Other News
New blog post by Nick Vaughan-Williams for the European Green Journal
A new blog post by Professor , entitled 'Europe's border crisis as an autoimmune disorder', has been published by the European Green Journal.
"A crisis point has emerged, whereby the figure of the ‘irregular’ migrant is seen as both a security threat to the European Union (EU) and its borders and as a life that is itself threatened and in need of saving by the EU and its agencies. This contradiction leads to paradoxical situations in the field of EU border politics whereby humanitarian policies and practices frequently expose ‘irregular’ migrants to dehumanising and sometimes lethal security mechanisms."
The full article can be accessed here:
Dr David Webber discusses the impact of Champions League football for Leicester City
Leicester City's win at Sunderland over the weekend guaranteed the club Champions League football next season.
As the club close in on the most unlikely of Premier League titles, ITV Central News caught up with Dr , module director of the PAIS final year undergraduate module, The Cultural Political Economy of Sport, to ask what he thought the economic and cultural impact of the Europe's premier club competition might be for the city of Leicester.
The report can be watched below:
PAIS Team Conduct Research at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library & Museum
Following the ISA Annual Convention 2016, held on 16-19 March in Atlanta, Georgia, Professor , PAIS graduate Dr and PhD candidate conducted research at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library & Museum.
Set up in 1986, the Carter Library holds millions of documents from the era of Jimmy Carter’s Presidency - including selected documents on the Camp David Accords, the President’s speeches and directives, human rights documents, secret briefs by the country’s intelligence community, oral histories as well as rarities such as the Iran Hostage Diary - a prison journal of a captive held at the American embassy in Tehran. The museum is also a wonderful homage to American domestic politics in the late 1970s.
During the course of their three-day research stay, the 糖心TV team focused on documents pertinent to the history of the CIA, events related to and triggered by the Columbian civil war, and materials on the alleged Soviet sponsorship of Cold War terrorism. Research at the Ford, Carter and Reagan libraries is being accelerated by computer databases of recently declassified materials linked to printers, which makes even a short research visit very productive. Gems uncovered by the PAIS team included a signals intelligence operation by the US National Security Agency against the British territory of Grenada.
Their research visit was made possible due to support for travel and accommodation from the Politics and International Studies Department.
Keynote Lecture by Dr. Maria Koinova at the CEU in Budapest
Dr. , Reader in IR and Principal Investigator of the ERC Project “Diasporas and Contested Sovereignty,” is giving a keynote lecture on 7 April, 2016 at a conference at the Central European University in Budapest on “Diasporas in Eastern Europe.”
The lecture is entitled “Diasporas, Sending States and Socio-spatial Positionality” and will feature how the socio-spatial position of diasporas in specific contexts empowers diaspora entrepreneurs in different ways, and accounts for trajectories of transnational diaspora mobilization. More information could be obtained .
Stuart Elden's book Foucault's Last Decade published
’s book has just been published by Polity Press.
The book is a study of the work Foucault conducted between 1974 and his death in 1984. In 1974, Foucault began writing the first volume of his History of Sexuality, developing work he had already begun to present in his Collège de France lecture courses. In that first volume, published in late 1976, Foucault promised five further volumes, and indicated some other studies he intended to write. But none of those books actually appeared, and Foucault’s work – which we can now closely track from his courses – went in very different directions. At the very end of his life, two further volumes of the History of Sexuality were published, and a fourth was close to completion. In contrast to the originally planned thematic treatment, the final version was a much more historical study, returning to antiquity and early Christianity.
The Paris courses, other lectures, shorter publications, and related materials – some collaborative and some unpublished – are used in this book to provide an intellectual history of this final project of Foucault’s career. Research for this book was conducted in archives in France and California, and the account shows how Foucault’s pursuit of a problem led him to rework the project in both scope and shape. The book is broadly chronological, and shows how all of Foucault’s concerns in this period – from race to confession, from governmentality to neoliberalism – are all, in various ways, connected to the project on sexuality or, as he reconceived it, on the relation between truth and subjectivity.
The book is partnered with a second study, on the period immediately preceding the last decade, tracing how Foucault moved from The Archaeology of Knowledge to Discipline and Punish. That book, Foucault: The Birth of Power, is forthcoming with Polity in early 2017, and it analyses Foucault’s early Collège de France courses in relation to his political activism and research on health, madness and discipline.
