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

Nov
3
Tue
Becoming a 19th Century Writer: The Life and Career of Louisa Stuart Costello – Clare Broome Saunders, @ Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College
Nov 3 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Becoming a 19th Century Writer: The Life and Career of Louisa Stuart Costello - Clare Broome Saunders, @ Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College | Oxford | United Kingdom

Louisa Stuart Costello (1799-1870) was a popular and critically acclaimed poet, novelist, travel writer, historian, biographer, artist, and medieval scholar. Clare Broome Saunders will explore how Costello’s long career offers a rich source of information about the working life of a professional writer in the nineteenth century; how Costello’s interactions with friends and supporters, such as Scott and Dickens, and her manipulations of literary markets, enabled her to disseminate her academic medieval scholarship in commercially and critically successful outputs, and how she skilfully used genre to express her strongly-held political views.
This event is free of charge and open to all. It will be followed by a drinks reception to launch Clare Broome Saunders’ new book, Louisa Stuart Costello: A Nineteenth-Century Writing Life.

Nov
4
Wed
Dublin, London, Washington and the Troubles in Northern Ireland 1969-97: how three Governments moved to implement a similar approach @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Theatre
Nov 4 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Dublin, London, Washington and the Troubles in Northern Ireland 1969-97: how three Governments moved to implement a similar approach @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Theatre | Oxford | United Kingdom

A talk by Seán Donlon, the former Irish ambassador to the United States.

Nov
5
Thu
Counterfeiting in Colonial British Africa @ Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies
Nov 5 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Come listen to a curator with the Smithsonian Institute, Dr. Ellen Feingold, talk about the ongoing fascinating ‘Money in Arica’ project at the British Museum, which aims to piece together African monetary history and its cultural and political impact. Dr. Feingold will also speak on her own focus of counterfeit currencies in colonial East and West Africa. The lecture will be held at the Ioannou (Classics) Centre on St. Giles.

This event should interest you if:

• you wish to know more about various numismatics research projects;
• you wish to know more about a unique and rare field of numismatics (African numismatics);
• you wish to know more about using numismatics as a source for research.

Speaker profile: http://americanhistory.si.edu/profile/1159
Abstract:

During the interwar period, international counterfeiting schemes originating in West Africa presented a new threat to British colonial and national currencies. The institutions responsible for the West African monetary system – the Colonial Office and West African Currency Board – believed these plots had the potential to generate high quality forged currency and thus considered them to present a greater risk than local counterfeiting practices. This paper argues that colonial officials were also alert to this illicit activity because the schemes presented a new challenge to British law enforcement in the colonies, set off disputes between national and imperial institutions in London, and required the British to collaborate with other nations to thwart. The emergence of these international counterfeiting schemes demonstrates that while the creation of a colonial monetary system for West Africa facilitated British imperial economic aims, it also created new and unanticipated challenges to British rule.

Please contact qaleeda.talib@some.ox.ac.uk for more information.

Free for members; a £2 fee applies for non-members. Please contact the Secretary at kim.zhang@wadh.ox.ac.uk if you wish to be a member and sign up to the mailing-list. Membership is free.

Nov
6
Fri
William Browder on the State of Law in Putin’s Russia @ Auditorium, Wolfson College
Nov 6 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
William Browder on the State of Law in Putin's Russia @ Auditorium, Wolfson College | Oxford | United Kingdom

In this lecture, William Browder, author of New York Times bestseller Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice, will give a firsthand account of corruption, dirty politics, and murder in Russia, as told by one of Putin’s Most Wanted.

November 2009. An emaciated young lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, is led to a freezing isolation cell in a Moscow prison, handcuffed to a bedrail, and beaten to death by eight police officers. His crime? To testify against the Russian Interior Ministry officials who stole $230 million of taxes paid to the state by one of the world’s most successful hedge funds. Magnitsky’s brutal killing has remained uninvestigated and unpunished to this day. His farcical posthumous show-trial brought Putin’s regime to a new low in the eyes of the international community.

Red Notice is a searing exposé of the wholesale whitewash by Russian authorities of Magnitsky’s imprisonment and murder, and the shadowy heart of the Kremlin. Bill Browder – the hedge fund manager who employed Magnitsky – takes us through his battles with ruthless oligarchs in the turbulent landscape of post-Soviet Union Moscow, to his expulsion from Russia on Putin’s orders.

William Browder is Chief Executive Officer of Hermitage Capital and author of Red Notice. He was the largest foreign investor in Russia until November 2005, when he was suddenly denied entry to the country and declared “a threat to national security”.

Since 2009 when his lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, died in a Russian prison, Browder has been leading a global campaign to expose the corruption and human rights abuses endemic in Russia. As a result of this campaign, the ‘Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act’ was signed into US law in 2012, imposing visa bans and asset freezes on certain officials involved in Magnitsky’s death.

Praise for Red Notice
A must-read for anyone interested in understanding the culture of corruption and impunity in Putin’s Russia today, and Browder’s heroic example of how to fight back.
– US Senator John McCain

Nov
13
Fri
Surgical Grand Rounds: Surgery for advanced rectal cancer @ John Radcliffe Hospital, Academic Centre, Lecture Theatre 1
Nov 13 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am

Mr Richard Guy, Mr Roel Hompes and Mr Bobby Bloemendaal from the Colorectal Department at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust will be presenting: “Surgery for advanced rectal cancer – crossing the boundaries”.

Dr Gavin Francis Medicine and the Human Body: An Adventure in Human Being @ Mansfield College
Nov 13 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Mansfield Lecture Series, Convener Baroness Helena Kennedy QC. Gavin Francis is a doctor and award-winning writer. He contributes regularly
to the Guardian, London Review of Books, and New York Review of Books. His most
recent book is Adventures in Human Being.

Nov
18
Wed
Gaza: an education the Palestinian people contribute to the world @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre
Nov 18 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Gaza: an education the Palestinian people contribute to the world @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre | Oxford | United Kingdom

In this Inaugural Gaza Lecture, Professor Karma Nabulsi, Assiociate Professor in Politics and International Relations from University of Oxford, will explore the politics, history and current predicaments faced by Palestinians in Gaza – particularly in the field of education.

In doing so, the lecture will illustrate the many extraordinary capacities and qualities of the Palestinian people that have come to the fore despite the extreme situation they are living in and how they have become an exemplar of democratic and universal values.

Gaza is commonly seen as a place of humanitarian catastrophe requiring emergency assistance, but Karma will instead show what the Palestinians of Gaza give to us.

Nov
19
Thu
What Animals Can Tell us About Sleep @ Mathematical Institute
Nov 19 @ 5:45 pm – 7:15 pm
Where is G-d in the modern university? @ Helena Kennedy Student Centre
Nov 19 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Where is G-d in the modern university? @ Helena Kennedy Student Centre | Oxford | United Kingdom

o mark Inter Faith Week 2015 (15 – 21 November) and the 150th anniversary of Oxford Brookes University, the University Chaplaincy will host a panel discussion on the role of faith, belief, and non-belief in 21st century higher education.
This discussion between some of the university Chaplains will explore the importance of building good relationships and working partnerships between people of different faiths and beliefs and the cultural, social and educational implications.

Nov
20
Fri
Professor Laurie Taylor The Lowering of Higher Education @ Mansfield College
Nov 20 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Mansfield Lecture Series, Convener Baroness Helena Kennedy QC.Laurie Taylor is Emeritus Professor of Sociology at the University of York and
Visiting Professor in Politics and Sociology at Birkbeck. He is the author of 14
books on crime, deviance, personal identity and the nature of contemporary
celebrity. He presents the weekly social science programme Thinking Allowed
on BBC Radio Four.

The GRACE Project Seminar: Observations on Grace and their Implications for Contemporary Dance @ St Hilda's College, Lady Brodie Room
Nov 20 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

‘Slavoj Žižek, Grace, and Contemporary Dance’
Speaker: Renate Braeuninger (Northampton)

In his extensive reflections on German philosophy and German Idealism, particularly in ‘Less than Nothing’ (2012), Žižek alludes to ideas of ‘grace’ on a number of occasions. This talk considers the following questions: What are the concepts and ideas of grace that Žižek is exploring, and to what extent are they useful for research into dance? By looking at German Idealism through the lens of Žižek and by thinking about its relevance to dance we gain a mediated perspective on German Idealism, but one that also reflects contemporary understanding of the term ‘grace’.

Nov
24
Tue
The 2015 Ken Hom Lecture: China in transition @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre
Nov 24 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm
The 2015 Ken Hom Lecture: China in transition @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre | Oxford | United Kingdom

Sir David Tang will reflect on recent developments in Chinese society and on the UK’s changing relationship with the Asian super-power. As a pre-eminent figure in fashion, hospitality, media and the arts, in both the UK and across Asia, Sir David will share his unique insights on this complex and fascinating topic.
The evening will be hosted by Ken Hom OBE, chef, author and broadcaster and honorary graduate of Oxford Brookes University.

Nov
28
Sat
The Role of the Choreographer in the Stage and Screen Musical @ Jacqueline du Pre Building, St Hilda's College
Nov 28 @ 10:30 am – 4:30 pm

Society for Dance Research/DANSOX presents a one-day conference on ‘The Role of the Choreographer in the Stage and Screen Musical’.
With distinguished keynote speeches from Dame Gillian Lynne, acclaimed British dancer, choreographer, and theatre/television director; and Professor Millie Taylor (University of Winchester). Dame Gillian Lynne will speak at 2pm. There will be a drinks reception after the conference.

Nov
30
Mon
OxPolicy Report Launch: Menstruation Education in the UK @ Blue Boar Theatre, Christ Church College
Nov 30 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
OxPolicy Report Launch: Menstruation Education in the UK @ Blue Boar Theatre, Christ Church College | Oxford | United Kingdom

**OxPolicy and #periodpositive are ready to launch their report on the state of menstruation education in the United Kingdom!**

Join us on the evening of November 30th for a bloody good time (haw haw). We’ll be discussing our findings and making suggestions on how to improve the provision of menstruation education in UK schools, ways of teaching period positivity, and how to lessen menstrual stigma both for young people and generally. Featuring the wonderful Chella Quint – comedian and founder of #periodpositive!

Drinks to follow at the Lamb and Flag (St Giles) after the event.

Dec
2
Wed
From medicine to the movies and back: how do they do those special effects, produce amazing characters and create imaginary worlds? @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre
Dec 2 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
From medicine to the movies and back: how do they do those special effects, produce amazing characters and create imaginary worlds? @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre | Oxford | United Kingdom

For much of the last nearly 200 years, a huge amount of work has been undertaken to record, analyse and characterise gait – the patterns of movement when we walk. The common objectives were to enlighten clinical understanding and to improve the quality of life of many thousands of children, veterans and people challenged by disability.

An unintended consequence of this work has been its us in the entertainment sectors. Tom will take you on a visual journey into the world of blockbuster movies, music videos and advertisements populated by amazing creatures animated characters and imaginary environments.
He will describe the techniques used to capture human motion and how to place animated characters and objects into real backgrounds.

Dec
4
Fri
‘Transitional Justice: Quo Vadis?’ – A Panel Conversation with Ruti Teitel Reflecting on ‘Globalizing Transitional Justice’ @ Lecture Theatre, Manor Road Building
Dec 4 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
‘Transitional Justice: Quo Vadis?’ – A Panel Conversation with Ruti Teitel Reflecting on ‘Globalizing Transitional Justice' @ Lecture Theatre, Manor Road Building | Oxford | United Kingdom

This panel takes the publication of Ruti Teitel’s new book ‘Globalizing Transitional Justice’ as paperback 15 years after the publication of her seminal book ‘Transitional Justice’ (OUP 2000) as the entry point into a critical discussion of the state of the field of Transitional Justice: What is its future? Has it a future? What is the role of Law vis-à-vis other disciplines in the field? Are the concepts and methods of Transitional Justice which emerged against the backdrop of transitions in Latin America and Eastern Europe still relevant to new contexts such as transitions in the Middle East? How are national and international security agendas with their renewed focus on terrorism affecting Transitional Justice Mechanisms? How can we push the research agenda in the field in new directions?

Panel Members:

Prof. Ruti Teitel, Ernst C. Stiefel Professor of Comparative Law and Director of the Institute for Global Law, Justice and Policy at New York Law School

Prof. Leigh Payne, Professor of Sociology, University of Oxford

Prof. Chandra Sriram, Professor of International Law and International Relations, University of East London

Dr. Iavor Rangelov, Global Security Research Fellow, London School of Economics

Dec
9
Wed
”Hello. I must be going” reflections on the OIA ombudsman service @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre
Dec 9 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
''Hello. I must be going'' reflections on the OIA ombudsman service @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Thretre | Oxford | United Kingdom

Ten years after the creation of the world’s first statutory-based national ombudsman service for higher education, Rob Behrens will mark his forthcoming departure from the Office of the Independent Adjudicator (OIA) with a frank appraisal of what has been achieved, how universities, student unions and complainants have reacted and what issues remain to be addressed.

He will explore the journey from ‘adjudicator’ to outward-facing ombudsman service and evaluate the OIA’s contribution to the current regulatory scene, assessing the impact of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 which brings private suppliers into the scheme on an equal footing with universities.

Members of AUA are very welcome to attend this event.

Rob Behrens is Independent Adjudicator and Chief Executive of the OIA, the ombudsman service for students in higher education in England and Wales. He is a member of the Regulatory Partnership Group for higher education.

He is also a non-executive member of the Bar Standards Board (BSB) in England and Wales, and Chair of the BSB Qualifications Committee.

Dec
15
Tue
Roman Krznaric recommends Five Books on ‘the Art of Living’ @ Blackwell's Oxford
Dec 15 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Join us for a conversation with cultural thinker Roman Krznaric as we decide which are the best books on ‘the Art of Living.’ The event is hosted by website www.fivebooks.com and Prosecco will be served…

Jan
19
Tue
Alistair Paterson on Visualizing Australian Rock Art and Archaeological Heritage @ Centre for Digital Scholarship, Weston Library, Broad Street
Jan 19 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Alistair Paterson on Visualizing Australian Rock Art and Archaeological Heritage @ Centre for Digital Scholarship, Weston Library, Broad Street | Oxford | United Kingdom

The use of data capture and visualisation technologies has grown dramatically, embracing the needs of researchers, stakeholder communities, cultural resource managers, tourists and the general public. This paper previews the types of techniques being used by Australian archaeologists and collaborators in a range of study areas. The digital acquisition and visualisation of archaeological sites using photographic techniques (hardware and software), 3D reconstruction, laser scanning and other methods, along with novel methods for presentation provide us with opportunities not available even 5 years ago. The challenge for researchers is to maintain the theoretical impetus in the face of a plethora of new technologies and opportunities. Methods to enhance recording and to facilitate research methodologies are explored and the potentials for cultural resource managers and stakeholder communities to manage their heritage (e.g. with tourists in interpretive displays, websites and other virtual media) are highlighted.

Professor Alistair Paterson is an archaeologist at the University of Western Australia where he has been Head of the School of Social Sciences (2013-15) and Archaeology Discipline Chair (2010-2012). He is currently a visiting researcher at the Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford. His research and teaching covers culture contact, historical archaeology in maritime and terrestrial settings, European colonization, historical rock art, digital scholarship, and archaeological and historical methodology. Much of his work is located in Western Australia and the Indian Ocean exploring the uses of coast and offshore islands in colonial and pre-colonial settings, and early colonial settlements across the state (in collaboration with the Western Australian Museum, iVec@UWA).

Jan
21
Thu
Life-Writing Lunch – Lucasta Miller: ‘Letitia Landon: portraiture and the slippery subject in post-Byronic literary culture’ @ Wolfson College
Jan 21 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

Renowned biographer Lucasta Miller talks about her work on Letitia Landon, with a free lunch included. Registration is necessary to guarantee a place.

Capturing the energy within: the future landscape of nursing education @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Threatre
Jan 21 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Capturing the energy within: the future landscape of nursing education @ John Henry Brookes Lecture Threatre | Oxford | United Kingdom

“We all have something of each other’s lives in the palms of our hands” (Martinsen 2006).
The connected nature of caring relationships is well-established in nursing theory and indeed nurses in Oxfordshire have historically been at the forefront of much of this theory generation. More recently, nursing education in the UK has been criticised for losing its base essential values of caring, despite a strong person-centred discourse in healthcare policy and strategy.
The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) have responded with new standards and a code of practice, whilst school of nursing have felt increasingly ‘regulated’ with a focus on compliance

Jan
25
Mon
Sunday Times bestselling crime writer, Peter May, talks about ‘Coffin Road’ @ Blackwell's Bookshop
Jan 25 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Sunday Times bestselling crime writer, Peter May, talks about 'Coffin Road' @ Blackwell's Bookshop | United Kingdom

Sunday Times top 10 bestselling novelist, Peter May, author of ‘The Lewis Trilogy’, will be in conversation with journalist Lucy Atkins about his new novel ‘Coffin Road’ at Blackwell’s Bookshop, Broad St, Oxford on Monday 25th January at 7pm. Tickets £3. For tickets and information call 01865 333623.

Jan
27
Wed
Engaging with the Humanities: Clare McCaldin @ Saïd Business School
Jan 27 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
Engaging with the Humanities: Clare McCaldin @ Saïd Business School | Oxford | United Kingdom

When the Fat Lady Sings: Leadership and Creativity in Opera

In the world of opera, many experts work together to create an amazing show: everyone from costume and lighting to singers and conductor need to align their creativity to make a final product that audiences love. There are many valuable lessons to be learned from these relationships that illustrate how leadership works.

Leadership involves coordinating different functions and communicating effectively both inside and outside an organisation. This talk will explore just that: how a system of shifting leadership works to pull together the creativity of the skilled experts in order to generate value for diverse stakeholders.

Expect practical demonstrations from a top-class singer!

Please arrive at 12.15pm for a prompt 12.30pm start. Lunch will then be provided and the lecture will commence at 1pm.

Jan
28
Thu
How can education research influence policy practice? @ Seminar D, Department of Education
Jan 28 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

As researchers, we aim to develop knowledge that will improve the human condition. This goal is hampered, however, if research is not consumed, interrogated, and used by those implementing policy. How then does research enter the policy process in practice?

This panel brings together decades of experience working at the intersection of education research and policy and will attempt to answer this key question. Drawing from their considerable experience, the panellists will describe their view of how research informs policy, and share perspectives on how researchers can better communicate and interact with policy makers and what researchers typically miss when thinking about how policy is made.

Featuring:

Tom Mcbride
Head of Strategic Analysis, UK Department for Education

Alex Scharaschkin
Director of Research, AQA; Director, AQA Centre for Education Research and Practice

Ewart Keep
Director, Oxford University Centre on Skills, Knowledge & Organisational Performance (SKOPE)

Distinguished Speaker Seminar: Carter Murray @ Saïd Business School, Oxford
Jan 28 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Distinguished Speaker Seminar: Carter Murray @ Saïd Business School, Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

Nothing is different but everything has changed

While the landscape of marketing is no doubt changing, the importance of cultivating and keeping diverse, creative talent remains as important today as it has been for centuries. This creative talent is at the heart of good marketing and no matter how the world shifts the consumption of media, creativity will remain key to making good ads.

FCB Worldwide CEO Carter Murray will discuss where he thinks the world of advertising is heading and how marketing is breaking new ground by sticking to the basics – awesome creative, great account management and a culture that allows it all to thrive.

The seminar will take place at Saïd Business School on 28 January 2016. Please arrive at the School from 5.15pm for a prompt 5.30pm start.

The talk will be followed by a short networking drinks reception until c19:30 hrs.

Feb
2
Tue
‘Digitally disrupted GDP’ with Prof Diane Coyle @ Oxford Martin School
Feb 2 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
'Digitally disrupted GDP' with Prof Diane Coyle @ Oxford Martin School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Gross Domestic Product: three words that can decide elections, influence political decisions, and determine whether a country can keep borrowing or will be thrown into recession. Economist Diane Coyle will argue why GDP is increasingly inappropriate for the twenty-first-century economy.

This talk will be followed by a book signing and a drinks reception, all welcome

This talk will be live webcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ck12yaw5Tzc

Feb
4
Thu
Responsible Leadership Seminar: Antony Jenkins @ Saïd Business School, Oxford
Feb 4 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Responsible Leadership Seminar: Antony Jenkins @ Saïd Business School, Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

Driving Business Performance

Peter Tufano and Antony Jenkins will discuss how leadership and culture drives business performance, including the tools that leaders can deploy to improve performance. They will also examine how technology is profoundly affecting business and society, including how to win in a new and very different world.

The seminar will take place at Saïd Business School on 4 Febrauary 2016. Please arrive at the School from 5pm for a prompt 5.30pm start.

The talk will be followed by a short networking drinks reception until c19:30 hrs.

Feb
9
Tue
Natural Hazards: Prediction, Perception, Prevention @ Merton College
Feb 9 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Natural Hazards: Prediction, Perception, Prevention @ Merton College  | Oxford | United Kingdom

Millions of people worldwide are affected by natural hazards ranging from devastating but localised events such as volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and tsunamis to the more subtle but global effects of climate change. It is therefore in our interests to be able to accurately predict these hazards, assess their risks and communicate this information quickly and effectively to those affected so that major loss of life can be avoided. Exactly how this should be done, and the extent to which certain natural hazards can even be predicted are key questions that need to be addressed. Less obvious but of equal importance are the roles that governments and charities should play in communication and prevention, and how different communities perceive the risks associated with natural hazards in the first place. These questions will be debated by a diverse panel of speakers from a variety of different backgrounds to be announced shortly. There will be a free drinks reception afterwards. So come on down, you might just learn something*!

*Or you can just come for the free wine

This is a free event, please register at the link below

Faith versus Fact: Can scientists also believe in God? @ Blackwell's Bookshop, Oxford
Feb 9 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Join us in a discussion with University of Chicago evolutionary biologist and author of Why Evolution is True, Jerry Coyne, about why science and religion are completely incompatible. He’ll be recommending five books that back up his case.

Feb
12
Fri
Dabke dancing workshop @ Union Hall - JHBB - Oxford Brookes University GB
Feb 12 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Dabke dancing workshop @ Union Hall - JHBB - Oxford Brookes University GB | Oxford | United Kingdom

Workshop with writer and performer Ahmed Masoud.
It follows his reading and performance of Home/Less.You can book tickets for the performance here.

Dabke (Arabic: دبكة‎) is a modern Levantine Arab folk circle dance of possible Canaanite or Phoenician origin. It is a dance performed in the Palestinian Territories, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, and north Saudi Arabia . It is a form of both circle dance and line dancing and is widely performed at weddings and joyous occasions. The line forms from right to left. The leader of the dabke heads the line, alternating between facing the audience and the other dancers.