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Charlotte Heath-Kelly Giving Lecture at the University of Connecticut, USA

Charlotte Heath KellyDr. , has been invited by the Department of Political Science, University of Connecticut, USA, to give a lecture. The talk is titled "Taking Pierre Nora to the Bombsite: Memory, Death and Capital."

Pierre Nora has argued that: ‘we speak so much of memory because there is so little of it left’. For Nora, industrialisation and capitalist acceleration were the destroyers of traditional societal structures. Memory industries emerged as methods by which societies could then imagine continuity and identity in response to social dislocation. This talk takes Pierre Nora, and other scholars of memory’s political economy, to the terrorist bombsite. Building upon their historical sociologies of memorialisation, and using her fieldwork from the reconstruction efforts which followed the 9/11 attacks and European bombings, I explore the sublimation of the memorial (and the dead human) to economic agendas and broader rationales of ‘regeneration’ and urban renewal. In post-terrorist reconstruction, the human subject is profoundly displaced by governance which triages economic injury and blight. Economy thereby emerges as the terrain upon which counterterrorism is fought.

The lecture takes place on Thursday April 6th, for more information, please see:

Wed 29 Mar 2017, 14:23 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate

Professor Richard Aldrich to Appear in Channel 4 Documentary

Richard Aldrich Channel 4 Richard Aldrich and Rory Cormac have worked with Channel 4 to produce a 2-part documentary on how British spies targeted Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson. New evidence reveals the extent of the surveillance, who ordered it, and the unique insights it provided into Downing Street's response to a constitutional crisis. The first programme will be show on Sunday at 8pm and the second programme will be shown the following week.

Wed 29 Mar 2017, 11:34 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

Why Erdoğan is chasing Turkey’s overseas voters so hard

Maria Koinova has written a piece, titled 'Why Erdoğan is chasing Turkey’s overseas voters so hard,' for The Conversation.

The article can be read here:

Tue 28 Mar 2017, 15:41 | Tags: Staff Impact

Juanita Elias & Shirin Rai publish article in The Conversation on Social Care

Juanita Elias and Shirin Rai have published a piece in The Conversation that considers how the £2 bn made available in the Spring budget for adult social care might be spent.

Read the article here:

This article draws upon research conducted by the PSA Commission on Care which reported in November 2016. Full details of the Commisions work can be found at

Mon 27 Mar 2017, 14:28 | Tags: Staff Impact Research

Dr. Koinova Speaks in a High Profile Policy Event on “Global Diaspora Mobilization” in Brussels

Dr. Maria Koinova will this week speak at a high profile policy event on “Global Diaspora Mobilization” at the 91福利 Brussels Office.

The global refugee crisis brings pressing concerns how to manage refugees on the move and deal with fragile sending states in conflict and disarray. While such concerns take the limelight, long-term effects of refugee and large-scale migration movements remain in the shadow. Over time refugees may return home, but many will remain in their new destinations, or move on to others, and eventually turn into conflict-generated diasporas with durable links to their original homelands. ​

Conflict-generated diasporas can be a source of economic development, but also of further conflict from afar, and engage in a variety of long-distance practices. Lessons learned from experiences of previous refugee waves, their diaspora engagement, and the management of large-scale migration, including fragile and developing states, can inform meaningful policies towards refugees and migrants today.

The seminar seeks to enhance the conversation between academics and policy-makers in European institutions by focusing on lessons learned from diaspora mobilisations and their management, and to bring their implications for policy areas such as: conflict and security, state-building, economic and social development, migration governance, transitional justice and democratisation.

The event will also highlight the links between the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and human mobility that needs to be understood more comprehensively to support and leverage different types of diaspora populations and link integration policies in countries of settlement with the transnational activities of mobile populations.

The event, takes place on Tuesday 28th March. For more details, and to register, please see:

Mon 27 Mar 2017, 11:13 | Tags: Staff Impact PhD Research

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