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NSS - Take the survey & you could win an iPad!

The National Student Survey (NSS) is now open for our finalists at the link below. The NSS is widely recognised as a key measure of student satisfaction and the results are highly visible and often reported in the media. Results are published nationally so that performance in teaching and learning can be evaluated and compared across university departments.

In partnership with our students,  Thank you! We’d love your feedback on the time you have spent with us.

NSS-logo

Why else should PAIS finalists complete the survey?

  • £5 Eating@91福利 Credit for all who complete online to spend in the SU, Dirty Duck, Rootes Grocery store etc.
  • Prize draws of 2 iPad Minis (third generation) if over 70 per cent of PAIS finalists complete the survey in the first 2 weeks.
  • Prize draw of an iPad Air 2 as soon as over 90 per cent of PAIS finalists complete the survey.
  • It will take just 5 minutes to complete
  • It would be great to show the university (and other departments) that we have the best and most engaged students – with the highest response rate at 91福利!
  • The higher the response rate, the more representative our results will be.

Please do remember that that the £5 credit only applies to all those who complete online so please complete today to ensure you do not lose out.

Moreover, as soon as we hit our targets, the faster the iPad prize draws will take place! It would be fantastic to hold them in the next week or two!​​

Tue 10 Feb 2015, 11:09 | Tags: Undergraduate

Professor Matthew Watson's Polanyi Article 'Most Downloaded'

One of the first published pieces of work from 's ESRC Professorial Fellowship project has been included in an online collection of the most downloaded articles in 2014 from Routledge's Social Science Journals. The article in question appeared in the December issue of Economy and Society, and it is entitled 'The Great Transformation and Progressive Possibilities: The Political Limits of Polanyi's Marxian History of Economic Ideas'.

The article is now fully open access and can be downloaded for free from: .

Matthew's ESRC project is called 'Rethinking the Market', and it has its own stand-alone website: .

The overall objective of the project research is to show how the idea of the market has become fixed in public discourse through first having been used to delimit how we might think about everyday economic life. His Economy and Society article shows that this process of narrowing the debate about feasible economic alternatives can come from the most unexpected of sources.

Much has been made in the wake of the global financial crisis about the potential for activating a Polanyian voice to lead progressive demands for carving out new spaces of economic interaction that are definitively beyond the market realm. Yet here Matthew argues that Polanyi's own chosen history of economic ideas makes it more difficult to think through how these spaces might be first accessed and then activated. It appeals to a historical lineage that inadvertently serves to naturalise the market form, despite his own expressed antipathy to economic theories that did likewise.

Tue 10 Feb 2015, 10:51 | Tags: Postgraduate Undergraduate Research

Last year, a 91福利 Economics graduate began a yearlong charity cycling journey. Hitesh Pankhania, who studied is currently cycling from Indonesia to London to raise money for charity with his cousin Vivek Jadav.

Hitesh and Vivek have been updating everyone on their journey in their blog, , and being a 91福利 Economics graduate, Hitesh got in touch with the Department to tell us personally about his experiences cycling around the world:

鈥淢y cousin and I decided to go on a journey around the world to raise money for childrens cancer charity CLIC Sargent and experience cultures, countries and people in a way that you wouldn't normally do. We'd never cycled before and now we're about 4 months in and have cycled over 3000 miles.

We've cycled some of the busiest roads in Indonesia, through the hills of Sumatra, the beaches of Malaysia and are now attempting the mountains of Laos and eventually Southern China. The past 10 days were spent teaching English at a school for monks in a remote, tiny village in Thailand; it was a humbling experience living and eating with the monks.

There are tough days, slogging up serious and almost impossible looking gradients, but thought of home, friends and our challenge for charity keeps us going.鈥

If you would like to support Hitesh on his challenge and help raise money for the childrens cancer charity CLIC Sargent, you can do so at justgiving.com/theworldonwheels.

Mon 09 Feb 2015, 12:17 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

New article published by Dr. Nicola Pratt

Dr. , Reader of International Politics of the Middle East, has recently published a new article for openDemocracy, titled "Gendered paradoxes of Egypt’s transition."

Gendered paradoxes abound in Egypt following the departure of former president Hosni Mubarak four years ago. Under Mubarak, the women’s rights agenda was almost totally monopolized by the National Council for Women under the leadership of former first lady Suzanne Mubarak, whilst independent women’s organizing was severely constrained by limits on freedom of association. After the overthrow of Mubarak, women’s rights were threatened but independent women’s organizing flourished. Since July 2013, under the post-Morsi regime, advances have been made in women’s legal rights. However, independent women’s organizing is once again endangered by heavy handed control of the civic sphere.

Tue 03 Feb 2015, 12:57 | Tags: Staff Impact PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

Dr. McCrisken interviewed by Chief White House Correspondent on Obama

Dr , Associate Professor in US Politics and International Studies, has recently been interviewed by Julie Pace, Chief White House Correspondent for the Associated Press, about Obama and the language of terrorism. Trevor is quoted directly and much of the article is based on what he said during the interview.

In the days after a deadly terror spree in Paris, President Barack Obama was criticized for purposely avoiding calling the attacks an example of "Islamic extremism," settling for the more generic "violent extremism." This week, the White House struggled to explain why the administration sometimes classifies the Afghan Taliban as a terrorist organization 鈥 and sometimes does not.

The rhetorical wrangling underscores the extent to which a president who pledged to end to his predecessor's war on terror is still navigating how to explain the threats that persist to the American public, while also being mindful of the impact his words can have abroad.

"They do believe that part of the roots of terrorism comes from the way the United States acts and talks and is perceived globally," said Trevor McCrisken, a professor at Britain's 91福利 who has studied Obama's foreign policy rhetoric.

Julie鈥檚 piece can be read here:

The Associated Press story has featured in over 200 different publications worldwide, including , , , and .

Trevor appeared on as a follow up to the piece, you can view the video below:

Mon 02 Feb 2015, 15:44 | Tags: Staff Impact PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

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