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

Jun
1
Wed
St Peter’s College: EU Referendum Forum @ St Peter's College Chapel
Jun 1 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
St Peter's College: EU Referendum Forum @ St Peter's College Chapel | Oxford | United Kingdom

Three high-profile SPC alumni return to their college to discuss the impending EU Referendum in a forum chaired by the Master, Mark Damazer CBE.

Join the Editor of the Sunday Times, Martin Ivens (BA Modern History – 1977), the Deputy Editor of the New Statesman, Helen Lewis (BA English – 2001), and the BBC’s Political Correspondent Ben Wright (BA Modern History – 1996) for a panel discussion in which they will cut through the rhetoric surrounding this most controversial of issues in contemporary British politics, and who will then face your questions.

Jun
8
Wed
Equalities Research Network ‘Mind the Gap’ Seminar Series: ‘Alternative Realities and New Perspectives on Family Violence’ Panel Discussion @ Jacqueline du Pre Music Building
Jun 8 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

“Alternative Realities and New Perspectives on Family Violence”

Panel Discussion 2:

Professor Marianne Hester, Centre for Gender and Violence Research, Bristol University – “Intimate Partner Violence in LGBTQ Relationships – What’s Gender Got To Do with It?”

Professor Rachel Condry, Associate Professor of Criminology, Oxford University – “Making Sense of Adolescent to Parent Violence”

Dr Carlene Firmin, Head of the MsUnderstood Partnership and Senior Research Fellow at Bedfordshire University – “Contextual Dimensions of Abuse in Young People’s Relationships”

Jun
15
Wed
How does conservation impact local people’s wellbeing (and how can we know?) @ Herbertson Room, School of Geography and the Environment, South Parks Road
Jun 15 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
How does conservation impact local people's wellbeing (and how can we know?) @ Herbertson Room, School of Geography and the Environment, South Parks Road | Oxford | United Kingdom

There is increasing recognition over the last decade that conservation, while conserving biodiversity of global value, can have local costs. Understanding these costs is essential as a first step to delivering conservation projects that do not make some of the poorest people on the planet poorer. Using examples from Madagascar and Bolivia, we explore the challenges of quantifying the impact of conservation on local wellbeing.
Julia Jones is Professor in conservation science at the School of Environment, Natural Resources and Geography, Bangor University. Julia is interested in how people interact with natural resources and how incentives can be best designed to maintain ecosystem services; for example the growing field of Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) and how schemes such as REDD+ can effectively deliver global environmental benefits while also having a positive impact on local livelihoods. She also has a strong interest in the design of robust conservation monitoring using different types of data, and in analysing the evidence underpinning environmental policies and decisions.

Sharing your genetic blueprint – who should have access? @ Said Business School
Jun 15 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
Sharing your genetic blueprint - who should have access? @ Said Business School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Welcome to Future Debates, a series of public events supported by the British Science Association.

A genome is an entire set of DNA; all the instructions for making every part of a living thing. Research into our genomes could improve our understanding of diseases, cancers and passing on certain traits. The application of this research through genomic medicine is at the cutting edge of science. There’s large potential for the technology to help us create new treatments and preventative approaches.

Someone’s genome can explain lots of things about them, and we don’t yet understand all of what the genetic code means. Genome data is being collected from a group of patients with rare diseases and cancers across the UK, as part of the Genomics England 100,000 Genomes Project. This information needs to be collected and stored securely, interpreted by experts and viewed in a way that protects the donor’s identity. There have been discussions among scientists about the implications of genomic medicine for privacy and the NHS, and the British Science Association believes that it is vital to open that conversation up to the public.

Come and join our panel of scientists and other experts to discuss who should have access to this data. Should genomic data be used outside medicine? Should private companies share any profits they make from genomic data with participants? Does the right to privacy outweigh the societal benefit of genomic research?

Doors open from 6.00 pm, and the debate will run from 6.30 pm until 8.00 pm.

Future Debates events are part of the British Science Association’s work to make science a fundamental part of British society and culture. We want to empower many more people – not just scientists – to constructively engage in debates over the applications and implications of science in their lives, their local economy and the UK’s future.

Follow us on twitter @LivingWellOx @HumanGeneticsOx @BritSciAssoc and use the event hashtag #FutureDebates

Jun
18
Sat
Women: A Century of Change @ Magdalen College School
Jun 18 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm

A lively panel discussion exploring women’s ever changing roles and struggle for equality, featuring speakers Professor Ngaire Woods, Dr Dana Mills, Dr Joanna Williams and Helen Pike.

Photographic Portraiture @ Oxford Playhouse
Jun 18 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

A discussion with photographer Alison Baskerville and curator Brigitte Lardinois that will consider women as photographers and photographic subjects, and the effects of social and technological change on portrait photography over the last 100 years.

Helen Yemm: Thorny Problems Live @ University of Oxford Botanic Garden
Jun 18 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Helen Yemm: Thorny Problems Live @ University of Oxford Botanic Garden | Oxford | United Kingdom

Telegraph writer Helen Yemm brings her column Thorny Problems to life by answering your gardening conundrums and dispensing invaluable advice in the picturesque setting of the Botanic Garden.

Jun
23
Thu
Gaming: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly @ Magdalen College School
Jun 23 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Gaming: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly @ Magdalen College School | Oxford | United Kingdom

Research psychologist Peter Etchells and author of ‘Death by Video Game’, Simon Parker, discuss the positive and negative effects of gaming.

Jun
28
Tue
Oxford Union Debate: The UK Borders @ Oxford Union
Jun 28 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Oxford Union Debate: The UK Borders @ Oxford Union | Oxford | United Kingdom

Join Oxford Festival of the Arts at the prestigious and historic Oxford Union for an evening of top class debating that will tackle one of this year’s key issues: the UK’s immigration policy.

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

Jun
29
Wed
PUBLIC DEBATE – IS GENETIC ENGINEERING OF HUMANS ETHICALLY JUSTIFIED? @ Oxford Town Hall, Assembly Room
Jun 29 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
PUBLIC DEBATE - IS GENETIC ENGINEERING OF HUMANS ETHICALLY JUSTIFIED? @ Oxford Town Hall, Assembly Room | Oxford | United Kingdom

‘Gene-editing’ sounds like science fiction, but today it is an emerging reality. This raises hope for treating medical problems, but also opens ethical quandaries about equality, privacy, and personal freedom. Discuss these questions with a panel of experts including geneticist Andy Greenfield, science fiction author Paul McAuley and science policy advisor Elizabeth Bohm. Lisa Melton, Senior News Editor at Nature Biotechnology, will moderate the event, with Ben Davies, Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, presenting technical background.

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

Jun
30
Thu
Future of Education @ Magdalen College School
Jun 30 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Future of Education @ Magdalen College School | Oxford | United Kingdom

The question of how to educate the next generation has always been fraught with the anxieties of the age – so what do our current approaches reveal about our own anxieties? Discover the answer to this and more at our lively panel discussion.

Jul
1
Fri
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
21
Thu
Is the party over? The British left in crisis @ Blavatnik School of Government
Jul 21 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

With a bruising new leadership contest underway and member set against member, Labour looks to be on the verge of splitting. Who is to blame? Would British politics benefit from a reconfiguration? And what other reforms does the system need in the wake of the Brexit vote?
John McTernan, commentator and former Political Secretary to Tony Blair
Isabel Hardman, Assistant Editor of The Spectator
Emily Jones, Associate Professor in Public Policy, Blavatnik School of Government (chair)
Tim Bale, Professor of Politics, Queen Mary, University of London
Anthony Barnett, writer and founder of the openDemocracy website

Sep
16
Fri
Corruption in Developing Countries @ Seminar Room G, Manor Road Building, University of Oxford
Sep 16 @ 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Nov
3
Thu
Far-Left and Far-Right Politics: The New Threat to Liberalism @ Kennedy Room (JHB 308), John Henry Brookes Building
Nov 3 @ 6:00 pm – 7:15 pm
Far-Left and Far-Right Politics: The New Threat to Liberalism @ Kennedy Room (JHB 308), John Henry Brookes Building | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

Haydar Zaki is outreach officer for the Quilliam Foundation and works extensively on projects that aim to promote values integral to Quilliam’s ethos, such as universal human rights.

His outreach work primarily involves working with universities and university societies. This includes establishing Quilliam university societies with students dedicated to upholding values of human rights and freedom of speech, through pro-freedom of speech campaigns such as #Right2Debate campaign. All university outreach is conducted with the intended aim of both keeping freedom of speech in universities intact, and challenging extremist narratives through an empowered student community.

He has participated in many outreach events at universities and schools with his main area of expertise being the role ideology plays in influencing the psychological outlook of an individual and their environment. He is also an avid campaigner for global democracy, social justice, secular democracy in Iraq and ending intra-Muslim discrimination.

This talk will discuss the role of identity politics and some of the dangers it poses.

Nov
17
Thu
Distinguished Speaker Seminar: Michael R. Bloomberg @ Saïd Business School
Nov 17 @ 5:45 pm – 6:45 pm

Distinguished Speaker Seminar: Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg in conversation with Peter Tufano
Thursday 17 November 2016, 5.45 – 6.45pm

Oxford Saïd is excited to announce that Michael R. Bloomberg, Founder of Bloomberg LP and former Mayor of New York City, will be speaking at the School, on Thursday 17 November.
We are extremely fortunate that Mr Bloomberg will be visiting Oxford and anticipate this event will sell out very quickly. Registration is essential so please use the ‘Book now’ link above to confirm your attendance at your earliest convenience.

About the speaker
Michael R. Bloomberg is the founder of Bloomberg LP, philanthropist, UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Cities and Climate Change, World Health Organization Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable Diseases, and three-term mayor of New York City.
He is an entrepreneur and philanthropist who served as mayor of New York City from 2002-2013 after leading the company he started in 1981 for 20 years. Since leaving City Hall, he has resumed leadership of Bloomberg LP.
A lifelong philanthropist, Bloomberg founded Bloomberg Philanthropies, which focuses on five main areas: public health, education, the environment, the arts, and government innovation. He also leads a number of bi-partisan coalitions on urgent issues, including climate change, illegal guns, immigration reform, and infrastructure investment.

Registration
Please remember that registration is required to attend this event. The seminar is open for anyone to attend and will take place at Saïd Business School followed by a short networking drinks reception until around 7.30pm.

Please note that filming, live streaming and photography will be taking place during this event. By entering and participating you are giving your permission to be recorded and for the School to us the media in future.

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)

Nov
30
Wed
Jenny Josephs & Why eating insects might soon become the new normal @ St Aldates Tavern
Nov 30 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Jenny Josephs & Why eating insects might soon become the new normal

By 2050 the global population will reach 9 billion and this will put ever increasing pressure on food and environmental resources. It will be a challenge to ensure global food security without further damaging the environment with intensified farming practices.

One UN backed solution is to focus on alternative sources of protein, such as insects for food and animal feed. About 2 billion of us already include insects in our diets, though it is still a growing trend in the west.

Insects are described as having a variety of different flavours, from mushroomy to pistachio or pork crackling. They are comparable to beef in protein and contain beneficial nutrients like iron and calcium. Their environmental impact is also minimal, requiring far less water and feed than cattle, and releasing fewer emissions.

During this talk, Jenny will explain how insects might replace some of the meat in our diets and also give some tips on how to cook them. You will be invited to sample some tasty bug snacks after the talk!

Bio: After completing a PhD in Visual Cognition at the University of Southampton, Jenny changed course and started The Bug Shack – a business promoting and selling edible insects. Jenny is a regular speaker at Skeptics events and science festivals and she recently returned from a trip to research attitudes towards eating and farming insects in Thailand and Laos.

7.30PM start at St. Aldates Tavern, and entry is free, although we do suggest a donation of around £3 to cover speaker expenses. We tend to get busy, so arrive early to make sure you get a seat. Come along and say hello! All welcome. http://oxford.skepticsinthepub.org/Event.aspx/8101/Why-eating-insects-might-soon-become-the-new-normal

Join the Facebook event and invite your friends: https://www.facebook.com/events/1317127301666085/

Dec
1
Thu
Tackling inequality: strategies, priorities and effects – Panel Discussion @ Oxford Martin School
Dec 1 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Tackling inequality: strategies, priorities and effects - Panel Discussion @ Oxford Martin School | Oxford | England | United Kingdom

For the final event in our series, we’re bringing together a panel of experts to discuss approaches to tackling inequality. Each panellist will draw on their own research and experience to put forward a response to the question of how to tackle inequality and its effects, before we open up to a wider discussion, with questions from the audience.

Speakers:

* Professor Brian Nolan, Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Inequality and Prosperity (Chair)
* Professor Sir Paul Collier, Co-Director, Oxford Institute for Global Economic Development, Oxford Martin School and Professor of Economics and Public Policy, Blavatnik School of Government
* Professor Sandy Fredman, Co-Director, Oxford Martin Programme on Human Rights for Future Generations
* Professor John Goldthorpe, Emeritus Fellow, Nuffield College
* Professor Simonetta Manfredi, Professor in Equality and Diversity Management and Director, Centre for Diversity Policy Research & Practice, Oxford Brookes University

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.

Feb
22
Wed
Oxford Fabian Society presents: Identity and British Politics @ Danson Room, Trinity College
Feb 22 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Oxford Fabian Society presents: Identity and British Politics @ Danson Room, Trinity College | England | United Kingdom

Following the Brexit vote on 23 June 2016 and the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States of America, there has been a rise in reported hate crime, often racially-orientated, in Britain and the USA.

But what role did identity politics play in the Brexit referendum outcome and how will this relatively new phenomenon shape politics in 2017 and beyond?

Does it signal that Europe and North America are swerving away from multiculturalism, and if so, what does this mean?

On the one hand some commentators argue that almost all political ideas and activity can be viewed through the lens of identity, whereas others posit that the entire topic is a distraction and we should instead focus on core economic and social issues such as jobs and housing.

Join the Oxford Fabian Society to discuss these important issues and to shape what we do about it.

Our panel:

1. Nesrine Malik writes for a number of publications including The Guardian and is a regular broadcaster.

2. Amina Gichinga stood as a candidate in the May 2016 elections in the London Borough of Newham.

3. Ella Whelan is assistant editor at Spiked and co-convenor of spiked’s campaign Invoke Article 50 NOW!

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.

May
18
Thu
Oxford Fabian Society presents: General Election public debate @ West Oxford Community Centre
May 18 @ 7:45 pm – 9:30 pm
Oxford Fabian Society presents: General Election public debate @ West Oxford Community Centre | England | United Kingdom

Featuring Professor Glen O’Hara (Oxford Brookes) and more TBC.

Jun
14
Wed
Book launch: Theology and New Materialism | Dr John Reader @ Danson Room, Trinity College
Jun 14 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Book launch: Theology and New Materialism | Dr John Reader @ Danson Room, Trinity College | England | United Kingdom

Dr John Reader launches his new book, published by Palgrave Macmillan – Theology and New Materialism: Spaces of Faithful Dissent. A panel presentation will preface a wider debate following chapters in the book which include not only issues of human agency and transcendence, but also the search for a New Enlightenment and practical issues of politics, aesthetics and technology.

Jun
20
Tue
Should We Synthesise Human Genomes? @ Oxford Town Hall
Jun 20 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Should We Synthesise Human Genomes? @ Oxford Town Hall | England | United Kingdom

The first synthetic virus self-replicated in 2002. Its DNA molecules were created in a laboratory, using genetic information copied from nature. In 2016 an international project, the Human Genome Project – Write, was launched to synthesise and recode entire human genomes.
Join a panel to discuss biosecurity and ethics, science fiction, practical limits and
possible futures related to our species.

Marianne Talbot is a bioethicist and Director of Studies in Philosophy at the University
of Oxford Department for Continuing Education.
Piers Millett is a Senior Research Fellow at the Future of Humanity Institute, where he
focuses on pandemic and deliberate disease and the implications of biotechnology.
Justina Robson is a science fiction author. Her novel Natural History, was reviewed by The Guardian: “clarity of vision now demonstrates itself as her major asset, making her one of the very best of the new British hard SF writers.”

Jun
29
Thu
Living with the Living Dead: The Wisdom of the Zombie Apocalypse @ Blackwell’s Bookshop
Jun 29 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Living with the Living Dead: The Wisdom of the Zombie Apocalypse @ Blackwell’s Bookshop | England | United Kingdom

Join us for the first in Blackwell’s free summer series of lunchtime events, where we will be joined by Greg Garrett author of ‘Living with the Living Dead’.
The zombie apocalypse is one of the most prominent narratives of the post 9/11 West, represented by popular movies, TV shows, games, apps, activities, and material culture. Greg explores why stories about the living dead serve a variety of functions for consumers and explains how representations of Death and the walking dead have appeared in other times of great stress and danger, including the Middle Ages and World War One.
Greg Garrett blogs on books, culture, religion, politics, travel, and food for The Huffington Post. He is the author or co-author of twenty books and one of America’s leading authorities on religion and culture.

Jul
5
Wed
Is it time to decolonise the curriculumn? @ The Studio, Magdalen College School
Jul 5 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Is it time to decolonise the curriculumn? @ The Studio, Magdalen College School | England | United Kingdom

Is it time to decolonise the curriculum?

The demand to decolonise education is growing ever louder. From Rhodes Must Fall in South Africa, and here in Oxford, to the “Why is my curriculum so white?” campaign at University College London, there is a call to make school and university curricula more representative and diverse. In January this year, students and academics at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London hit the headlines with their campaign to Decolonise Our Minds because of newspaper reports that this would mean dropping Plato, Locke and Kant from the Philosophy syllabus. Meanwhile, the Faculty of History at the University of Oxford announced a major shakeup to its curriculum last month, as undergraduates will now have to sit a compulsory paper on non-British, non-European, history.

Are these sensible steps towards a more inclusive and diverse educational system, or an attempt to rewrite history around contemporary obsessions with identity and culture? Does the focus on recognising excluded voices serve to make a more inclusive educational system, or does the demand to decolonise risk reflecting back to students their own cultural identity rather than taking them beyond their existing cultural and intellectual horizons?

Speakers:

Rekgotsofetse (Kgotsi) Chikane is National President of InkuluFreeHeid, a non-partisan youth-led organisation that seeks to deepen democracy in South Africa. He is a former Mandela Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford, and a recent YALI Mandela Washington Fellow, and a founding member of the Rhodes Must Fall campaign in South Africa.

Dr Cheryl Hudson is Lecturer in American History at the University of Liverpool. She was formerly the Academic Programme Director at the Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford and was an Associate of the Centre for the Study of Higher Education, University of Kent, 2015-16. She has taught at Oxford, Sheffield, Coventry, Vanderbilt and Sussex. She is the author of, amongst other things, A Century of Academic Freedom (2016).

Professor Pekka Hämäläinen is Rhodes Professor of American History at the University of Oxford, and a fellow of St Catherine’s College, Oxford. He is a historian of early and nineteenth-century North America, specialising in indigenous, colonial, imperial, environmental, and borderlands history. His book, The Comanche Empire (Yale, 2008), received twelve awards, including the Bancroft Prize, the Merle Curti Award, and the Caughey Prize and has been translated into Spanish and French.
Kenan Malik is a writer, lecturer and broadcaster. He has presented Analysis, on BBC Radio 4, and Nightwaves, on BBC Radio 3, and was a regular panelist on BBC Radio 4’s The Moral Maze. Kenan is the author of numerous books, including Multiculturalism and its Discontents (Seagull, 2013), From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and its Legacy (Atlantic, 2009 ), Strange Fruit: Why Both Sides are Wrong in the Race Debate (Oneworld, 2008), and The Meaning of Race: Race, History and Culture in Western Society (Palgrave, 1996). His latest book is The Quest for a Moral Compass: A Global History of Ethics (2014).

Arts Festival website details: http://www.artsfestivaloxford.org/whats-on/debates-and-discussions/the-education-debate

A limited number of free tickets available – email jpanton@mcsoxford.org to reserve.

Oct
28
Sat
What is Feminism? Morning Tea & Discussions @ Restore Cafe
Oct 28 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

What does it mean to be a feminist? Who can be a feminist? And is there a right and wrong way of doing it?

Join us on a unique journey through feminist history, adding your voice as we discuss key moments in literature, art, politics, music, sport, and science to develop our understanding of feminism.

You’ll discover knowledge you didn’t realise you had as we join together the pieces of feminist history and women’s achievements in this fun, interactive workshop.

We will identify different stages and criticisms of feminism and consider intersections with race, LGBTIQ, age, and disability politics. We look for silences and unacknowledged voices, and consider the privileges and biases in our own perspectives.