Other News
Ben Richardson and Chris Moran take top awards in Social Sciences Faculty Impact Awards
In the first ever Social Sciences Faculty Impact Awards, two members of PAIS staff took the top spots in the Early Career Academics category.
Winner: (Politics).
Nominated by Nick Vaughan-Williams and Matthew Watson
Ben’s post-doctoral research has been funded by ESRC and Leverhulme, and focusses on ethical food production and the dynamics of international trade, particularly in terms of agricultural production methods within some of the poorest countries in the world, with a specific focus on small scale farmers working on sugar production. The key focus of Ben’s impact strategy has been to try to ensure that such communities are provided with an enhanced stake in the system. He has communicated to and achieved impact amongst industry bodies, the EU parliament, NGOs and workers and farmers. Amongst the NGOs Ben has built strong links with are ActionAid, Traidcraft, the World Wildlife Fund, Friends of the Earth and GRAIN. He is the Editor of the English version of the website Ethical Sugar which has been phenomenally successful in enhancing public knowledge of political issues concerning the sugarcane industry. Moreover he has made a significant contribution to the Bonsucro certification initiative for ethically and environmentally responsible sugarcane production. His work has been cited positively as an influence by the European Centre for Policy Development Management in its campaign on Aid for Trade and by the Nuffield Council on Bioethics report on biofuels. Ben has incorporated elements of this work into teaching through the ‘Politics of Developing Areas’ module in which undergraduates can become directly involved in real-life politics through their own research and studies. In addition, Ben has made a significant contribution to the development of the department’s REF Impact Case Studies.
Runner up: (Politics).
Nominated by Richard Aldrich and Matthew Watson
Chris’s research has influenced public and professional debate about intelligence, secrecy and openness. He has communicated to national and international security and intelligence practitioners including; the Ministry of Defence, the Cabinet Office, the Defence Advisory Notice Committee, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Serious Organised Crime Agency, and this has resulted in practices in some of these organisations. Chris was Guest Curator and Historical Consultant at the International Spy Museum, Washington DC for the exhibition ‘Exquisitely Evil: 50 Years of Bond Villains’. He has produced monographs including a Guardian Bookshop bestseller of the week: ‘Classified: Secrecy and the State in Modern Britain’ (Cambridge University Press, 2013). His research has informed 2 documentaries for Radio 4 and a further one planned for 2014 on Richard Nixon’s presidency. All this has been achieved alongside a British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellowship and significant contribution to the development of the department’s REF Impact Case Studies.
Dr Peter Ferdinand to present paper to EU Parliament
recently wrote a briefing paper for the Security and Defence Committee of the EU Parliament entitled 'The positions of Russia and China at the UN Security Council in the light of recent crises'. Dr Ferdinand is due to present this paper to the committee this Thurday, 16 May, at the EU Parliament in Brussels.
(PDF)
PhD Candidate Promoted in Coventry City Council
PhD Candidate Damian Gannon was recently selected as the cabinet member for finance in Coventry. Damian has been a councillor for two years and will now be responsible for the City Council's budget.
Damian's PhD research focuses on the role of subjective understandings of democracy in shaping democratic practice.
Read about the promotion in the
Dr Andre Broome contributes to European Politics and Policy Blog
, Associate Professor of International Political Economy, recently contributed to LSE's European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) Blog on 30 April with a commentary entitled ''. This blog post was based on an article Dr Broome wrote for the Journal of European Public Policy entitled ''.
In the piece, he examines the evolution of bureaucratic cooperation between the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Union between the signing of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992 and the launch of the euro in 1999. He finds that the exercise of informal influence by advocates for change within international organisations can shape the outcomes of formal decision-making processes, even when these cut across the national preferences of powerful states, but can also impede the development of robust formal structures for institutional cooperation that are needed for effective crisis management.
Dr Broome's blog entry has also now been cross-posted to 's website as ''.
2013/14 DIVERSITY Calendar Photography Competition
The University of 糖心TV publishes a calendar every year which showcases the diversity of of our people, environment, events and local community.
Deadline: Friday 28 June 2013
Read more about the competition
Submit your entries online at: