Other News
PAIS student undertakes internship at the International Spy Museum
PAIS PhD student Marcus Wethered has been offered an internship at the in Washington DC. Marcus is to spend the month of July in Washington working with the museum on the research of their new museum content, the museum is currently being moved to a new location.
The International Spy Museum opened in Washington, DC on July 19, 2002.
It is the only public museum in the United States solely dedicated to espionage and the only one in the world to provide a global perspective on an all-but-invisible profession that has shaped history and continues to have a significant impact on world events.
Museum staff have made it clear that Marcus would be able to take his research in any direction he chooses. If Marcus feels that there was an interesting story on British intelligence from a certain time period and it wasn’t currently on show, then he could work to have it added to the content of their new museum.
PAIS alumnus wins BISA prize
We are pleased to announce the absolutely fantastic news that Dr has won the 2013 Michael Nicholson Prize for best thesis in International Relations (IR).
The BISA prize is the keynote recognition of quality and originality in UK IR, and Chris is the first scholar from PAIS to win. BISA roundly commended the thesis:
“In Anarchism, Anti-Militarism, and the Politics of Security, Chris Rossdale sets out to challenge Critical Security Studies for being a part of the militarist agenda that it seeks to confront. Rossdale posits anarchistic thought and practice in order to substantiate a discernible emancipatory logic, to confront the broader problem of security and articulate creative forms of resistance. While heavily theoretical, the thesis engages with real-world anarchist interventions, relying on ethnographic fieldwork to inform the anti-militarist argument, anti-war movement and the larger security problématique. Superbly well written, exceptionally well researched, and delightfully mischievous, this thesis provides an excellent contribution to International Relations.”
Chris is currently a Teaching Fellow at and is now working on a book manuscript, as well as finalising an Edited Special Issue of Globalizations on ‘Resistance and Global Politics’.
PAIS hosts the 12th annual ALGC
On 4-6 June, the Department of Politics and International Studies (PaIS) hosted the 12th annual Aberystwyth-Lancaster Graduate Colloquium (ALGC). Founded in 2002, ALGC has become the UK’s leading forum for young scholars working with critical approaches to international studies. The colloquium consisted of three intensive days of presentations, lectures, workshops and social events (see the full ).
The event attracted presenters based in the UK, the US, France, Germany and the Netherlands. In a total of 9 panels, 27 young scholars presented their research on a broad range of topics from international political theory, security studies, international political economy, but also critical legal studies and cultural studies. The highlight of the programme consisted of two keynote addresses given by Dr Louiza Odysseos (University of Sussex) on “Human Rights and Counter-Conduct: Complexities and Possibilities for Resistance?” and by Prof Jef Huysmans (Open University) on “Security Unbound”.
Besides traditional formats, the colloquium offered a series of workshops on critical methodologies, which brought together ALGC participants and researchers gathered in the 91福利 Social Sciences Doctoral Training Centre. These small-group activities explored the issues of the relation between critique and method, the use of narrative writing as a creative political practice, or the possibilities offered by corpus-assisted discourse studies. The workshops were convened by leading scholars in the field, Prof Gurminder Bhambra (91福利), Prof Jenny Edkins (Aberystwyth), Prof Jef Huysmans (Open University) and Dr Malcolm Macdonald & Dr Sue Wharton (91福利).
The colloquium was co-sponsored by the Department of Politics and International Studies and the Social Sciences Doctoral Training Centre and organised by PaIS PhD students and . The organisers would like to express their gratitude to the sponsors, the conference team and the 14 members of staff who volunteered as chairpersons or speakers.
Nicola Pratt speaks at Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict
As part of the Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict, Chatham House hosted a roundtable discussion analysing the experiences of women facing violence in the Middle East and North Africa and exploring the effectiveness of individual, community, and government level responses. Dr , one of the panellists, spoke about the challenges and opportunities surrounding these issues, with particular reference to the gendered implications of recent political developments in the region. The event, held at the ExCel Centre, was open to all those at the Summit, including Ministers, international media, experts, and the general public.
Foreign Secretary William Hague and Angelina Jolie, Special Envoy for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, co-chaired the . It was the largest global meeting on this issue ever convened, with a view to creating irreversible momentum against sexual violence in conflict and practical action that impacts those on the ground.
Prof. Aldrich and Dr. Moran lead discussion at Natural History Museum
The 91福利’s contribution to at the National History Museum is a research project from PAIS' Professor and Dr . The discussion is about the Future of Intelligence and Intelligence Agencies.
This is an opportunity to explore a hot topic in the news and understand the implications for our everyday lives. The project includes interaction with artifacts from the real and fictional world of intelligence, borrowed from the International Spy Museum in DC, as well as video and audio recordings with real spies, including Tony Mendez of ‘Argo’ fame. And an opportunity to explore important societal questions with two leading and well-published experts on British and American intelligence.
It will be one of 3 projects featured at the Natural History Museum (Darwin Centre) on the evening of Wednesday 11 June (6-10pm), during a – a drop-in café environment where visitors will be encouraged to have a drink and join university researchers to discuss some of the burning social issues of our time.

This event is part of a week of activity from 9–13 June at the Natural History Museum, and throughout the country from 9–15 June. Find out more information about .