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

Jun
16
Thu
Intrepid Explorers Launch Event @ Gottmann Room, School of Geography and the Environment
Jun 16 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Intrepid Explorers Launch Event @ Gottmann Room, School of Geography and the Environment | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Photos and tales on the highs and lows of life in the field. Intrepid Explorers was co-founded at King’s College London by Briony Turner to provide an informal opportunity to share fieldwork experiences. The program has subsequently been nominated for an ESRC impact champion prize and the hope is to expand it to the School of Geography and the Environment at Oxford University. The highs and lows of research in the field will be shared by members of SoGE, including fascinating photographs from around the globe.

Jun
25
Sat
Oxford Science Fair @ Oxford Town Hall
Jun 25 – Jun 26 all-day
Oxford Science Fair @ Oxford Town Hall | Oxford | United Kingdom

Check out http://www.oxfordshiresciencefestival.com/oxford-science-fair.html for a full list of stalls. This is a FREE, drop in event with something for the whole family. Saturday 25 June 12-5pm, Sunday 26 June 1-5pm.

Jun
26
Sun
SEVEN NEW MAPS OF THE WORLD @ Story Museum, Pembroke Street, Oxford
Jun 26 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
SEVEN NEW MAPS OF THE WORLD @ Story Museum, Pembroke Street, Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

Visualise the world in the 21st century in seven new maps! Geographers Ben Hennig and Danny Dorling present some of the key challenges and questions relating to the future of people across the world, using a series of seven thought-provoking maps about our lives on the planet.

Jun
28
Tue
BOARD GAMES: MOVERS AND SHAKERS @ Old Fire Station, Oxford
Jun 28 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
BOARD GAMES: MOVERS AND SHAKERS @ Old Fire Station, Oxford | Oxford | United Kingdom

Ludo, snakes & ladders and draughts are all popular pastimes, but in the past couple of decades a new generation of board games from designers with backgrounds in maths and science has begun to break the Monopoly monopoly. Perhaps the most successful of these is multi award winning Reiner Knizia, who joins mathematician Katie Steckles and board game lover Quentin Cooper to discuss how you develop a game which is easy to learn, hard to master and fun to play time after time. With a chance to have a go at some of Reiner’s latest creations and other top games afterwards.

Book here: http://www.oxfordshiresciencefestival.com/tuesday.html

Jul
1
Fri
GRAVESTONE GEOLOGY TOUR​ @ Holywell Cemetery
Jul 1 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
GRAVESTONE GEOLOGY TOUR​ @ Holywell Cemetery | Oxford | United Kingdom

Date/Time: Friday 1 July 13:00
Venue: Holywell Cemetery, St Cross Road, Oxford
Admissions: Free, Drop-In
Suitability: 14+
Find out more: http://www.oxfordshiresciencefestival.com/friday.html

The wide range of rock types used for gravestones means that cemeteries can be geological treasure-troves – and provide a wonderful introduction to geology and other sciences. Social history comes into it too. Join geologists Nina Morgan and Philip Powell on a geological walk through Holywell Cemetery, one of the cemeteries described in their book, The Geology of Oxford Gravestones. You’ll never look at cemeteries in the same way again!

CABARET OF THE ELEMENTS @ Glee Club
Jul 1 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm
CABARET OF THE ELEMENTS @ Glee Club | Oxford | United Kingdom

Join us for a sensational evening of cabaret – an alchemy of acts delivered by Science Oxford’s network of creative science performers. If you love science, stage and stand up, you’ll be in your element with our periodic table-themed cabaret including science presenter and geek songstress Helen Arney and compered by award-winning science communicator Jamie Gallagher. See the everyday elements that make up the world around us in a new light, watch in disbelief as gold is created before your eyes, and learn about their origins and how they behave inside our bodies. Get your tickets now – once they are gone they argon!

Jul
2
Sat
BIONIC HEARING: THE SCIENCE AND THE EXPERIENCE @ Amey Theatre, Abingdon School
Jul 2 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
BIONIC HEARING: THE SCIENCE AND THE EXPERIENCE @ Amey Theatre, Abingdon School | Abingdon | United Kingdom

Ian Shipsey, Particle Physicist and Professor of Physics, Oxford University, has been profoundly deaf since 1989. In 2002 he heard the voice of his daughter for the first time thanks to a cochlear implant. These implants have instigated a popular but controversial revolution in the treatment of deafness. Learn the physiology of natural hearing, the function of cochlear implants, and experience speech and music heard through a cochlear implant. Ian Shipsey was one of the leaders of the experiments that discovered the Higgs particle in 2012.

Jul
3
Sun
UK SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY: NICOLA BLACKWOOD IN CONVERSATION WITH THE GUARDIAN @ Amey Theatre, Abingdon School
Jul 3 @ 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm
UK SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY: NICOLA BLACKWOOD IN CONVERSATION WITH THE GUARDIAN @ Amey Theatre, Abingdon School | Abingdon | United Kingdom

Nicola Blackwood, local MP, is Chair of the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Commons. Science and technology are central for the development of the region, and fundamental for the country: boosting innovation and enterprise,
developing employment, advancing health and promoting knowledge. Engage in a conversation chaired by Hannah Devlin, science correspondent for the Guardian. Get insights from your local MP and take part in a reflection about the future of science and technology in the UK.

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
27
Tue
Drought Science and Management @ The Simpkins Lee Theatre, Lady Margaret Hall
Sep 27 @ 9:15 am
Drought Science and Management @ The Simpkins Lee Theatre, Lady Margaret Hall | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

The Symposium focuses on drought and water scarcity in the UK and globally. A range of expert speakers give their perspectives from an academic and practisers view on the impact of drought and how to manage drought risk in the Up and beyond.

This event is organised and subsidised by the MaRIUS project, and so has a very low price of either £25 for the conference incl. lunch and a drinks reception; or £35 for conference, lunch, drinks reception and dinner!

More information on the event can be found here: http://www.mariusdroughtproject.org/news/

Oct
17
Mon
“European Migration Crisis? Spaces of Transit, Migration Management and Migrant Agency” by Dr Leonie Ansems de Vries (King’s College London) @ Oxford Brookes University, John Henry Brookes Building, Room 401
Oct 17 @ 4:15 pm – 5:30 pm

Brookes Centre for Global Politics, Economics and Society seminar series

Oct
27
Thu
Laketown, or How a mythology for Switzerland came to contribute to a Mythology for England @ Christ Church, Lecture Room 2
Oct 27 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Laketown, or How a mythology for Switzerland came to contribute to a Mythology for England @ Christ Church, Lecture Room 2 | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Denis Bridoux (past editor of Mallorn, founder of the 1992 Tolkien centenary conference committee, convener of the Amon Sul branch of the Tolkien Society) will be visiting Oxford to give his talk entitled “Laketown, or How a mythology for Switzerland came to contribute to a Mythology for England”

Refreshments will be served after the talk

Synopsis:
“Laketown is one of the most iconic places in The Hobbit, but where did Tolkien get the idea? The concept of palafites (lacustrian dwellings), whereby people lived on platforms built on wooden stakes and piles above lake waters in prehistoric times, was first identified in Switzerland in the 1850s. It was soon included in all history schoolbooks , and it is indeed most probably the source for Laketown, but might not Tolkien have had a more personal inspiration? Denis Bridoux’s slideshow entitled Laketown, or How a mythology for Switzerland came to contribute to a Mythology for England, will attempt to answer those questions.”

Oct
29
Sat
Artist Talks at OVADA @ OVADA Gallery
Oct 29 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Artist Talks at OVADA @ OVADA Gallery | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

A free afternoon of artist talks.

3-5pm at OVADA Warehouse, Osney Lane.

Our guest speakers will be independent publishing house Hurst Street Press and fine artist Tommy Watkins.

This event is part of the exhibition ‘Blue Fades into the Invisible’ by Klick Oxford-Leiden.

Oct
31
Mon
Spitsbergen Retraced: A Journey into the High Arctic @ Department of Earth Sciences
Oct 31 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Spitsbergen Retraced: A Journey into the High Arctic @ Department of Earth Sciences

This July, a team of four from Oxford travelled high into the Arctic Circle to ski from East to West across the island of Spitsbergen.

For the first time in ninety-three years they retraced the route of a groundbreaking 1923 expedition that pioneered the exploration of this remote polar land.

Over the course of thirty-two entirely unsupported days they tracked down and repeated the photos from 1923, conducted scientific surveys and pursued mountaineering objectives old and new whilst capturing it all in film for an upcoming feature documentary.

Hosted by the Oxford University Exploration Club, join the Spitsbergen Retraced team to learn more about a journey into one of the last truly wild corners of our increasingly crowded planet.

svalbard2016.com

Free entry to members of the OUEC and, for this week only, OUMC members too. OUEC membership can be bought on the night.

Nov
16
Wed
Summertown & St Margaret’s Neighbourhood Forum AGM @ Woodstock Road Baptist Church Hall
Nov 16 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Summertown & St Margaret’s Neighbourhood Forum  AGM @ Woodstock Road Baptist Church Hall | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Dr Brenda Boardman will speak at the Neighbourhood Forum AGM on ‘How we can deliver a low carbon future for Summertown and St Margaret’s’.
Please come along. All welcome. Entry free.

Nov
17
Thu
From Munich to Athens – Biking along the refugee route through the Balkans @ Department of Earth Sciences
Nov 17 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
From Munich to Athens – Biking along the refugee route through the Balkans @ Department of Earth Sciences

8 countries, 50 days, 2300km, countless encounters – Between March and May of this year Christian cycled from Munich along the Western Balkan refugee route to Athens. Attempting to understand what European and national politics meant for people fleeing their homes, he engaged with NGOs, border guards and refugees along the route. He described and portrayed his fascinating encounters and experiences bilingually under https://chrisbikes.wordpress.com/ and on Facebook (www.facebook.com/chrisbikestoathens/).

On Thursday, 17 November, Chris will talk about his insightful tour, his touching impressions and the lessons to be drawn from his journey in the context of European and national migration and border policies.

Thinking about Disappointment: Understanding reactions to the Hobbit Trilogy @ Christ Church, Lecture Room 2
Nov 17 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Thinking about Disappointment: Understanding reactions to the Hobbit Trilogy @ Christ Church, Lecture Room 2

Martin Barker (Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at Aberystwyth University, Director of the Global Hobbit Project) will be visiting Oxford to discuss the results of the landmark Global Hobbit Project, a research initiative examining the popular reception of Peter Jackson’s Hobbit Film trilogy.

Synopsis:
“Tolkien aficionados may have disagreed somewhat among themselves about the value and achievements of the Lord of the Rings film trilogy. But any frustrations – or celebrations – over the 2001-3 films were nothing compared to the overwhelming sense of let-down occasioned by the Hobbit trilogy. But your disappointments are, I am afraid, grist to the mill of an audience researcher like me. In 2014 I led a consortium of researchers in 46 countries across the world, to gather responses to Peter Jackson’s second trilogy. We managed to attract just over 36,000 completions of our questionnaire. Of course, when we conceived and planned the project, we couldn’t know what the films would be like, or what range of responses and debates they might elicit. In this presentation I will (briefly) explain why and how we carried out the research, and offer some of its major findings. These can act, I hope, as a kind of mirror to the depths, and also the significance, of the sense of disappointment experienced by even the most hopeful and forgiving viewers. And they open an important agenda about the changing role of ‘fantasy’ in our contemporary culture.”

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)

Dec
1
Thu
You say acid, we say base: a critique of psychedelic ideology @ The Mitre (upstairs function room)
Dec 1 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
You say acid, we say base: a critique of psychedelic ideology @ The Mitre (upstairs function room) | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

A twenty minute talk to introduce the topic, followed by Q&As and about an hour’s discussion. All welcome.

Jan
24
Tue
Quintin Lake – Expedition Photography – Tuesday January 24th @ Department of Earth Sciences
Jan 24 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Quintin Lake - Expedition Photography - Tuesday January 24th @ Department of Earth Sciences

From Lesotho Rock art to Peruvian orchids, multi-award winning fine art photographer Quintin Lake will share his highlights from visiting over 70 countries.

Quintin will speak on his approach to expedition photography having photographed for expeditions to Greenland, Iran, Peru, Namibia and closer to home on various UK walks. This includes his ongoing project, The Perimeter, to walk the 10,000 km of coast around Britain, through which he has come to understand that exotic locations are not a prerequisite for adventure and discovery.

Jan
26
Thu
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School
Jan 26 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Oxford Botanic Garden Winter Lectures: Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate @ SaÏd Business School | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Mary Keen, Paradise and Plenty – the How and Wow of Lord Rothschild’s private garden on the Waddesdon Estate

Mary Keen is a writer, lecturer and renowned garden designer and will talk about the garden, its dedicated gardeners, past and present, and her book, which celebrates the tradition of excellence at Eythrope.

Feb
14
Tue
Why Restorative Practice is therapeutic, but not therapy @ The Mint House, (Oxford Centre for Restorative Practice)
Feb 14 @ 12:45 pm – 2:00 pm

Katherine Stoessel has worked in the field of restorative practice for over 20 years in the UK, the USA, West Africa, the Balkans and Eastern Europe and she is a regular facilitator and trainer for the Thames Valley Restorative Justice Service. She is privileged to work with these powerful and meaningful processes and they underpin her deep commitment to restorative approaches and the profound difference they can make to people’s lives.

Feb
21
Tue
Emily Chappell – The Road and the Sky @ Department of Earth Sciences
Feb 21 @ 7:30 pm
Emily Chappell – The Road and the Sky @ Department of Earth Sciences

Cyclist and author Emily Chappell has been travelling by bicycle for many years. Here she shares some of her more noteworthy adventures, from surviving the frozen Alaska Highway to winning the 4,000km Transcontinental Race across Europe.

Feb
22
Wed
The deceit of ‘flourishing for all’: facing up to the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning” – Oxford Future of Cities seminar programme @ Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine
Feb 22 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
The deceit of ‘flourishing for all’: facing up to the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning” - Oxford Future of Cities seminar programme @ Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine | England | United Kingdom

Jonathan Metzger (KTH, Sweden) will talk about the necessity of exclusion in environmental planning.

Abstract: A more-than-human sensibility is founded upon an awareness of the fundamentally entangled fates of humans and non-humans, from the individual body to the planetary scale. The purpose of this presentation is to probe some of the implications of such insights on planning theory and methodology, and to explore potential ways of studying the degree to which such insights actually influence existing planning practices.

In the first part of the presentation I briefly review some currently fashionable ‘radical’ planning theories from the angle of how they may contribute to enacting a more-than-human sensibility within planning processes. I suggest that their oft-repeated ambition of producing benefits ‘for all’ are deceitfully misguiding, since such claims effectively serve the function of covering up the ever-present biopolitical dimension of planning practice and the radical exclusions that necessarily must take place.

In the second part of the presentation I sketch the outlines of a research program investigating how urban planning and design professionals relate to the more-than-human biopolitical dimension of planning. I argue that it is necessary to focus not only on the degree of displayed reflectiveness regarding this type of issues, but also if/how this comes to affect their concrete professional practice.

Feb
28
Tue
Lord Browne – Annual Hands Lecture: A Changing World: The Future of the Energy Industry @ Examination Schools,
Feb 28 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Lord Browne of Madingley is presently Chairman of L1 Energy, the Chairman of Trustees of both the Tate and the QEII Prize for Engineering, and Chairman of the Advisory Board of the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University.

Mar
3
Fri
Heron-Allen Lecture 2017 with Rory Stewart MP: ‘Conservation, Development: Rhetoric and Reality’ @ Lady Margaret Hall
Mar 3 @ 5:45 pm – 7:15 pm

With Rory Stewart OBE MP, Minister of State at the Department for International Development and Conservative MP for Penrith and The Border.

Mar
8
Wed
Be-longing. Humanimal crowding in the city (Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities) @ 47 Banbury Road,
Mar 8 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

The paper evolves from research Tora Holmberg has done for several years when capturing the more-than-human experiences and politics of living in the city. The research comes together through the concept of “humanimal crowding”, a sociospatial process through which bodies and places become transformed. Empirically, phenomena such as animal hoarding, feral feeding and shelter movements will be scrutinized. In the presentation of urban humanimal becomings, meaning and materiality, space and time, interaction and form, can be summarized with the term “be-longing”. Drawing on Lefebvre’s dialectical approach, “be-longing” is partly about conceptualizing the practices, materialities and emotions which make us at home, and partly about listening to the statements of affiliation and othering, to cultivate a place sensitivity that takes advantage of the senses of the sociologist. In short, the paper concerns how humans and other animals perform belonging in cities, and in turn, through their movements and interactions, transform the meaning and politics of places.

Mar
10
Fri
Climate Change Morphing into an Existential Problem @ Oxford Martin School
Mar 10 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

​With unchecked emissions of climate pollutants, there is a 50% probability for the planetary warming to cross the so-called dangerous threshold of 20C by 2050; and there is at least a 5% probability the warming can exceed a catastrophic 60C in about 80+ years.
For the bottom three billion in rural areas, 20C would be enough to pose existential threats. With a 60C warming accompanied by 10 billion population, loss of bio diversity and species extinction, we should ask: whether civilization as we know it can be extended beyond this century?
Is there still time to avoid such catastrophes? The answer is Yes. But, we need to reinforce the technological and the market-based solutions with societal transformation. An alliance between scientists, policy makers, religious institutions and health care providers has a good chance to bring the needed transformation.

Apr
4
Tue
Pete Newbold – Recording the invisible @ Old School Room, St Peter’s Church
Apr 4 @ 7:45 pm – 9:15 pm
Pete Newbold - Recording the invisible @ Old School Room, St Peter’s Church | England | United Kingdom

Peter Newbold will give an introduction to the Mammals of Oxfordshire and an overview of how to identify and record this illusive taxon.
After studying Environmental Science at Southampton University, Peter has been a professional ecologist for over ten years, working for Natural England, the RSPB and more recently as a private consultant with BSG Ecology (a local consultancy). He was one of the founding members of the Oxfordshire Mammal Group and is their Survey and Data officer.

Apr
25
Tue
How does it all end? Syria, Iraq and Kurdistan @ St Catherine's College, Oxford
Apr 25 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
How does it all end? Syria, Iraq and Kurdistan @ St Catherine's College, Oxford | England | United Kingdom

St Catherine’s College is delighted to welcome Ambassador Peter Galbraithback this April to give a lecture on the current situation in the Middle East. Drawing on his first-hand expertise of the region he will consider the question: How does it all end? Syria, Iraq and Kurdistan.

Peter was appointed as the first United States Ambassador to Croatia by President Bill Clinton in 1993, where he was actively involved in the peace processes in Croatia and Bosnia. He has a wealth of professional experience in international relations, with particular expertise on Iraq and its Kurdish region. Peter travelled to Iraq during the Kurdish uprising, exposing Saddam Hussein’s atrocities and contributing to the decision to create a safe haven in the north of the country. From 2003 to 2005, he was an advisor to the Kurdish Regional Government in Iraq. He is the author of two books: The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War without End (2006) and Unintended Consequences: How War in Iraq Strengthened America’s Enemies (2008).