深夜亚洲福利久久

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About our Seminar Series

The Department of Sociology & Criminology hosts a regular seminar series. This is a time for all of us (Staff and Postgrads) to come together and share our work and ideas with one another. We want to create a positive and encouraging atmosphere so that we can have some fruitful exchanges and really learn about what each of us are working on to create and contribute to an ongoing conversation. Seminars also help to establish good professional links and contacts, and just generally facilitate our department鈥檚 research community.  

The seminars are open to all interested staff and postgraduate students from other departments in the university, and beyond.

Our Seminar Series 2026

2nd April 2026 - Dr Tine Munk

Title: Memes: The New Digital Battlefield in War and Conflict

CACSSS Seminar Room, G27, ORB, 12-2pm

Abstract:

Memes are no longer just light-hearted internet humour; they have become powerful tools in contemporary conflict and wars. This presentation explores 鈥榤emetic warfare鈥 by distinguishing between offensive uses (disruption, manipulation, and provocation) and defensive uses (resilience, solidarity, and counter-narratives).

Focusing on the war in Ukraine, the presentation shows how memes play a central role in digital resistance and strategic communication among state and non-state actors engaged in online information warfare. It then broadens the lens to consider how memes, short-form videos, and visual culture are increasingly used in geopolitical conflicts, functioning as a shared language of war in which online users are active participants.

The presentation draws on the online-offline continuum approach as a criminological framework for understanding the actions, actors, and consequences shaping these communications. This approach highlights how memes move between digital and physical spaces, creating ongoing feedback loops that influence real-world perceptions and responses. Overall, the presentation positions memetic warfare as a central and evolving feature of contemporary conflict communication. 

Bio:

Dr Tine Munk is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Criminal Justice at Nottingham Trent 深夜亚洲福利久久. Her research focuses on cybercrime, information and memetic warfare, and digital extremism, examining how actors operate across the online-offline continuum to shape political communication and online actions. She has authored three monographs: The Rise ofPolitically Motivated Cyber Attacks (2022), Memetic War: Online Resistance in Ukraine (2024), and Far-Right Extremism Online (2024). Her work explores how digital environments are used to advance both offensive and defensive forms ofcommunication on social media.

She has led the British Academy-funded project The Complex Web of Memetic Warfare (2024鈥2025), a collaboration between Nottingham Trent 深夜亚洲福利久久 and Aarhus 深夜亚洲福利久久, Denmark. Her publication, Digital Defiance: Memetic Warfare and Civic Resistance (2025), further develops this work. Munk has also co-edited Victimisation in the Digital Age (2025) and New Forms of Civic Resistance and Activism (2026) and has published on information disorder, the UK 2024 riots, and far-right extremism.

 

2024-2025 Seminars

15th February, Dr Joan Cronin and Dr John O'Brien (UCC)

Title: Building Resonance and Overcoming Rationalisation: The potential and barriers to dog-training programmes in prisons.

Dog training as an element of wider animal-assisted therapies in prisons can ameliorate the pains of imprisonment, and help build recovery capital. To investigate this eight in-depth interviews were carried out with prison staff, dog trainers working for a charity that provides assistance dogs to disabled people, and incarcerated men assisting with the training of dogs for the charity. All worked on the same programme which runs in an open prison. The testimony of all parties noted that involvement builds relationships, improves communication ability, instils agency, inspires self-respect, builds personal strengths, and helps to overcome the pains of imprisonment. Overall, involvement is experienced as a type of conversion, from being 鈥榟ard鈥 to 鈥榮oftening鈥, as an orientation that objectifies one鈥檚 self and others is replaced by a subjectifying orientation, with an ability to get in touch with oneself and others. We interpret its effect as fostering 鈥榬esonance鈥 where people are put into relationship with the world, overcoming alienation and instrumentalization (Rosa 2019). However, the project takes place in the context of the inherently problematic prison environment; an environment that is inherently alienating and instrumentalised. It thus succeeds through a strategic engagement with the prison bureaucracy. Relationships, reciprocity, informal understandings and trust are the lubricant that allows it to succeed. Incarcerated men must be able to step outside of their prescribed roles in the prison hierarchy. The programme on an organisational level succeeds due to the open prison environment, where features of a total institution are dialled down. Thus it has a precarious existence and future due to the tension between bureaucratic expediency and personalised ways of making good things happen.

February 10th 2025 - Dr Susannah Chapman (UCC)

Title: The Affective Relations of Loss: Reflections on the conservation, life, and death of 鈥榗rop diversity鈥 in The Gambia

Since the mid-twentieth century, concerns about crop diversity loss have spurred large-scale efforts to assess, collect, bank and conserve agricultural biodiversity. In this context, plants, seeds, and their genes have emerged as vital 鈥榞enetic resources鈥 that provide essential 鈥榚cosystem services鈥. In The Gambia, for example, national level assessments sent to the Food and Agriculture Organization present agricultural diversity as a valuable economic 鈥榓sset鈥 and 鈥榮ervice鈥 that is in concerning decline. In this talk, I reflect on the differences between such accounts of loss and the accounts of varietal life and varietal death offered by Gambian farmers. In The Gambia, farmers describe the life cycle of cultivars in ways that often parallel the life of persons. Cultivars come into and remain in existence by being held in relation with (human) others. While cultivars can be lost to drought, birds, or too many people leaving the farm, loss also happens because people abandon varieties intentionally. Here I argue that Gambian farmers offer an account of varietal existence predicated upon relational care and respect, one in which varieties are always becoming and in which loss is always a possibility, sometimes even a necessity. Such accounts invite reflection on the very frames used to apprehend the loss and persistence of crop diversity, including the varied practices of care deployed in the name of conservation.

March 11th - Dr G眉l莽in Con Wright (TED 深夜亚洲福利久久, Turkey)

Title: Families in Later Life: Intergenerational Family Ties and Exchanges of Support in Turkish and American Families

Time and location: Askive, G01, Tuesday 11th March, 12:00-13:00

With rising life expectancy, intergenerational ties within families throughout the life course have become increasingly significant in people鈥檚 lives. Upward and downward flows of support play a critical role in these ties, which affect the wellbeing of both generations. The principle of 鈥榣inked lives鈥 in life course perspective indicates that one family member鈥檚 experiences are inextricably linked to those of other family members, whether this experience is a major life transition or merely emotional closeness. In this seminar, I will present the findings of several of my projects conducted on Turkish and American families from a life course perspective. I will highlight the key dynamics of intergenerational family ties ranging from grandparental care to parental favoritism. Focusing on the perspectives of both older parents and adult children, this seminar aims to spark discussions about the diversity and complexity of familial relationships throughout the life course.

Bio: G眉l莽in Con Wright is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and serves as the Department Head at TED 深夜亚洲福利久久. She received her Dual Title PhD. on Sociology and Gerontology from Purdue 深夜亚洲福利久久, USA. Her teaching interests include family sociology, sociology of the body, medical sociology, sociology of aging, and gender. She continues to conduct research on gender dynamics in intergenerational relationships and caregiving in later life in Turkish as well as American families.

Dec 4th 2024 - Dr Nadia Aghtaie (深夜亚洲福利久久 of Bristol)

Title: Victim-Survivor and Practitioner Perspectives on Religious Arbitration within the Muslim Faith 

This presentation examines the perspectives of victim-survivors and practitioners on religious arbitration within the Muslim faith, with a specific focus on Sharia councils in the UK. Drawing on two studies, the research explores how "justice" is understood, sought, and experienced by women engaging with these councils and the professionals supporting them. The findings suggest two key themes: (1) spiritual abuse, where religious teachings are misused to justify or perpetuate abuse, and (2) structural coercion, where systemic barriers compel women to use religious arbitration systems to achieve justice. These themes highlight the complexities faced by women navigating faith-based mechanisms in the UK and the broader challenges in ensuring their agency and equity in these processes. The presentation offers critical insights for policymakers, practitioners, and advocates working to address gender-based violence in faith-based contexts.

Biographical note: Dr Nadia Aghtaie is an internationally recognised academic specialising in violence, justice, and gender-based violence (GBV). Her research spans interpersonal, cultural, structural, and spiritual abuse, with a particular focus on the Muslim context. Dr Aghtaie is also an expert in participatory research methodologies and has extensive expertise in young people鈥檚 experiences of GBV. Her current project focuses on sextortion, further advancing the understanding of coercion and abuse in digital and social contexts.

Nov 19th - Dr Myles Balfe (UCC)

Title: Abjection in Nirvana鈥檚 In Utero

Nirvana's 'In Utero' was one of the most important Grunge albums, and albums more generally, of the 1990s. In Utero is much harsher and more abrasive than Nevermind. It's lyrics are also more idiosyncratic and darker. This seminar argues that the main theme of In Utero is abjection. 

This seminar, like Nirvana's music, directly addresses the topics of suicide, illness, self-harm and sexual violence.  Some listeners might find this upsetting.

Nov 13th 2024 - Dr Robert Porter (UU)

Title: The 深夜亚洲福利久久 in Crumbs: A Register of Things Seen and Heard

Reading from his latest book, The 深夜亚洲福利久久 in Crumbs, 'Robert' will talk specifically, and somewhat parochially, about the place and purpose of critique in the contemporary academy, and make a bit of a tit of himself doing so. He will rant about how the very notion of critique is 'shot through with the logic of the commodity-form'. He will caustically describe the contemporary academy as a 'spectacle of disintegration'. He will dismiss critique in and of the academy as ' cynical', 'highly stylised' and 'mannerist'. In other words, 'Robert' will slip into his usual supposedly 'critical' academic persona, succumbing to the generic pull of a kind of 'slam-dunk philosophism' that is little more than diatribe.   

Occupying a space in-between conventional scholarship and imaginative storytelling, The 深夜亚洲福利久久 in Crumbs: A Register of Things Seen and Heard is an experimental work that dramatizes the everyday life of the academy. Consisting primarily of a series of five first-person reports, Robert Porter, Kerry-Ann Porter and Iain Mackenzie provide the reader with a number of stories that attempt to capture some of their everyday experiences of academic life in the UK, roughly between 2017 and 2022.

Robert Porter is a social, cultural and political theorist at Ulster 深夜亚洲福利久久 and the author of seven books. His latest book, co-authored with Richard Ekins, is a sociology of popular music entitled: The Politics of Authenticating: Revisiting New Orleans Jazz. Currently, Robert is working on a new book looking at 'astrological reasoning' in various forms of organisational, cultural and political life. 

Nov 6th 2024 - Dr Julius-Cezar Macarie (UCC)

Title: Nightnography: We Are Not Night Creatures

This seminar talk is based on a book chapter 鈥楴ightnography: We are not night creatures鈥, published in Invisible Nightworkers in 24/7 London (MacQuarie 2023). This chapter is now available Open Access via CORA (Cork Open Research Archive), 深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork. Download .

Abstract: The chapter maps out the emerging sub-field in anthropology 鈥 nocturnal ethnography. Nightnography is a multi-mixed method that stems from anthropology. Nightnography, that is, in-person observation in the late hours after dark or at night (MacQuarie 2021; MacQuarie 2023), marks a radical departure from established diurnal work patterns in anthropology, not only because it approaches the participants through reversing the diurnal temporal axis 鈥 at night. But also, because it teaches how essential studying licit activities between sunset and sunrise is, as opposed to studying illicit ones through which people tried to make a living (such as theft, burglaries and prostitution), often associated with the night or darkness. This talk will show that nightnography is wide in scope, and that it can be used in many disciplines or fields, which use ethnographic approaches, such as geography, sociology, migration and business studies, by novice or seasoned researchers.

Oct 16th - Dr Tom Boland (UCC)

Title: Iconoclastic Critics?: Understanding the 鈥榡ust like a religion鈥 critique.

Contemporary commentators, primarily on the broad right, tend to critique their opponents as being 鈥榡ust like a religion鈥, invoking figures of zealots, dogma, mantras, high-priests and so forth. While openness to debate is often a key value of these commentators, this discursive manoeuvre tends to position the other as an unthinking ideologue or a duplicitous manipulator. In books, articles, blogs and social media posts, this iconoclastic critique has become commonplace, disfiguring opponents as 鈥榩ost-modernists鈥, 鈥榗ritical social justice鈥 or 鈥榳oke鈥 in a negative valance. These 鈥榠conoclastic critics鈥 position themselves as reasonable, dedicated to debate, and describe opponents via a dichotomy of ideology and critique, employing metaphors of depth. Crucially, they tend to distort or disfigure their opponents鈥 claims, redescribing them through religious metaphors. This analysis informs a reflexive consideration of critical discourse generally and considering the extent to which characteristics of this 鈥榠conoclastic critique鈥 are shared across political divides.

Oct 9th - Dr Gema Kloppe Santa-Maria (UCC)

Title: Violence, Religion, and the Secular: Towards a Decolonial Approach to Violence and Conflict in Mexico

This presentation examines the relative absence of religion in scholarly analyses of contemporary violence in Mexico, particularly in studies that emphasize the roles of drug cartels, state actors, and political-criminal networks. While a substantial historiography exists on the Cristero War, broader considerations of religious violence remain limited and largely disconnected from current interpretations of the country鈥檚 violent landscape. I argue that this omission reflects a secularized epistemic framework, shaped by what Yountae An terms the "hegemonic installation of secularism" within Western thought. This framework enforces a rigid division between religion and politics, privatizes belief, and casts religion as either irrational or epiphenomenal in relation to political conflict. Consequently, religion is understood either as a source of fanaticism or as a superficial ideology masking material interests. Engaging with the work of Saba Mahmood, Talal Asad, Atalia Omer, and others, this presentation proposes a decolonial approach to religion that rethinks these assumptions. Such an approach opens space to critically examine the complex and often contradictory entanglements between the sacred and the political, without reducing religion to essentialist or dismissive explanations of violence

March 31st 2025 - Dr Marina Bell (UCC)

Title: Carceral Abolition, the Eco-Climate Crisis, and the Role of Othered Knowledge Traditions 

This project explores the idea that carceral abolition and climate justice are inseparable parts of the same project, necessary for challenging the hegemony of carceral state, and preserving the future of the planet. It employs a theoretical analytical approach to argue that the Western materialist, reductionist worldview that has resulted in the climate catastrophe is part of the same oppressive, colonialist, neo-liberal, capitalist, white-supremacist ideology that upholds the existence of the carceral state. It argues for the necessity of a shift away from the Western knowledge paradigm, and toward alternative, foreclosed, oppositional knowledges, knowledge sources, and practices traditionally excluded from the Western knowledge paradigm, that offer other ways of imagining how to be, in relationship with each other, and with the earth. These include  traditional ecological knowledge (TEK), earth-based spiritual practices, and animism. The perspective that is necessary for a sustainable relationship with the planet and our non-human relatives is the same perspective that is necessary to achieve and sustain the liberation sought through abolition. These alternative forms and sources of knowledge, and their accompanying cosmologies, can help us achieve both. 

This seminar will take place at 1pm, March 31st 2025 at Askive G01

2023-2024 Seminars

10th June, 12-1.30pm, Askive G01, Professor Corinne Squire, Bristol 深夜亚洲福利久久

Title: Supporting refugees into higher education: Oppositional and alter-political strategies 

Corinne Squire is Chair in Global Inequalities at Bristol 深夜亚洲福利久久, a co-organiser of the Association of Narrative Research and Practice, and coordinator of the UK Open Learning Initiative (OLive), a collaboration between Refugee Education UK and Bristol 深夜亚洲福利久久. Her research interests are in refugee education and politics, narrative theory and practice, and HIV and citizenships. Recent publications include Stories changing lives (2021) and Researching family narratives (with Ann Phoenix and Julia Brannen, 2021). 

2nd May, 12-2pm, Askive, G01, Professor Saara Liinamaa, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Guelph, ON, Canada

Title: The New Spirit of Creativity: Creativity, Compromise and Cultural Workers

鈥淭hey say artists don鈥檛 know how to compromise, but they don鈥檛 work here.鈥 Kat, study participant

How does the creative ideal of the passionate, uncompromising artist measure against contemporary cultures of work and bureaucracy? Based on fieldwork conducted at three art and design universities in Canada, this talk examines the day-to-day work, organization, and administration of artistic creativity and its clashes with a "new spirit" of creativity that has widely taken hold; the combined uncertainties of higher education and cultural work make for a volatile mix. For artists, designers, and other creative practitioners employed at these art schools, a day at work can involve quarreling over planning objectives, funding allotments, and evaluation formats. But that鈥檚 just the surface. More deeply felt, these workers must navigate heightened ambiguity around artistic identity and creative excellence. Against this context, in this talk I will explain how my recent book, The New Spirit of Creativity, rethinks the relationship between creativity and compromise in culture-based work and occupations. While creativity may be inequitably recognized and rewarded across the art school, compromise, given its close companionship with critique, can support or erode creative diversity.

Bio

Saara Liinamaa works in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Guelph (ON, Canada). As a cultural sociologist her research combines interests in culture, creativity, and everyday life with published work on sociability in/and public space, migrant agricultural labour, cultural theory, and creative work and occupations. Her recent book, The New Spirit of Creativity was awarded the 2023 Canadian Sociology Book Award.

15th March, 12-1pm, Askive G01, Dr Nasrin Khandoker, Department of Sociology and Criminology, UCC

Title: Songs of Desire and Defiance: Subjectivity, Emotions and Authenticity in Bhawaiya Folk Songs of North Bengal.

Bhawaiya is one of the most popular folk song genres among Bengalis. While all Bangla folk songs express the emotions and the stories of the most marginal people, Bhawaiya is significant for expressing the female passion grounded in day-to-day material reality through the stories of the female subject of the songs. The passionate lyrics of Bhawaiya, when expressing love and desire for a woman鈥檚 lover, are not always bound to marital or 鈥榣egitimate鈥 sexual relations. In this research, through the lens of these songs, I located those desires that often seem deviant but can defy normative control by constructing female subversive subjectivities. Through my ethnographical research of the 鈥楤hawaiya people鈥, such as singers, producers, and researchers in the main Bhawaiya areas, I see how those emotions are evoked through performances and how they make connections between the performers and the listeners. Through these songs, I examined the subversive possibilities within Bangla folk songs for the people on the margins, tracing the construction of the perils and pleasures of sexual subjectivity through a variety of Bangla social-cultural fields.

28th November, 12-2, Safari G01, Professor Nicola Ingram, School of Education, UCC

Title: THE DEGREE GENERATION: THE MAKING OF UNEQUAL GRADUATE LIVES

Abstract: This seminar draws on a recent book which traces the transition to the graduate labour market of a cohort of middle-class and working-class young people who were tracked over seven years through their undergraduate and post-graduation lives in the UK. Its aim is to provide insights into the ways in which the dominant policy goals of social mobility and graduate employability are experienced by young people themselves. The book traces the unfolding of their young graduate lives, through analysis of a unique longitudinal qualitative data set gathered over a seven-year period. Using personal narratives and voices, it provides in-depth insights into the group鈥檚 experience of graduate employment and shows how life-course transitions are shaped by social background and education. Critically evaluating current government and university policies, the book explores the attitudes and values of this generation, their hopes and aspirations with regard to employment and their futures as graduates in a challenging socio-economic context.

24th November, 10-12, Askive G01, Professor Nicola Carr, School of Sociology and Social Policy, 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Nottingham

TIME, PUNISHMENT AND PROBATION

Time is a strangely neglected aspect in the study of punishment, despite its centrality to many philosophies of punishment, the imposition of criminal sanctions and the experiences of people subject to punishment.  This presentation explores how the subject of time has featured across different criminological literature. This includes as as a structuring logic for punishment, and as a feature of the carceral experience. Looking beyond the prison, the presentation will also explore temporal aspects of community sanctions and measures through a focus on an empirical study of the use of pre-sentence reports in the Irish criminal justice system. Using the frame of the chronotope it will explore how the use of pre-sentence reports shifts the spatio-temporal logics of the court process towards a different sphere of governance. 

Bio

Nicola Carr is a Professor of Criminology in the School of Sociology and Social Policy at the 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Nottingham. She has recently co-edited (with Gwen Robinson) a book on Time and Punishment 鈥 New Contexts and Perspectives published by Palgrave. She is a Visiting Professor at the Department of Sociology and Criminology, UCC in Autumn 2023.

14th November, 12-2, Safari G01, Professor Louise Ryan, London Met 深夜亚洲福利久久

Title: NAVIGATING THE HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT - AFGHAN EVACUEES IN LONDON

Following the dramatic evacuation from Kabul airport in August 2021, the British government proclaimed its commitment to a 'warm welcome' for Afghans. This paper draws on original qualitative research to explore the emerging experiences of evacuees, and other recent arrivals, during their first year in London. Using the narratives of our Afghans participants, as well as insights from key stakeholders, we show how they navigated slow, opaque bureaucratic processes and lack of communication with official agencies. As a result of these lengthy processes, many thousands of evacuees remained in temporary hotel accommodation for 2 years. The paper argues that the ad hoc response of the Home Office and the Foreign Office has created 鈥榝alse distinctions鈥 between categories of Afghan refugees, reinforcing notions of 'deserving' versus 'underserving' migrants. This distinction allows the British government to present itself as humanitarian, 'rescuing' people from Afghanistan, while simultaneously maintaining its commitment to the 'hostile immigration environment'.

This event is organised in collaboration with ISS21 /en/iss21/

 Belonging and Narrative Symposium, ORB G027, 1-4pm, Sept 20th 2023.

  • Professor Molly Andrews, UCL
  • Professor Nira Yuval-Davis, UEL
  • Professor Maggie O'Neill, UCC
  • Dr Caitriona N铆 Laoire, UCC
  • Dr Ulrike M Vieten, Queens Belfast
  • Dr Mastoureh Fathi, UCC

Programme available to download here: Programme for our Sociology Symposium Sept 20th 2023

 

 

2022-2023 Seminars

March 7th 2023 

Dr John O'Brien, UCC: The Belfast Rape Trial: A forensic sociological analysis

Grit Hoppener (UCC) 

February 22nd 2023

Dr Ulrike M Vieten, Queen's 深夜亚洲福利久久 Belfast, presented 'The Normalization of colonial continuity: anti-migration discourse and gender toxicology'

January 18th 2023

Dr Simone Varriale, Loughborough 深夜亚洲福利久久 gave a talk entitled Changing imaginaries of unequal EU migrations

The paper draws on a larger book project, titled Coloniality and Meritocracy in Unequal EU Migrations (Bristol 深夜亚洲福利久久 Press, 2013). The book is based on 57 biographical interviews with working-class and middle-class, White and Black Italian migrants, and with both migrant women and men.

November 16th 2022 

Professor Brenda Murphy, 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Malta and UCC, gave a talk entitled Boundaried spaces and the pursuit of happiness feminist practices: from academy to activism.

2021-2022 Seminars

June 2nd 2022

Dr David Honeywell

Life After Prison: Liminality, identity and who gets to decide how 'moving on' looks like.

See our news item here for info and RSVP detail: 

/en/sociology/news/life-after-prison-liminality-identity-and-who-gets-to-decide-how-moving-on-looks-like.html 

May 25th 2022 

Book launch of Criminal Women - Gender Matters

See this listed in our news item /en/sociology/news/book-launch-criminal-women-gender-matters.html 

May 9th 2022

Professor Gary Craig

The Racist Tail Wags the Welfare Dog

April 6th 2022 

Diana Stypinska, NUIG

The pantomime of critique: On decadent indignation and the (im)possibilty of radical social change.

February 28th 2022

Lorraine Bowman Grieve (WIT)

Researching the Radical Right online: Stormfront and the Women's Forum 

February 21st 2022

Professor Louise Ryan

Is it who you know?

Exploring the direct and indirect roles of social migrants' accessing labour markets

2020-2021 Seminars

29th March 2021

Professor P谩draig Carmody and Dr. Su-Ming Khoo

Revisiting Development Theories

24th November 2020 

Dr Ebun Joseph, Ismail Einashe, Dr Jacqui O'Riordan and Dr Mike FitxGibbon

Migration, Race & Ethnicity

8th October 2020 

Professor Ursula Kilkelly

Transforming Youth Detention: the Oberstown story? Making rights real in youth detention

 

 

2019-2020 Seminars

10th October 2019

Professor David Wall

鈥楥ybercrime Kingpins: The changing division of criminal labour within the modern cybercrime ecosystem鈥

19th November 2019

Dr Annie Cummins

鈥楿nderstanding the nature of play in after-school settings in Ireland鈥

3rd December 2019

Dr Tom Boland

鈥楪overning the labour market in the cargo-cult for full employment鈥

21st January 2020

Professor Louise Ryan

鈥樷淜ilburn is not Kilburn any more鈥: an analysis of ageing in and out of place鈥

28th January 2020

Professor Arpad Szakolczai (UCC)

鈥楩rom Baudelaire through Picasso to Sartre: Scenes from the lives of the demonic avant-garde鈥

11th February 2020

Dr Richard Milner (UCC)

鈥楴arratives and Collective Learning Processes: how society makes sense of and responds to crises鈥 

20th February 2020

Dr Aine Mangaoang (深夜亚洲福利久久 of Oslo) and Dr Tom Western (深夜亚洲福利久久 of Oslo and 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Oxford) ISS21 joint seminar with the School of Applied Social Studies.

"Music, Sound, and Power in contemporary places of detention"

 

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