Other News
NSS Now Open For PAIS Finalists
The National Student Survey (NSS) is now open at the link below. In partnership with our students, we have built the department together. Thank you! We’d love your feedback on the three or four years you have spent with us.
Why else complete the survey?
- Treat Yourself – each online participant will receive £5 Eating at ÌÇÐÄTV credit, as a thank you
- Help Someone Else – for each response, PAIS will donate £5 to the ÌÇÐÄTV Cancer Research Centre, our finalists chosen charity
- Shape the Department - your feedback will help shape the future of the PAIS department
It will take just 5 minutes to complete. Your feedback matters and makes a huge difference as shown on our page.
Please remember the £5 credit only applies to those who complete online so please complete early to ensure you do not lose out.
Simply send your confirmation email – after completing the survey - to NSS-Promotion@warwick.ac.uk to receive your £5.
The results are highly visible, often reported in the media and used by prospective students to help make their university choices. Their high profile has delivered positive, progressive change for PAIS students.
Last year PAIS achieved 94% for overall satisfaction. In recent years PAIS has often had the highest participation rate across the University.
Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship success for Ben Clift
Professor Ben Clift has been awarded a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship for a project entitled ‘The OBR and the Politics of UK Growth amidst Brexit, Uncertainty and Austerity’. This will run from October 1st 2018 to September 30th 2021. The trust noted that ‘The competition for these Fellowships has been particularly keen. The Trust received 186 applications and awarded 33 Fellowships. More importantly, the quality of the applications was extremely high and the Trust Board has been gratified both by the outcome and by the distinction of the successful scholars.’
Ben’s Major Research Fellowship will draw back the veil on how UK growth assessments are constructed amidst pervasive uncertainty to explore the implications of Brexit and the British model of capitalism. The project penetrates the world of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) in path-breaking fashion to reveal an under-appreciated politics of economic forecasting, and to analyse the political economy of Brexit. The analysis will explore how economic concepts used to frame and pilot economic policy, even when advanced by technocratic bodies like the OBR, are political constructions, always founded upon contestable and contested normative assumptions. Growth forecasts crucially mediate the politics of austerity through their implications for the tax take, and in assumptions they make about effects of government policy (and shocks like the GFC or Brexit) on actual and potential growth. Government policy options are opened up or closed off by particular renderings of Britain’s growth trajectory and their assumptive foundations (notably about Brexit effects).
This hugely impressive achievement means that the Department of Politics and International Studies now holds a record four Leverhulme Major Research Fellowships — the others being held by Professors Richard Aldrich, Shaun Breslin, and Mike Saward.
Keith Hyams awarded BA research funding on Indigenous Climate Adaptation
Keith Hyams has been awarded a British Academy International Challenges Research Project Grant for his project ‘Remedying Injustice in Indigenous Climate Adaptation Planning’. The project investigates ethical aspects of the relationship between indigenous communities, climate change, and adaptation policies. It asks how adaptation policies that integrate indigenous knowledge on climate adaptation can work to reduce the inequitable distribution of climate impacts on indigenous populations. The project will be undertaken in collaboration with the University of Makerere in Kampala, and Batwa Indigenous Communities in the South West of Uganda.
Students' Question Time 2018
We are delighted to announce that this academic year’s Students’ Question Time will be held on Monday 22 January 2018 at 6.30pm and will be all about current affairs.
Did you enjoy this year's Question Time event but wish you could have been more involved in the debate? Now it’s your chance to share your views on the issues affecting the world today.
The panel will be made up entirely of students, with the Department of Economics' Claudia Rei acting as Chair. The event is a collabertation with PPE and Economics, giving you the chance to debate not only with your own classmates but also students from other departments who will no doubt have differing views to your own.
We are currently looking for students to be on the panel and you can submit your one-minute application video online. Taking part in this event will give you the chance to practice your public speaking skills, as well as preparing a reasoned argument and improving your confidence.
If being on the panel doesn’t appeal to you then you can come along and see how the debate unfolds from the audience. Book your place now.
Keith Hyams awarded Leverhulme funding on Global Catastrophic Risk
Keith Hyams has been awarded a Leverhulme Research Project grant for his project ‘Anthropogenic Global Catastrophic Risk: The Challenge of Governance’. The project looks at long term threats to humanity arising from advances in emerging technology, aiming to identify the political obstacles that stand in the way of progress on governing these risks, and ethical guidelines within which new governance solutions for specific risks will be advanced. The project focusses on three case studies, in nanotechnology, biotechnology, and artificial intelligence, and will be undertaken in collaboration with Co-Investigators in the departments of biology, chemistry and computer science.