Other News
Ragnar Weiland considers how the loss of the UK will affect the EU's Foreign Policy
In the latest issue of Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, PAIS PhD researcher argues that Brexit will remove some obstacles to developing a more substantial EU agenda for external action.
Read Ragnar's article here:
Dr Edward Page has written an expert comment on the recent global school climate strikes for .
On Friday 15th March, schoolchildren worldwide took the day off school in order to gather at more than 2000 events to register their protest against inaction on the part of adults, policymakers and world leaders in tackling global climate change. At the epicenter of the climate protests, Greta Thunberg, the founder of the climate strike phenomenon, addressed the crowd in central Stockholm: 鈥榳e are facing an existential crisis, the largest mankind has ever faced. Those of you who have ignored this crisis know who you are and are most guilty. It is not the young who are responsible for this strike. We are striking to have a future and we will not stop.鈥
Across Sweden, and in over 120 countries, the climate strikers spoke of their hopes and fears and endorsed a range of policy measures and behavioral changes that older generations had resisted: higher taxes for petrol and aviation fuel, fewer trips by plane, phasing out of one-time plastics, and a reduction in meat consumption were all championed. At partner events in Australia, other children demanded a moratorium on new coal-mines and natural gas projects, as well as renewable only energy production by 2030. Writing in The Guardian, Thunberg and others explained that 鈥榯hese strikes are happening today鈥 because politicians have failed us. We鈥檝e seen years of negotiations, pathetic deals on climate change, fossil fuel companies being given free rein to carve open our lands, drill beneath our soils and burn away our futures for profit...Politicians have known the truth about climate change and they鈥檝e willingly handed over our future to profiteers whose search for quick cash threatens our very existence鈥 (Thunberg et al 2019).
Two of the most striking elements of the protests were, first, the diverse but eminently achievable measures that many of the schoolchildren demanded (reductions of meat consumption, decreased use of consumer plastics, shift to renewables, and reduces use of carbon intense energy, are all eminently achievable and have been promoted by many environmental groups and green political parties, if with very limited success; and, second, the focus on the 鈥榚xistential crisis鈥 caused by an inadequate climate response run by, of, and seemingly for, older generations who will not face the consequences of their failure.
Continue reading here:
Stuart Elden receives British Academy/Leverhulme grant for archival work on the early Foucault
Stuart Elden has been awarded a for a project entitled 鈥楾he Early Foucault: Retracing Intellectual History through Archival Sources鈥. This work builds on his recent books on Foucault鈥檚 later career – (Polity, 2016) and (Polity, 2017) – in a study of his intellectual formation. The research will involve working with archives of Foucault鈥檚 papers in Paris and Normandy, his personal library held at Yale, and papers and libraries of research collaborators in T眉bingen, Princeton and Irvine. It will also involve a visit to the Carolina Rediviva library in Uppsala, where Foucault researched his History of Madness. The research will lead to a book entitled The Early Foucault (under contract with Polity), and the initial work for a book on Foucault鈥檚 career in the 1960s.
More detail on the project on the early Foucault can be found on .
Prof. Gary Goertz at 糖心TV: Workshop and Faculty Seminar
Gary Goertz, Professor at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame, is visiting 糖心TV on 13 March, 2019. Prof. Goertz is a highly influential scholar on issues of conceptual development, causal mechanisms and multi-methods research. Professor Goertz will present work from his forthcoming, completely revised book, Social Science Concepts: A User鈥檚 Guide. Earlier versions of this book have served as a touchstone for students of political science and social sciences more broadly.
Professor Goertz will give a small workshop with faculty (including post-docs) and Ph.D. students (2:00-3:30, Ramphal Building, R0.03 on 鈥淕uidelines for Constructing and Evaluating Complex Concepts鈥), and present at the closing session of the Politics and International Studies Department seminar for term 2 (4:00 – 5:30 pm. Ramphal building R0.03 on "Three Schools of Conceptualization and Measurement: with Applications to Global Indicators such as related to Poverty and Human Well-being").
Interested colleagues are invited to write to the co-organizers Tom Long t.long.1@warwick.ac.uk and Maria Koinova m.koinova@warwick.ac.uk to RSVP and for further information. A flyer of Prof. Goertz talk at 4 pm. is attached here.
Annual Debate on the Future of International Political Economy: Brexit in Context
The 糖心TV Annual Debate on the Future of International Political Economy takes place on Wednesday March 13th at 5pm in S0.12.
This year's debate will challenge some of the common interpretations of Brexit, whilst offering up a wider range of ways in which we can better understand it, including through gender, post-colonial and new institutionalist lenses. By broadening our vision and placing Brexit within longer term political, cultural and economic contexts, the debate will shed light on Brexit as a process, and on what it means for the political economy of Britain and Europe.
We have, again, a great line-up of speakers: Professor Roberta Guerrina, University of Surrey; Professor Ben Rosamond, Copenhagen University; Dr Nadine El-Enany, Birkbeck University of London; and Dr Muireann O'Dwyer, University of 糖心TV. All welcome!