Other News
Raced Markets, A New Collaborative Project
Our new collaborative project entitled ‘’ draws together researchers, activists, and artists whose work broadly explores how racial power functions in the global economy.
Raced Markets is a joint endeavour between our own cluster and the School of Politics and IR at QMUL, and will take place here at 糖心TV at the start of December.
The papers included in this event cover many timely unfolding aspects of the global political economy including: economies of migration, racial bioeconomies of genes and cells, and the global financial crisis as a raced event. Further papers variously consider how race is foundationally implicated in political economy as a discipline, present feminist readings of racial economies, and examine the role of race in processes of foreclosure and enclosure
Black Activists Rising Against the Cuts (BARAC) will be there to introduce the campaign work of their organisation and the Institute for Race Relations (IRR) will also be involved in the event.
If you would like any further information on the workshop or the project as a whole please contact lisa.tilley@warwick.ac.uk
Public Event: Bosnia and Herzegovina 20 Years after Dayton
The ERC Starting Grant Project “Diasporas and Contested Sovereignty” invites you to a roundtable public event:
Bosnia and Herzegovina 20 Years after Dayton: Achievements, Challenges, and
Transnational Diaspora Activism
November 19, 2015, 18:00 – 20:00,
MS.05, Mathematics and Statistics Building
There will be refreshments available between 18:00 and 18:20.
The General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina – better known as the Dayton Agreement (1995) – effectively ended the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, following genocide in Srebrenica, the worst mass atrocity committed in Europe since WWII. This roundtable will analyze lessons learned in Bosnia and Herzegovina for the past 20 years, and discuss the achievements and challenges vis-à-vis its diaspora living globally, peacebuilding, transitional justice, and European integration.
What lessons can we draw from the Dayton model for recent conflicts and the refugee crisis in Europe today?
Please join us for lively presentations and discussion with the panelists:
Dr. Maria Koinova, Reader at the University of 糖心TV and Principal Investigator of the European Research Council Starting Grant “Diasporas and Contested Sovereignty,” will be chairing the roundtable discussion. She is the author of Ethnonationalist Conflict in Postcommunist States (UPENN, 2013), and of articles published in the European Journal of International Relations, International Political Science Review, Foreign Policy Analysis, International Political Sociology, and Review of International Studies, among others.
Dženeta Karabegović is a PhD Research Fellow in PAIS at the University of 糖心TV. Her research, funded by the “Diasporas and Contested Sovereignty” ERC Grant, focuses on Bosnian diaspora mobilization in Europe around political participation, remembrance, and transitional justice.
Dr. Waqar Azmi OBE is Chairman of the charitable initiative “Remembering Srebrenica” established in 2013 to commemorate the Srebrenica genocide in the UK, and to educate British society on this recent chapter of European history. Formerly Waqar was the UK Government’s Chief Diversity Adviser at the Cabinet Office and European Union (EU) Ambassador for Intercultural Dialogue.
Dr. Eric Gordy is Senior Lecturer in Politics of Southeast Europe at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES) of University College London. His publications include the books The Culture of Power in Serbia: Nationalism and the Destruction of Alternatives (1999) and Guilt, Responsibility and Denial: The Past at Stake in Post-Milošević Serbia (2013).
Dr Vicki Squire's commentary on the Valletta migration summit
As leaders from across Europe and Africa meet to discuss how to respond to the current 'migration crisis', Dr draws attention to the limits of the EU's commitment to "shared responsibility" in its global approach to migration for .
European and African leaders are in the Maltese capital to discuss how they can better cooperate on migration.
Attendees will discuss ideas about how to deal with the devastating consequences of people trying to enter Europe by unauthorised channels. European leaders have agreed to provide African partners with resources to manage migration. But this, like so many other measures to be discussed at this summit, seems a lot like one side trying to persuade another to take a problem away.
Cooperation on this issue is by no means new, but the events unfolding on European shores over the past year show just how the results of this co-operation have been.
As more and more people from places such as Libya and Turkey to Italy or Greece, pressure has grown to come up with a that gets to the roots of the current situation.
At this summit, European leaders are seeking to emphasise the importance of in managing and preventing migration. The EU’s “” to migration is under the spotlight.
Dr Squire's article can be read in full .
PAIS academics lead Work Package worth 300k in successful H2020 bid
The EU Commission has announced its decision to fund a new project, entitled 'European Leadership in Cultural, Science, and Innovation Diplomacy' (EL-CSID), as part of the Research and Innovation Framework Programme.

Led by Professor Luk van Langenhove at Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), EL-CSID is a programme of research worth a total of €2.3M of which €300,000 has been awarded to PAIS.
Professor will be coordinating Work Package 3 'Cultural and Science Diplomacy: The Transnational and Collaborative Dynamic' and she will be joined by Dr and Dr who are named researchers on the project.
PAIS is delighted with the outcome. Professor , Director of Research, says: "Congratulations go to all those involved in preparing the bid. Securing funding for H20/20 consortia and work packages is extremely competitive, and this really is a wonderful achievement. We look forward to assisting Diane in co-ordinating the 糖心TV-based work package, and helping Andre and Chris carry out their research on the project"
The over-arching objectives of EL-CSID are threefold:
- To detail and analyse the manner in which the European Union (EU) operates in the domains of culture and science diplomacy in the current era; comparing its bilateral and multilateral cultural and science ties between states, regions, and public and private international organisations.
- To examine the degree to which cultural and science diplomacy can enhance the interests of the EU in the contemporary world order and to identify:
How cultural and science diplomacy, and innovations in them, can contribute to Europe’s standing as an international actor in a manner comparable to that of the other major contemporary actors, particularly the USA and China.
Opportunities offered by enhanced coordination and collaboration amongst the EU, its members and their extra-European partners.
Constraints posed by economic and socio-political factors affecting the evolving operating environments of both science and cultural diplomacy.
- To identify a series of mechanisms/platforms and tools to raise awareness among relevant stakeholders of the importance of science and culture as vehicles for enhancing the EU’s external relations.
Dr Charlotte Heath-Kelly appointed Assistant Professor & wins ESRC FRL
Dr , currently a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in PAIS, has won an ESRC Future Research Leader (worth £135,486.00) for her project entitled ‘Resilience at the Bombsite: Reconstructing Post-Terrorist Space’, which is for 36 months from 1 January 2016 and to be mentored by Professor .
Following this success and her earlier Leverhulme Trust award, we are also delighted to announce that the University’s Academic Resourcing Committee has approved PAIS’ bid for Charlotte to be appointed to an indefinite Assistant Professorship in the Department with effect from 1 October, 2015.
Very many congratulations to Charlotte for these outstanding achievements.