糖心TV

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Composite Calendar

This is a composite calendar page template pulling in feeds from events calendars in department and research centre sites. It is purely used as a tool to collect the event details before filtering through to a publicly-visible calendar filter page template. To remove or add a feed to this composite calendar, please contact the IT Services Web Team (webteam at warwick dot ac dot uk).

Friday, October 13, 2017

Select tags to filter on
Thu, Oct 12 Today Sat, Oct 14 Jump to any date

How do I use this calendar?

You can click on an event to display further information about it.

The toolbar above the calendar has buttons to view different events. Use the left and right arrow icons to view events in the past and future. The button inbetween returns you to today's view. The button to the right of this shows a mini-calendar to let you quickly jump to any date.

The dropdown box on the right allows you to see a different view of the calendar, such as an agenda or a termly view.

If this calendar has tags, you can use the labelled checkboxes at the top of the page to select just the tags you wish to view, and then click "Show selected". The calendar will be redisplayed with just the events related to these tags, making it easier to find what you're looking for.

 
-
Export as iCalendar

Runs from Wednesday, October 11 to Friday, October 13.

-
Export as iCalendar
Millburn House

Runs from Friday, October 13 to Saturday, October 14.

This two-day event brings together theatre practitioners, clinicians, and scholars in humanities and medical ethics with other members of the public to consider the embodiment of illness (both physical and mental) in theatre.

-
Export as iCalendar
Private Sustainability Standards, the Market and Public Authority in Global Governance
Room S1.50 (Social Sciences)

My presentation focuses on the central problem of transnational private governance—the matter of governing 鈥渁t a distance鈥 through the market and producing change in local sites when such rule systems are not mandated or authorised by governments in these sites. Drawing on various literatures – the politics of scale, global production networks, and assemblage 鈥榯heory鈥– and using the empirical case of sustainable palm oil, I argue that non-state regulatory entrepreneurs adopt globalising strategies that rescale key governance targets to sites more amenable to voluntary private governance away from the constraints imposed by national and multilateral governance. Global supply chains are crucial to rescaling governance to the transnational scale. However, fragmented supply chains and inadequate attention to segments of the supply chain deeply embedded in local sites of palm oil production create gaps in governance, requiring various corrective localising strategies. An important dynamic also seen in the palm oil case is the emergence of consultants and experts independent of the transnational governance scheme in question who help to enrol new participants into its ambit. Through technical and financial advisory and brokering services, these actors are part of the wider assemblage of actors whose work consolidates private governance, including by enrolling small farmers previously neglected by the globalising strategy but central to producing sustainable palm oil.

Placeholder

Let us know you agree to cookies