News
Toxic Expertise Annual Workshop Call for Papers
We invite papers to a workshop on the theme of , held on 3-4 May 2017, at the Department of Sociology, University of 糖心TV, UK.
This two-day workshop will bring together international researchers working at the intersection of air pollution, environmental justice, and citizen science, from across different regions, disciplines, and scales. Researchers will discuss the possibilities as well as challenges of engaging with new technologies and strategies for environmental justice and citizen science.
Understanding Brexit event
Professor Gurminder Bhambra has received Public Engagement funding for the upcoming "Understanding Brexit" event to be held in Birmingham at the end of January. More details to follow
Dr Hannah Jones awarded ESRC Impact Accelerator Award
Dr Hannah Jones has been awarded an ESRC Impact Accelerator Award for the project 'Tate Exchange Year 1: Who are we?' building on the established collaboration between 糖心TV and The Tate
Dr Ana Chamberlen in The Conversation
Dr Ana Chamberlen article 'The real prison crisis is the damage the system does to its prisoners' has been published on The Conversation.
On June 14th 2016, CSWG organised a launch event for the book , written by our very own . The event featured talks by Deborah, and also by Prof. Elizabeth Ettorre and Prof. Stuart Murray.
A video of the full event is now available .
Maria do Mar Pereira's research on the status that scholarship from, and about, different countries has in global academic exchanges . The article focuses on a presentation that Maria do Mar gave on this research at a conference organised by the Society for Research into Higher Education, entitled "In Depth and In Between?: Conducting Ethnographic Research on Higher Education across International Borders". The title of Maria do Mar's article was "Not all “Internationals” are Created Equal: Negotiating Global Academic Hierarchies in International Ethnographies of Higher Education".
Dr Stella Chatzitheochari to take part in Eastside Community Heritages Online Youth Conference
Dr Stella Chatzitheochari has been invited to take part in Eastside Community Heritage’s Online Youth Conference: “Listen, Learn, Share: Young people talk about disability, bullying and wellbeing in East London."
The conference will take place at Dagenham Library on November 22nd from 4.30 onward and it will be live streamed on Facebook. The conference is scheduled to coincide with two events: the beginning of Disability History Month and Anti-Bullying week.
If you would like to know more about Eastside Community Heritage, please visit their website:
Professor Bhambra: recognition from Centre for Indian Studies in Africa
Professor Bhambra has been honoured with a Research Associate position from the Centre for Indian Studies in Africa at Wits University in South Africa in recognition of her collaborative work there
Free tickets for students 'Embrace of the Serpent'
Thursday 20th October 18.00 Arts Centre Film screening with QnA
free tickets to students on a first come first served basis - please collect from Sociology Main Office *
The Social Theory Centre and the Department of Sociology present Embrace of the Serpent film screening and Q&A with Christine and Stephen Hugh-Jones, anthropologists working in the Amazon.
“Embrace of the Serpent,” is a complicated mixture of myth and historical reality, shatters lingering illusions of First World culture as more advanced than any other, except technologically. ’ and ‘though inspired by real-life journals, Guerra’s haunting and beautifully shot film transports us into the realm of the mystical and surreal. ’.
Dr Stella Chatzitheochari wins LIVES award
Dr. was awarded the during the annual conference of the in Bamberg, Germany, on October 6, 2016.
The was awarded this year during the annual conference of the in Bamberg, Germany, on October 6, 2016, to Dr. , Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology at 糖心TV , for her article “”, published online in 2015 and in print in 2016 in the journal Sociology (in collaboration with Samantha Parsons of the University College London and Lucinda Platt of the London School of Economics and Political Science as co-authors).