medics and non-medics alike who are serious about the impact of their career.

Date: Saturday 24 October (Week 2)
Time: 4:30pm-5:30pm
Venue: Blue Boar Lecture Theatre, Christ Church

************************

WHY DOCTORS DON’T DO MUCH GOOD

If you want to save lives, should you study medicine? Probably not.

The conclusion of our research is that most people skilled enough to make it in a field as challenging as medicine could have a bigger social impact through an alternative career.

The best research suggests that doctors do much less to improve the health of their patients than you might naturally expect. Health is more determined by lifestyle factors, and most of the treatments that work particularly well could be delivered with a smaller number of doctors than already work in the UK or USA.

However, medicine is high earning and highly fulfilling, and we expect there are more promising opportunities to help others through biomedical research, public health, health policy and (e.g. hospital) management.

Overall, we think going to medical school would be the best way to have a social impact only if someone felt they were a significantly better fit for medicine than the other options we recommend.

Source: 80,000 Hours https://80000hours.org/2012/08/how-many-lives-does-a-doctor-save/

************************

BIOGRAPHY

Dr Gregory Lewis, a full-time public health doctor training in the east of England. He studied Medicine at Cambridge, where he volunteered for Giving What We Can and 80,000 Hours, and he did his FY1 at the John Radcliffe Hospital.

He will present some of his research into these very questions. This talk should be of interest to medics and non-medics alike who are serious about the impact of their career

Dec
2
Wed
The changing nature of reporting from a war zone – Nazanine Moshiri @ Barclay Room - Green Templeton College
Dec 2 @ 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm

Reuters Institute seminars “The business and practice of journalism”
The following seminars will be given at 2 pm on Wednesdays, normally in the Barclay Room, Green Templeton College.
Convenors: James Painter, David Levy

Nazanine Moshiri, roving correspondent, Al Jazeera English
2 December: ‘The changing nature of reporting from a war zone’

Feb
3
Wed
“Censored Voices” Screening with Professor Derek Penslar @ Lady Margaret Hall
Feb 3 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

One week after the 1967 ‘Six-Day War’, a group of young kibbutzniks, led by renowned author Amos Oz and Editor Avraham Shapira, recorded intimate conversations with soldiers returning from the battlefield. The Israeli army censored the recordings, allowing only a fragment of the conversations to be published. Censored Voices reveals these original recordings for the first time.

Following the screening, there will be a talk from Professor Derek Penslar, Oxford’s Stanley Lewis Professor of Israel Studies. Dr Penslar has written a number of books and articles on Israel’s place in modern Jewish and world history, and co-edits two scholarly journals, The Journal of Israeli History and Jewish Social Studies.

Please book by emailing events@lmh.ox.ac.uk

Feb
10
Wed
Stop Trident: Decision Time 2016 @ Oxford Town Hall
Feb 10 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Stop Trident: Decision Time 2016 @ Oxford Town Hall | Oxford | United Kingdom

A public meeting featuring veteran peace campaigner Bruce Kent plus speakers from CND and Momentum. There will also be questions and discussion.

Parliament will soon be making a decision on Trident replacement. Come and hear the facts.

All welcome – feel free to join in the discussion or just listen.

Organised by Oxford CND and Momentum Oxford

Feb
24
Wed
What can photography teach us about poverty? @ Ertegun Scholarship Programme
Feb 24 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

What do Apple’s design principles, World War II propaganda, selfies and mobile phone video scandals all have in common?

Learn more about the power of visual imagery and how the era of social media and mobile-phone technology allows us to craft a new, smarter public view of poverty, in what promises to be a fascinating talk!

Free wine and nibbles, as always

Mar
4
Fri
Heron-Allen Lecture 2016 – Natural Governance: Lessons from Animal and Human Ecology for Sharing the Planet @ Simpkins Lee Theatre, Pipe Partridge Building, Lady Margaret Hall
Mar 4 @ 5:15 pm – 7:00 pm
Heron-Allen Lecture 2016 - Natural Governance: Lessons from Animal and Human Ecology for Sharing the Planet @ Simpkins Lee Theatre, Pipe Partridge Building, Lady Margaret Hall | Oxford | United Kingdom

The 2016 annual Heron-Allen lecture will be given by Dominic Johnson, Alastair Buchan Chair of International Relations, Director of Research, at the Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR), Oxford.

For millions of years, humans and other animals have had to find ways to coexist in sharing finite resources in the environment. Often this has led to competition and conflict, but it has also led to the evolution of remarkable adaptations and systems of social organisation that promote cooperation and sharing. Dominic suggests that we have often focused too much on the former and not enough on the latter, more optimistic aspects of ecology and evolution. Today, with the rapid rise in human population and consumption, the Earth’s finite resources are dwindling beyond repair, and we desperately need fresh approaches to maximise our chances of damage limitation. Dominic and the interdisciplinary “Natural Governance” project team at Oxford suggest that major new insights may come from studying and learning how other species, as well as indigenous human societies, have successfully managed common resources in the past, and the social and behavioural mechanisms which enable this sharing and conflict resolution to succeed. The team believe that, even if by small steps, this approach opens a new avenue for the successful governance of natural resources. From long term studies of badgers in Wytham Woods, to hunter-gatherers in Africa, to contemporary conflicts over resources, the talk will give examples of new ways to think about our predicament and ask whether nature itself may hold solutions to help us preserve it.

The lecture starts promptly at 5.15pm in the Simpkins Lee Theatre and finishes with a drinks reception in the Monson Room. The event is free to attend and guests are welcome. To book your place(s), please email events@lmh.ox.ac.uk.

May
12
Thu
’The great only appear so, because we are on our knees’: James Connolly (1868—1916) and the politics and culture of revolution @ The Mitre (upstairs function room)
May 12 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
’The great only appear so, because we are on our knees’:  James Connolly (1868—1916) and the politics and culture of revolution @ The Mitre (upstairs function room) | Oxford | United Kingdom

An introductory talk of about twenty minutes, followed by Q&As and an hour or so’s discussion among the audience. You’re welcome to come along just to listen, or to take an active part in the discussion.

May
21
Sat
The Reasons for the New Uprising : Attacks on Non-Violent Resistance to Illegal Military Occupation @ St Antony’s College
May 21 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm
The Reasons for the New Uprising : Attacks on Non-Violent Resistance to Illegal Military Occupation @ St Antony’s College | Oxford | United Kingdom

Dr Barghouti will talk about the situation in Palestine, concentrating on the Palestinian strategy of non-violent resistance, and the exposure of the grave violations of human rights in occupied Palestine.

Speaker:
Dr Mustafa Barghouti, General Secretary, Palestine National Initiative (Mubadara), Ramallah, Palestine

Chair:
Dr Avi Shlaim, Senior Research Fellow, St Antony’s College, University of Oxford

Siege and Survival in Gaza: The Impact on Health and Human Rights @ EP Abraham Lecture Theatre / Green Templeton College, OX2 6HG
May 21 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Siege and Survival in Gaza: The Impact on Health and Human Rights @ EP Abraham Lecture Theatre / Green Templeton College, OX2 6HG | Oxford | United Kingdom

Speaker: Dr Rita Giacaman, Founding Director, Institute of Community and Public Health, Birzeit University, Palestine

Rita Giacaman will present research findings on the impact of the 2009 and 2014 assaults on the health of the population of Gaza.

Speaker: Miri Weingarten, Physicians for Human Rights–Israel

Miri Weingarten will link the attempts made by Israeli and Palestinian groups to seek accountability for Palestinians in international fora and the punitive responses of the Israeli government.

May
22
Sun
The Twice Promised Land: Britain’s Role in Creating 100 Years of Conflict in Palestine @ St Margaret’s Institute Polstead Rd, OX2 6TN
May 22 @ 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm
The Twice Promised Land: Britain’s Role in Creating 100 Years of Conflict in Palestine @ St Margaret’s Institute Polstead Rd, OX2 6TN | Oxford | United Kingdom

Introductory Speaker and Chair:

▪Karl Sabbagh, British-Palestinian writer, documentary maker, and publisher

Panel members:

▪ Mustafa Barghouti, Palestine National Initiative (Mubadara), Ramallah, Palestine

▪ Rita Giacaman, Birzeit University, Palestine

▪ Jeremy Moodey, Embrace the Middle East

▪ Karma Nabulsi, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford

▪ Naomi Wayne, Jews for Justice for Palestinians

May
23
Mon
Human Rights for Palestinian Prisoners with Sir Stephen Sedley and William Parry @ Investcorp Building, The Middle East Centre, St Antony’s College, 68 Woodstock Rd, OX2 6JF
May 23 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Human Rights for Palestinian Prisoners with Sir Stephen Sedley and William Parry @ Investcorp Building, The Middle East Centre, St Antony’s College, 68 Woodstock Rd, OX2 6JF | Oxford | United Kingdom

Short film and panel discussion with:

▪ Sir Stephen Sedley – one of the authors of the Foreign & Commonwealth Office report ‘Children in Military Custody’ (2012) which was discussed this January in Parliament

▪ William Parry – journalist/documentary film maker ‘Palestinian Prisoners in Israeli Jails’

▪ Oxford Ramallah Friendship Association visitors who attended a juvenile court in the West Bank

(Event run by Oxford Ramallah Friendship Association – ORFA)

May
26
Thu
Hope for a better future: Education and jobs as a response to the Syrian refugee crisis @ Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College, Linton Road
May 26 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Hope for a better future: Education and jobs as a response to the Syrian refugee crisis @ Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College, Linton Road | Oxford | United Kingdom

In the fourth and final lecture of the Trinity Term Annual Lecture Series on ‘Global Education’, Prof Stefan Dercon will discuss ‘Education and jobs as a response to the Syrian refugee crisis’.
Speaker
Prof Stefan Dercon is Professor of Economic Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government and the Economics Department, Director of the Centre for the Study of African Economics and Chief Economist at the UK Department of International Development. His research at Oxford University relates to the application of microeconomics and statistics to problems of development.

Jun
30
Thu
John Simpson: Life in the World’s Troubled Regions @ Magdalen College School
Jun 30 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
John Simpson: Life in the World's Troubled Regions @ Magdalen College School | Oxford | United Kingdom

BBC World Affairs Editor John Simpson discusses his first-hand experiences of world-wide events, from the 2011 Libyan civil war to the current-day migrant crisis.

Jul
19
Tue
‘Building Respectful Families: A Restorative Approach to Child on Parent Violence’ @ The Mint House (adjacent to New Road Baptist Church)
Jul 19 @ 12:45 pm
‘Building Respectful Families: A Restorative Approach to Child on Parent Violence’ @ The Mint House (adjacent to New Road Baptist Church) | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Colette Morgan works for SAFE! as the Child on Parent Violence Project Development Manager. Sadly, Child-on-Parent violence is on the rise and this fascinating talk will show us how SAFE! tackles this problem and works with families to cultivate respectful family relationships, for the benefit of all society.

We will even provide you with a free sandwich and a cuppa.

Sep
16
Fri
Corruption in Developing Countries @ Seminar Room G, Manor Road Building, University of Oxford
Sep 16 @ 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Oct
20
Thu
The Confession + Q&A @ The Ultimate Picture Palace
Oct 20 @ 6:15 pm – 8:30 pm
The Confession + Q&A @ The Ultimate Picture Palace | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

The Confession details the first-hand experiences of Moazzam Begg, British Muslim and former detainee at Guantanamo Bay, as he chronicles the rise of modern jihad, its descent into terror and the reaction of the West.

This one off screening will be followed by a Q&A with Moazzam himself, director Ashish Ghadiali and chaired by Dr Tina Managhan, Senior Lecturer of International Relations, Oxford Brookes.

Nov
1
Tue
7 Days in Syria: An Evening with Janine di Giovanni @ Lady Margaret Hall
Nov 1 @ 7:30 pm – 10:00 pm

The Tim Hetherington Society and the Oxford PPE Society present: 7 Days in Syria, an evening with Janine di Giovanni.

Join us for free in the Simpkins Lee Theatre at Lady Margaret Hall for a talk by Janine di Giovanni and a film screening of Robert Rippberger’s feature length documentary ‘7 Days in Syria’. After the screening, there will be a free drinks reception in the adjoining Monson Room.

Nov
24
Thu
Foreigner: Migration into Europe 2015-2016 @ Moser Theatre, Wadham College
Nov 24 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Foreigner: Migration into Europe 2015-2016 @ Moser Theatre, Wadham College | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Please join us at 7pm on Thursday of 7th Week (November 24th) for a presentation by Daniel Castro Garcia and Thomas Saxby on their recent publication ‘Foreigner: Migration into Europe 2015–2016’.

—————————————————–

“The photographs are a protest against those who so
readily attack refugees and migrants entering Europe
without taking into consideration the dangers faced
during the journey.” (Foreigner: Migration into Europe 2015–16 by John Radcliffe Studio www.johnradcliffestudio.com)

For more information please read the press release below:

‘Foreigner: Migration into Europe 2015–2016’, is a photography book that documents the lives of people at various stages of their migration to Europe. The book is divided into three sections, focusing on migration to Italy from North Africa, migration to Greece and through the Balkans from the middle east, and the migrant camp in Calais known as ‘The Jungle’. Alongside the photography, written texts serve both as a context, and a means to share the stories of the people we met during the project.
The book was created in response to the imagery used in
the media to discuss the issue of migration, which we felt was
sensationalist, alarmist and was not giving people the time and
consideration they deserved. We wanted to approach the subject from a calmer perspective, using medium format portrait photography as a means of meeting the people at the centre of the crisis face to face – and of learning something about their lives.

John Radcliffe Studio is the creative partnership of Thomas Saxby and Daniel Castro Garcia. We specialise in photography, film and graphic design and have spent the last year documenting the refugee and migrant crisis in Europe.

—————————————————–

The Moser Theatre is fully accessible, with access to gender netural toilets, and the event will be **FREE** to attend. Oxford for Dunkirk will be collecting donations before and after the event in aid of La Liniere Refugee Camp, Dunkirk, France: please see our page for more details! (www.facebook.com/oxfordfordunkirk)

Mar
3
Fri
Professor Lord Alton of Liverpool – John Milton Lecture: Freedom of Religion and Belief @ Lecture Theatre
Mar 3 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Member of the House of Commons from 1979-97 and Independent Crossbench Peer since 1997. Chair and a founder of the All Party Group on Freedom of Religion or Belief who has authored reports on North Korea, Sudan, Tibet and Pakistan; a founder of the Jubilee Campaign; author of twelve books including “Building Bridges: Is there Hope for North Korea?” with Rob Chidley (2013)