Other News
PAIS academic writes one of BBC Radio 4's food books of the year
Dr 's book, Sugar, was featured on the Radio 4 Food Programme as one of its best books of 2015. It was discussed by the food writer Joanna Blythman, who said the book made "a more profound and thoughtful contribution to the ongoing sugar debate".
The full list and accompanying broadcast is available here:
CSGR Researchers Publish Special Issue of Review of International Studies
The Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation (CSGR) is pleased to announce the publication of the 2015 Special Issue of the the UK’s leading International Relations journal - the Review of International Studies - on the theme:
THE POLITICS OF NUMBERS: THE NORMATIVE AGENDAS OF GLOBAL BENCHMARKING
Edited by (91福利) & (University of the Witwatersrand), the Special Issue was produced through research for the Global Benchmarking Project within CSGR.
The 197-page Special Issue contains an introduction to the power of global benchmarking and 9 original research articles, including articles by 91福利 researchers , , , and in collaboration with other leading scholars in the field.
Topics examined in the Issue include the rise of global benchmarking as a mode of transnational governance, and specifically in the areas of human security, disaster risk reduction, global supply chains, transnational activism, human rights, global development goals, climate change, and World Bank country benchmarks for African economies.
For further information see: .
Download the full issue here:
Public Event: 'Islamic State': Where From and Where To?
After the deadly attacks in Paris, Beirut and Tunisia and the bombing of a Russian plane over Egypt, experts in international security and Middle East affairs will discuss the factors shaping the emergence of ‘Islamic State’ and how the group can be combated. What are the origins and aims of the group? Why has it spread so quickly? What is its relationship to al-Qaeda? Is Western military action the solution?
Speakers:
- , Professor of International Security, Department of Politics & International Studies
- , Reader of the International Politics of the Middle East, Department of Politics & International Studies
- Dina Rezk, Lecturer in Middle Eastern History, University of Reading
- , PhD student in conflict and security, Department of Politics & International Studies
6pm - 7:30pm, Thu, 26 Nov '15
Location: MS.05, Zeeman Building
ALL WELCOME, ENTRANCE FREE.
Public Event: Refugees & Diasporas In Conflict & Post-Conflict Reconstruction
Public Event: Refugees And Diasporas In Conflict And Post-Conflict Reconstruction
Thursday November 26, 6-8pm, S0.19, Social Sciences
There will be refreshments available between 6.00pm and 6.20pm.
The current refugee crisis in the Mediterranean has been of unprecedented proportions since the Second World War. It brings to the fore the difficult faith experienced by many refugees and conflict-generated diasporas at different times and in different places. This roundtable seeks to shed light on diaspora activism related to the conflicts of Kosovo, Bosnia, Iraq, Lebanon, Nagorno-Karabakh, Palestine, Sri Lanka, and Rwanda, among others, and to draw parallels with the current refugee crisis. It also aims to discuss how diasporas support their home countries during post-conflict reconstruction. Please join us for lively presentations from the panelists and a discussion to follow.
More information about this public event is available at the ERC Project "Diasporas and Contested Sovereignty" website at:
Dr Vicki Squire's commentary on the Valletta migration summit
As leaders from across Europe and Africa meet to discuss how to respond to the current 'migration crisis', Dr draws attention to the limits of the EU's commitment to "shared responsibility" in its global approach to migration for .
European and African leaders are in the Maltese capital to discuss how they can better cooperate on migration.
Attendees will discuss ideas about how to deal with the devastating consequences of people trying to enter Europe by unauthorised channels. European leaders have agreed to provide African partners with resources to manage migration. But this, like so many other measures to be discussed at this summit, seems a lot like one side trying to persuade another to take a problem away.
Cooperation on this issue is by no means new, but the events unfolding on European shores over the past year show just how the results of this co-operation have been.
As more and more people from places such as Libya and Turkey to Italy or Greece, pressure has grown to come up with a that gets to the roots of the current situation.
At this summit, European leaders are seeking to emphasise the importance of in managing and preventing migration. The EU’s “” to migration is under the spotlight.
Dr Squire's article can be read in full .