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Monday, March 04, 2019

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Mark Duffield: Crisis and the Rise of Social-Robotics
OC01.08, Oculus Building

Mark Duffield, Professor Emeritus, Bristol University, is the author of several path-breaking books in the field of development studies and humanitarianism, including 'Global Governance and the New Wars: The Merging of Development and Security' (2001), 'Development, Security and Unending War: Governing the World of Peoples' (2007) and his most recent book, 'Post-Humanitarianism: Governing Precarity in the Digital World' (2018).

In his talk, Professor Duffield will explore the increasing use of 'social robotics' -- the acceptance of the control and direction of human behaviour by automatic smart technologies -- in addressing social and ecological crisis and its implications for the future of democracy.

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IRS Lecture: From Circulation to Network Connectivity: Crisis and the Rise of Social Robotics
OC1.08

IRS Lecture: From Circulation to Network Connectivity: Crisis and the Rise of Social Robotics

- Speaker: by Prof Mark Duffield

- Date: Monday 4 March 2019

- Time: 4-6 pm

- Venue: OC1.08

- All are welcome

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CRIPS Annual Lecture: Kyle Grayson - Why Popular Culture Matters (for Contemporary Geopolitics)
S0.11

Why Popular Culture Matters (for Contemporary Geopolitics)

Kyle Grayson, Newcastle University

CRIPS Annual Lecture, March 4, 6-7.30pm, S0.11

 

Abstract:

Popular culture is central to how contemporary geopolitics is understood and practiced. Drawing up cultural approaches to geopolitics and a range of contemporary examples from Harry Potter to hip hop, this presentation will provide insights into how popular culture matters, when it matters, where it matters, to whom it matters, and how its myriad influences might be assessed and/or perceived. The central argument is that popular culture's importance for contemporary geopolitics stems from more than its allegorical or metaphorical properties. Rather, if analysts and practitioners are to take geopolitics and the exercise of power seriously, the productive capacities of popular culture in world politics must be an ongoing concern.

 

Speaker:

Kyle Grayson is a Reader in Security, Politics, and Culture at Newcastle University. His research areas are popular culture and world politics, visuality, and critical geopolitics. He is a co-editor of the UK Political Studies Association's journal POLITICS (SAGE), an associate editor of Critical Studies on Security (Routledge), and a co-editor of the Popular Culture and World Politics Series (Routledge).

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