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27 March 202415:30

CES seminar: Danielle Hipkins

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20 March 202415:30

CES seminar: Sanja Vico

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13 March 202415:30

CES seminar: James Mark

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13 March 202413:45

The enclosure of knowledge: Books, power and agrarian capitalism in Britain 1660-1800

James Fisher UoE - The enclosure of knowledge: Books, power and agrarian capitalism in Britain 1660-1800. Full details
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13 March 202412:30

Centre for Computational Social Science (C2S2)/IDSAI - Joint Seminar

An exploration of the incelopshere and how incels fit into the current self-initiated terrorists (SITs) landscape with Dr Lewys Brace. Full details
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6 March 202415:30

CES seminar: Lise Herman

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28 February 202415:30

CES seminar: Harry West

Harry West: Heritage foods and how European practices remains an important reference point for folks in this sector in the UK. Full details
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21 February 202415:30

CES seminar: Dario Castiglione

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21 February 202410:45

Between Scales, Subjectivities and Species: Towards a political ecological theory of futurity in agri-food systems

Rob Booth, University of Birmingham - Between Scales, Subjectivities and Species: Towards a political ecological theory of futurity in agri-food systems. Full details
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7 February 202415:30

CES seminar: Mike Melidis

Evaluating Greece's environmental policy implementation patterns in turbulent times (2007-2022). Full details
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31 January 202413:15

CES seminar: Isabelle Rueda

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31 January 202410:45

Katharina Graf - University of Frankfurt

Cyborg Cooks: Digitalizing Domestic Cooking in Germany. Full details
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29 January 202413:00

Is Politics More-than-Human? How American (local) Government is Created by the Environment

In the discipline of politics, we tend to view the environment along a spectrum of something that humans have to make decisions about protecting; to environmental disasters that limit human action, and require political responses. This talk questions these assumptions, asking to what extent to the nature and structures of our politics are entangled and co-evolving with the environments that we live in, and the kinds of economic opportunities that local geologies, ecologies, and geographies afford. The paper draws on ethnographic research in communities the mountains of southern Appalachia, and in the Cornish gold mining town of Grass Valley, California to explore the extent to which the natural environment, communities, and polities, are inseparably entangled. Full details
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24 January 202415:30

CES seminar: Joasia Luzak

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24 January 202415:00

Exeter Q-Step Relaunch and Networking Event

We would like to invite you to our upcoming networking event, to celebrate our launch as the Centre for Computational Social Science (C2S2). Full details
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17 January 202415:30

CES seminar: Sally Faulkner

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13 December 202315:30

CES Webinar: Florian Stoeckel

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13 December 202310:45

Harry G West

War and Cheese. Full details
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29 November 202314:00

CES Webinar: Irene Fernandez-Molina

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29 November 202313:00

Utilising Textual Data in Crime Analysis: Insights from the Sex Market and Public Reactions to Crime on Twitter

Text is often used for qualitative research, but it hasn’t been used much for quantitative research. This talk will show how we can use automated text analysis in crime research.. Full details
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22 November 202315:30

CES Webinar: Alice Moseley

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22 November 202310:45

Rosie McVey

Learning From The Herd?: Ethics and Intercorporeality in Equine-Assisted Therapy.. Full details
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17 November 202310:00

St Dennis Community Museum and Archive in a Filing Cabinet!

This event aims to improve people's well-being by feeling more connected to their community through a community archive/museum, bringing together people from all ages to share artefacts related to their experiences of the community. Full details
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14 November 202313:30

CES Webinar: David Monciardini

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8 November 202310:00

Maps in Stata

The two hour interactive workshop aims to equip the participants with the tools and the code to start making high-quality maps in Stata. Full details
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7 November 202313:30

CES Webinar: Alison Harcourt

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1 November 202315:30

CES Webinar: Sandra Kröger

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1 November 202310:45

Allan Butler

The invention of nature to its metrification. Full details
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25 October 202315:30

CES Webinar: Mihail Danov

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22 October 202320:00

FOOD ON FILM: ANNIE GRAY; FEAST, FAMINE AND FADS

Dr Annie Gray is one of Britain’s leading food historians, specialising in the history of food and dining from c.1600 to the present day. As part of our Harvest Festival and in partnership with our Food on Film Series and Exeter Food, Annie turns her attention to excess and abstinence. Full details
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22 October 202317:00

FOOD ON FILM: BABETTE’S FEAST

When Babette’s fortune changes one day she takes the opportunity to bring quiet revolution in the form of one exquisite meal to a circle of starkly devout villagers offering them sensual pleasures and experiences for one night only. Full details
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17 October 202318:00

FOOD ON FILM: WASTED! THE STORY OF FOOD WASTE (15) + INTRO

WASTED! exposes the criminality of food waste and how it’s directly contributing to climate change and shows us how each of us can make small changes – all of them delicious – to solve the greatest problems of our time. Full details
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14 October 202313:30

FOOD ON FILM: EXETER GROWERS CO-OPERATIVE VISIT AND GROWING EXPERIENCE

Join us for a visit to Exeter Growers Co-operative’s 5 acre site on the edge of Exeter as part of Food on Film’s autumn season. The co-op grow delicious organic produce together on the site to promote healthy food, growing knowledge, enjoyment, biodiversity and sustainable use of the land. Full details
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11 October 202310:45

Rebecca Laughton

Grassroots Solutions: Landworkers' Alliance and the emergence of farmer-led research. Full details
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10 October 202318:00

FOOD ON FILM: THE GLEANERS AND I

Agnès Varda’s extraordinary self-reflexive documentary explores the world of modern-day gleaners: those living on the margins who survive by foraging for what society throws away. Full details
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2 August 202312:00

FOOD ON FILM: CHICKEN RUN (U)

This engaging stop-motion, claymation from Aardman (Shaun the Sheep) shares the adventures of Ginger and her friendly brood who are trapped on a horrible farm.. Full details
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1 August 202312:00

FOOD ON FILM: CHICKEN RUN (U)

This engaging stop-motion, claymation from Aardman (Shaun the Sheep) shares the adventures of Ginger and her friendly brood who are trapped on a horrible farm.. Full details
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29 July 202312:00

FOOD ON FILM: CHICKEN RUN (U)

This engaging stop-motion, claymation from Aardman (Shaun the Sheep) shares the adventures of Ginger and her friendly brood who are trapped on a horrible farm.. Full details
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25 July 202318:00

FOOD ON FILM: MEAT THE FUTURE + PANEL

Imagine a world where real meat is produced sustainably without the need to breed, raise and slaughter animals. This is no longer science fiction, it’s now within reach. Full details
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11 July 202318:45

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Should we all be giving up meat and dairy if we’re to have a hope of avoiding dangerous climate breakdown? This is what the headlines seem to tell us. But is this too simplistic a picture – and what would this mean for Cornwall, where the majority of our farmland is used to raise livestock or to grow crops for these animals to eat?. Full details
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29 - 30 June 2023

NCRM Mixed Methods Workshop

This two-day workshop will focus on analysing and presenting data from mixed methods projects. REGISTRATIONS ARE NOW LIVE. Full details
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14 June 202310:30

Kreseda Smith - Agricultural Crime as an additional Stressor for Farmer Mental Health and Wellbeing

Agricultural Crime as an additional Stressor for Farmer Mental Health and Wellbeing. Full details
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31 May 202310:30

Andrew Jones - The need for interdisciplinary approaches toward research into farming

The need for interdisciplinary approaches toward research into farming. Full details
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17 May 202310:30

Alessandro Guglielmo - Cheese, maggots, and multi-species bodies. The decay of more-than-human health in rural Sardinia

Cheese, maggots, and multi-species bodies. The decay of more-than-human health in rural Sardinia. Full details
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3 May 202310:30

Jed Hilton and Robin Burrow - Suffering, Respect, and Identity in High End Kitchens

Suffering, Respect, and Identity in High End Kitchens. Full details
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25 April 202318:45

FOOD ON FILM: IN OUR HANDS + PANEL

The seeds of a better food system. In Our Hands explores a quiet revolution that is transforming the way our food is produced and distributed. Our current industrial food system is a vast and wheezing giant that is only upheld by a stilted subsidy regime that pays out to landowners and leaves many farmers by the wayside. Full details
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18 April 202318:00

FOOD ON FILM: FROM BELOW + PANEL

From Below, is a documentary that showcases the mutual aid and grassroots community action that helped feed and comfort the vulnerable during the Covid-19 pandemic lockdowns.. Full details
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17 - 27 April 2023

NCRM 2nd Annual Exeter Spring Computational Communication Science School

Researchers interested in computational social science will be given the chance to learn new skills at our 2nd annual spring school in April 2023. Full details
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29 March 202310:30

CRPR Seminar - Farming in the shadow of violent organizations: Understanding farmers’ place shaping in socio-ecological crises

Stefano Pascucci. Full details
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29 March 202310:00

Reading Group Democracy in Europe

In this iteration of the interdisciplinary reading group, we will discuss a text by Richard Bellamy and Sandra Kröger: Lies, Truthfulness and the Crisis of Representative Democracy.. Full details
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15 March 202310:30

CRPR External Seminar

Agricultural Crime as an additional Stressor for Farmer Mental Health and Wellbeing. Full details
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14 - 15 March 2023

Brexit Britain - A divided nation?

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8 February 202314:00

Institutional Ethnography: A Feminist Approach to Analysing Institutions Using Texts

Institutional Ethnography is an interdisciplinary feminist approach to research that examines how texts and language organise our everyday lives.. Full details
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8 February 202310:30

CRPR External Seminar

Local Food System Marketing Innovations – Links to Employer Wellness and Other Win-Win Branding Ideas Needing to Be Developed. Full details
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7 February 202319:00

FOOD ON FILM: Come back anytime + intro

The story of a master who created a community in Tokyo, one bowl of ramen at a time. Full details
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31 January 202318:00

FOOD ON FILM: Tampopo (18) + intro

How far would you go for the perfect ramen? Guided in her quest by scrappy truck drivers Gun and Gorō, Tampopo strives to create the best ramen around to serve from her roadside shop. In the process she is run through a rigorous training process, encouraged to steal secrets of broth-making and challenges other ramen-makers in Spaghetti Western (noodle Western?) style stand-offs. Full details
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25 January 202318:15

FOOD ON FILM: Blind ambition (12A) + intro + wine tasting workshop

Joseph, Marlvin, Pardon and Tinashe form a unlikely team of Zimbabwean refugees turned sommeliers, who turn the international wine establishment of privilege and tradition on its head in this inspiring documentary. Full details
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25 January 202310:00

Reading Group Democracy in Europe

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14 December 202210:30

CRPR External Seminar

Josh Milburn - Animal rights and food: Can we have our cow and eat her too?. Full details
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30 November 202210:00

Reading Group Democracy in Europe

In this iteration of the interdisciplinary reading group, we will discuss a text by Lise Herman et al., on: 'A Climate of Optimism? EU Policy-making, Political Science and the Democratisation of Central and Eastern Europe (2000-2015)’. Full details
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28 November 202214:00

Q-Step Work in Progress (WIP) Seminar: Michele Scotto Di Vettimo

Michele Scotto Di Vettimo (SPSPA) will discuss his working paper on EU integration and policy preferences.. Full details
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23 November 202210:30

CRPR External Seminar

“Keeping on top of it”: how livestock farmers manage their workloads and the demands of farm assurance shortly. Full details
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22 November 202214:00

Q-Step Work in Progress (WIP) Seminar: Simge Andi & Travis Coan

Simge Andi & Travis Coan (SPSPA) will discuss their ongoing research measuring the impact of fake news laws on online political discussions. Full details
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16 November 202214:00

Q-Step Work in Progress (WIP) Seminar: Alexey Bessudnov

Alexey Bessudnov (SPSPA) will discuss his work on predicting perceived ethnicity from data on personal names for major ethnic groups in Russia.. Full details
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2 November 202214:30

Decolonising Quantitative Teaching

The teaching of quantitative methods has a crucial role to play in the decolonisation of undergraduate politics degree programmes, given that Eurocentrism determines the quantitative approaches used today. As such, the decolonisation of, and through, quantitative methods teaching is both possible and necessary. Full details
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2 November 202210:30

CRPR External Seminar

Mapping the Good Farmer: Using Mental Maps to Explore Good Farming and Biosecurity in the New Territories of Hong Kong. Full details
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26 October 202210:00

Reading Group Democracy in Europe

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6 - 7 October 2022

PGR and ECR Conference for Sociology, Philosophy, Anthropology and Politics: Collaboration and Empowerment

Closing Date for Abstracts: Tuesday 6th September 2022. Full details
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5 October 202213:00

Suffrage, Turnout and the Household: The Case of Early Women Voters in Sweden

How were newly enfranchised women mobilized? Classic narratives suggest that newly enfranchised women were mobilized by their arguably more politicized husbands. However, husbands' mobilization of wives has not been subject to rigorous tests, primarily reflecting lack of suitable data.. Full details
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6 September 202218:00

Evening tour of St Nicholas Priory Museum - FULLY BOOKED

A delightful opportunity to visit Exeter’s oldest building and explore its extraordinary history with this private tour and talk focusing on the 20th century restoration of the Priory and its eccentric patron Maud Tothill.. Full details
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14 July 202216:15

Why Migration Museums? – A Public Roundtable Discussion - Join online

Join us online for a public roundtable discussion, the last of the Migration, Mobility and Displacement Series. Full details available below. To register for the zoom sessions please write To: sekretariat-altertum@uni-potsdam.de (24h in advance) and use Zoom link below Zoom link: https://uni-potsdam.zoom.us/j/64368136838 Meeting-ID: 643 6813 6838 Password: 74720546. Full details
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7 July 202216:00

Thomas Winzen (presenter) and Frank Schimmelfennig: Do Citizens Support the Differentiated Integration of Their Country?

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30 June 202215:00

Maria Dede (presenter) and Sandra Kröger: Economic integration, sovereignty, and democracy: How British business assess the trade relationship with the EU and its trade-offs

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25 May 202210:00

PGR conference, Political Studies in a Digital Age.

The conference will take place on May 25th after which we’ll have a drinks and food reception at the RAM bar. Full details
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25 May 202210:00

PGR conference, Political Studies in a Digital Age.

The conference will take place on May 25th after which we’ll have a drinks and food reception at the RAM bar. Full details
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25 May 202210:00

PGR conference, Political Studies in a Digital Age.

The conference will take place on May 25th after which we’ll have a drinks and food reception at the RAM bar. Full details
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20 May 20229:30

One-day Research Workshop on “Conditions of Autonomy – Legal, Political, Philosophical Perspectives”

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10 May 202218:30

Politics Movie Screening Series - In the Loop (2009)

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6 - 7 May 202213:00

Academic Life and Interdisciplinarity: Learning from Experience

A two-day event for the retirement of Professor Iain Hampsher-Monk. Full details
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27 - 28 April 202214:00

Workshop on 'The UK – a case of democratic backsliding?'

The Centre for European Studies and the Human Rights and Democracy Forum join forces for this two-day workshop with high profile speakers. Full details
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25 April 202216:00

Adventures in meaningful social movement research

This event is being organised by the Environment and Sustainability Institute (ESI) and the the Department of Politics,. Full details
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6 - 14 April 2022

NCRM UoE Computational Communication Methods Spring School - APPLY NOW

Researchers interested in computational social science will be given the chance to learn new skills at a spring school in April 2022. The NCRM/Exeter Computational Communication Methods Spring School will provide training at introductory and advanced levels, catering for both social scientists and data scientists. Full details
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31 March 202218:00

Politics Final Year Celebration: Alumnus Talk & Drinks Reception

Includes an inspirational talk International Relations alumnus Tom Bonsundy O'Bryan. Full details
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16 March 202213:45

Book launch of ‘Flexible Europe’

The Centre for Political Thought and the Centre for European Studies join forces for the book launch of ‘Flexible Europe. Differentiated Integration, Fairness, and Democracy’ by Richard Bellamy, Sandra Kröger, and Marta Lorimer. Full details
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11 March 202213:00

'Group identities and strategic discrimination' presented by Dr Dominik Duell, University of Innsbruck

In a laboratory setting, we explore strategic discrimination in principal-agent relationships, which arises from mutually reinforcing expectations of identity-contingent choices. Our experimental design isolates the influence of the strategic environment from effects of other sources of discrimination, including statistical differences between subpopulations and outright prejudice.. Full details
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8 March 2022

Politics Movie Screening Series - RBG (2018)

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3 March 20229:00

'The 4D Project: a holistic response to climate misinformation' presented by John Cook, Monash University

A number of psychological challenges hinder the countering of misinformation and science denial. Polarization on issues such as climate change and COVID-19 result in some segments of the population being more resistant to fact-checks. Inoculation theory offers a solution to polarization, with experimental studies finding that inoculating messages neutralize the polarizing influence of misinformation on issues like climate change.. Full details
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24 February 202214:00

Di Garage featuring Professor Christopher Lord on ‘Benchmarking Brexit against the Norwegian model’.

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24 February 202214:00

'Microtargeting: Reverse engineering of an ethical conundrum' presented by Prof Stephan Lewandowsky (University of Bristol)

There has been much concern about the “microtargeting” of political messages at individuals on social media based on sometimes sensitive personal characteristics that are inferred by the platforms from mundane data and activities. Evidence suggests that this type of microtargeted advertising, for example based on recipients’ personality, can be effective.. Full details
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23 February 202215:30

Reading Group on Democracy in Europe

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3 February 202214:00

Di Garage featuring Alexander Schilin: Still in the same boat? Studying the effect of constitutive norms on differentiated integration in EMU during the sovereign debt crisis

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26 January - 30 March 202212:45

Reading Group in Political Theory

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25 January 202218:30

Politics Movie Screening Series - 12 Angry Men (1957)

Topic: Justice and Class. Full details
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25 January 202215:00

Reading Group on Democracy in Europe

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9 December 2021

Di Garage featuring Dr Lisanne de Blok, Dirk Leuffen, et al. on ‘Public support for Differentiated Integration: Does Institutional Design Matter?

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8 December 202115:00

Guest research seminar - Dr Inge Graef

Consumer sovereignty and competition law: from personalization to diversity. Full details
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30 November 202116:00

Reading Group on Democracy in Europe

We will discuss this reading: T. G. Daly (2019) ‘Democratic Decay: Conceptualising an Emerging Research Field’, 11, Hague Journal on the Rule of Law, 9-36. Full details
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23 November 202111:00

South West Doctoral Training Programme (SWDTP): Using the Understanding Society study for longitudinal research

Funded by ESRC and as part of NCRM training, Understanding Society is the largest longitudinal study of its kind. It provides crucial information for researchers and policymakers on the changes and stability of people's lives in the UK on topics including Biomarkers, Genetics and Epigenetics; Covid-19; Education; Employment; Ethnicity & immigration; Family & households; Health & wellbeing; Politics & Social attitudes; Transport & environment; Young people. As with most other longitudinal household surveys, the structure and documentation of the Understanding Society are quite complex. Sometimes this may seem as an obstacle for researchers who are just starting to use the data. Full details
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23 November 20219:00

Exeter Q-Step/NCRM Introduction to Nvivo for Social Scientists

NVivo is a powerful and intuitive qualitative data analysis software for gaining richer insights from diverse data. This workshop is aimed at those who have no experience of Nvivo and little-to-no experience of computer coding. Full details
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16 November 202118:30

Politics Movie Screening Series - Do the Right Thing (1989)

First event of the movie screening series for Politics and IR students launched by the University of Exeter's Politics Department. Full details
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4 November 202114:00

DI Garage featuring Dr Sandra Kröger and Dr Thomas Loughran on ‘The limits of support for differentiated integration as perceived by academic experts’.

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28 October 202112:30

Political Theory Reading Group: Three pieces by Frederick Douglass

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27 October 202115:00

Q&A with Exeter MP Ben Bradshaw about Brexit

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25 - 29 October 20219:30

NCRM Research Methods Festival: 25-29 October 2021

The University of Exeter and Exeter Q-Step Centre are partners in the National Centre for Research Methods -- the UKRI funded national consortium for social science research methods training. Full details
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14 October 202116:00

Routes Conversation: Is the asylum system fit for purpose for Sexual Orientation & Gender Identity (SOGI) claimants?

Routes Conversation: Is the asylum system fit for purpose for Sexual Orientation & Gender Identity (SOGI) claimants? with Raawiyah Rifath (Lecturer in Law and PhD Candidate, University of Exeter) and Prof. Nuno Ferreira (Professor of Law, University of Sussex). Full details
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14 October 202112:30

Political Theory Reading Group: Pauline Kleingeld, ‘On Dealing with Kant’s Sexism and Racism’

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13 October 202115:30

Online launch of Ross Carroll's new book

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13 September 202110:00

Centre for Political Thought Online Workshop: Two new problems of intergenerational justice

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8 September 2021

Uncovering and Understanding the Far-Right Online Ecosystem - Online symposium

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15 July 202114:15

The Politics of Climate Change

Online discussion around the role of politicians and policy in the fight against climate change. Full details
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7 July 202114:00

South West Doctoral Training Programme (SWDTP): Secondary analysis of cross-national, comparative survey data webinar

Those completing PhD research over the past 16 months may have had to develop new strategies for conducting comparative research because travel to other countries has not been possible. Full details
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30 June - 2 July 20219:30

ASYFAIR Virtual conference Adjudicating Refugee Claims in Practice: Advocacy and Experience at Asylum Court Appeals

We have an exciting programme about various aspects of asylum and refugee status determination by international speakers, including judges, lawyers and researchers. The conference programme and other details are available on our website: https://asyfair.com/output/events/asyfair-conference-2021/ Registration is free, and will be open from 4 May until 16 June 2021. Please click on the link to register: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/asyfair-conference-2021-adjudicating-refugee-claims-in-practice-registration-152681682021. Full details
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23 June 202117:00

A Model Court For Migrant Children

Webinar to refine and develop proposals for A Model Court For Migrant Children, Chaired by Baroness Helena Kennedy of the Shaws. Full details
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23 June 202112:30

ONLINE Seminar - Constructing Mental illness and Criminal Responsibility in Capital Cases: Psychiatric expertise, Folk Psychology, and the Power of Stereotypes

Organised by the Centre for Political Thought and Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health at the University of Exeter. Full details
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23 - 25 June 2021

The 8th Biennial Regulatory Governance Conference sponsored by the ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance.

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14 June 202113:00

University of Exeter Workshop on Media and UK Elections

The British Election Longitudinal News Study 2015-2019 (BELNS) covers campaign coverage relating to three general elections: 2015, 2017, 2019. Full details
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9 June 202116:00

Routes Conversation Why should colonial histories be central to the study of migration and what does taking this seriously really mean? with Dr Lucy Mayblin and Dr Luke de Noronha

Routes conversations are monthly meetings where two scholars or activists from different disciplines discuss a migration question from their different perspectives. In this conversation Dr Lucy Mayblin, Senior Lecturer in Sociology at The University of Sheffield and Dr Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Studies at UCL will have a conversation on 'Why should colonial histories be central to the study of migration and what does taking this seriously really mean?'. Full details
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9 June 202112:30

ONLINE Reading Group session on Republicanism(s)

Join us on Zoom. Full details
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2 June 202114:00

Women Candidates Use More Positive Language than Men Candidates in Political Campaigns

Dr Akitaka Matsuo will be presenting his work with Tiffany Barnes, Charles Crabtree and Yoshikuni Ono. What explains the type of electoral campaign run by politicians? Prior work shows that parties strategically manipulate the level of emotive language used in their campaigns based on their incumbency status, their policy position, and objective economic conditions ... Full details
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26 May 202114:00

Negativity in Politicians' Communication during Campaign and Regular Times

Bruno Castanho Silva, Lennart Schürmann, and Sven-Oliver Proksch While research on the tone of politicians' rhetoric has picked up steam in recent years, almost all of our knowledge on factors that influence negativity is based on political communication during electoral campaigns. Full details
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19 May 202114:00

A Cross-National Analysis of the Effect of Parties' Characteristics on Affective Polarization and Interpersonal Trust

This paper uses multilevel models to investigate how parties influence affective polarization and interpersonal trust in multiparty systems. Full details
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19 May 202110:00

Applying for Government Research Tenders Training Session

Join Dr Bridget Sealey, Higher Education Consultant, to understand why you might want to apply for a government tender and how. Full details
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12 May 202114:00

When (not) to trust the overlap in confidence intervals: A practical guide

Researchers often aim to compare estimates across groups. For an intuitive and compact presentation of empirical results, many practitioners prefer reporting group-specific estimates instead of pairwise differences, and subsequently seek to infer the statistical significance of pairwise differences from the confidence intervals of the group-specific estimates. Full details
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5 May 202116:00

Routes Event: Precarious protection: Inside Europes Asylum Appeals with Dr Nick Gill

This will be an informal talk outlining some of the findings from a set of ethnographies of asylum appeals in France, Germany, the UK, Belgium and Austria conducted over the last few years by researchers at Exeter University as part of the ASYFAIR project. It will examine why asylum appeals are important, but also some of the challenges they encounter on the ground. It will raise concerns about the superficiality and (in)accessibility of legal protection via asylum appeals, and use this to reflect on some of the problematics of refugee protection more broadly. Full details
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8 April 2021

COVID and Euroscepticism

Exeter students discuss COVID and Euroscepticism on their Democracy in the European Union module EU at the Centre for European Governance. Full details
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30 March 2021

Democratic backsliding in Hungary

Exeter students discuss Democratic backsliding in Hungary in their Democracy in the European Union module on the Centre for European Governance's Soundcloud podcast series. Full details
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29 March 2021

EU’s democratic deficit on their Democracy in the European Union

Exeter students discuss Democratic backsliding in Hungary in their Democracy in the European Union module on the Centre for European Governance's Soundcloud podcast series. Full details
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12 March 202112:30

Symposium on 'The Privatised State' - Chiara Cordelli

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10 March 202116:30

Patriarch, Populism and the Pandemic - Women activists fighting discrimination

Panel discussion to mark International Women's Day 2021. Full details
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8 March 2021

European Citizens' Initiative on their Democracy in the European Union

Undergraduate students discuss the European Citizens' Initiative on University of Exeter's Democracy in the European Union module. Full details
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3 March 202116:00

Routes event: U.S. Immigration Law - a brief overview of issues with Anthony Vale

Anthony Vale is a 1972 law graduate from the University of Exeter, who has been practicing law in the USA. Tony represents immigrants caught up in the US immigration system, who seek asylum or relief from removal. He has been successful in cases on behalf of non-citizens from Angola, Cameroon, El Salvador Guatemala and Honduras. These cases are difficult and raise many constitutional issues, which he will clarify and discuss. Full details
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1 March 2021

Seminar on populism and national political parties including interviews with Ben Bradshaw and Alison Harcourt

students discuss the EU’s democratic deficit on their Democracy in the European Union module on the Centre for European Governance's Soundcloud podcast series. Full details
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1 March 2021

Seminar on populism and national political parties including interviews with Ben Bradshaw and Alison Harcourt

students discuss the EU’s democratic deficit on their Democracy in the European Union module on the Centre for European Governance's Soundcloud podcast series. Full details
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15 February 2021

Seminar on Europarties on their Democracy in the European Union

Undergraduate students discuss Europarties on the University of Exeter's Democracy in the European Union module. Full details
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10 February 202116:00

Routes event: Marriage, migration and Integration with Professor Katharine Charsley

Full details
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2 December 202016:00

Routes Conversation: What Does Citizenship Mean Today? with Dr Ben Hudson (Lecturer in Law at the University of Exeter) and Daniel Mutanda (MPH Candidate at the University of Warwick)

Routes Conversation: What Does Citizenship Mean Today? with Dr Ben Hudson (Lecturer in Law at the University of Exeter) and Daniel Mutanda (MPH Candidate at the University of Warwick). Full details
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11 November 202015:30

Understanding the relationships between risk factors, intersectional identities and criminal career trajectories: A multilevel approach

Researchers have called for developmental criminologists to better understand how criminal career patterns and 'risk factors' relate to intersectional identities. Full details
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9 November 202017:00

SSIS Honorary Graduate Speaker Series - "Leadership – a perspective" Colonel Lucy M Giles

The College of Social Sciences and International Studies will be organising a short programme of online VIP Honorary Graduate talks for the College over the course of Term 1. Colonel Lucy M Giles BSc MA PGCE Hon LLD will be giving a talk on Monday 9th November 2020 titled "Leadership – a perspective". Full details
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4 November 202012:30

Professor Jonathan Wolff University of Oxford: 'An Ethical Framework for Global Vaccine Allocation'

Chaired by Professor Catriona McKinnon (Department of Politics, Exeter). Full details
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28 October 202012:30

Political Theory Reading Group

Ross Carroll will introduce a discussion of interest for Black History Month. Full details
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26 October 2020

Alison Harcourt interviews Lord Andrew Adonis "Brexit: Will it ever get done?"

Full details
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14 October 202012:30

Political Theory Reading Group

Rob Lamb will introduce a discussion of interest for Black History Month. Full details
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13 October 202017:00

SSIS Honorary Graduate Speaker Series - Harriet Lamb

The College of Social Sciences and International Studies will be organising a short programme of online VIP Honorary Graduate talks for the College over the course of Term 1.. Full details
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9 September 202015:00

Establishment Relations and Fatherhood Wage Premiums

Fathers often earn more than their childless counterparts, although effects can vary among groups of men. Most of this literature uses micro data and attributes these wage effects to individual selection. We instead draw on relational inequality theory (RIT) to argue the importance of establishment relations behind group differences in net fatherhood wage premiums.. Full details
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17 July 202011:00

Open Event -Towards Fashion Justice: A UK-India Exchange Think Tank Webinar

The University of Exeter's Environment and Sustainability Institute and the GW4 Water Security Alliance cordially invites you to its first online Think Tank, Towards Fashion Justice: A UK-India Exchange on Friday 17 July, between 11am-1pm. Full details
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1 July 202013:00

Data Analysis and visualisation with Python

Building upon the basic introduction offered to Python in workshop 1, this workshop will cover exploratory data analysis, quantitative data analysis, and visualising data in Python and the Seaborn package. Full details
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24 June 202013:00

Introduction to Python for Social Scientists

This workshop is aimed at those who have no experience of Python and little-to-no experience of computer coding.. Full details
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3 June 202013:00

Longitudinal Data Analysis

In this workshop you will learn about the principles of longitudinal data analysis; when it should be used and the advantages and disadvantages of longitudinal methods. Full details
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15 May 202013:00

An Introduction to Open-Source Intelligence and its practical applications - ONLINE Workshop

This seminar will be an Introduction to Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT). It will cover some broad themes of what OSINT is and what it is not, as well as some thoughts on the future of OSINT.. Full details
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12 May 202014:00

Bayesian analysis with JAGS/Topics in Bayesian analysis - ONLINE Workshop

One of the advantages of Bayesian analysis is its great flexibility with respect to the functional form of the model. To take full advantage of this flexibility, the analyst need to know how to write code for Stan, JAGS, BUGS or a similar sample.. Full details
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11 May 202014:00

Introduction to Bayesian analysis - ONLINE Workshop

This workshop offers an introduction to Bayesian analysis in R. We will talk about the theoretical underpinnings of Bayesian analysis and the practical considerations for conducting such analyses in R.. Full details
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18 March 202015:30

CANCELLED: Understanding the relationships between risk factors, intersectional identities and criminal career trajectories: A multilevel approach

Researchers have called for developmental criminologists to better understand how criminal career patterns and 'risk factors' relate to intersectional identities.. Full details
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10 March 202014:00

CANCELLED - Hope and Despair: Presidents, Prime Ministers, Populists, Polarization and Mass Democratic Accountability in Challenging Times

The Executive Approval Project (EAP) is a global collaborative data and research project whose goal is to measure public approval of political leaders to help understand why some executives are despised and removed while others remain popular and reelected.. Full details
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4 March 202013:00

Data Analysis with R for Social Scientists

Building upon the basic introduction offered to R in workshop 4, this workshop will cover exploratory data analysis, quantitative data analysis, and visualising data using R, as well as introducing the various libraries that a user needs to be familiar with in order to carry out such tasks. Full details
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13 - 14 February 202014:00

Research Workshop on “The nature and transformation of contemporary political regimes: Sino-European perspectives”

This research workshop is meant to start a conversation between scholars working from different perspectives on the nature and development of contemporary political regimes. We shall concentrate on two main cases, the European and the Chinese political regimes; which can also be regarded as both emblematic and paradigmatic of the rather simplified dichotomy between authoritarian and democratic regimes that often dominates political analysis and political discourse. This slight Manichean categorization of political regimes has long maintained a stronghold on the political imagination—perhaps with some reason, in terms of the underlying conviction that modern political authority needs to rest on some form of popular legitimacy and unforced acceptance. Arguably, such simplification was at its most popular and pervasive during the last decade of the last century, after the collapse of the Soviet regime, which seemed to signal the unchallenged dominance of the liberal democratic model. Full details
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7 February 202015:30

Geographical and Place-based dependence in multilevel models

Multilevel models have been applied to study many geographical processes in epidemiology, economics, political science, sociology, urban analytics, and transportation. They are most often used to express how the effect of a treatment or intervention may vary by geographical group, a form of geographical process heterogeneity.. Full details
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5 February 202013:00

Introduction to GIS

A geographic information system (GIS) is a system designed to allow researchers to capture, store, manipulate, analyse, manage, and present spatial or geographic data. This workshop will introduce attendees to the introductory principles of GIS and how to use Python QGIS for research purposes. Full details
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30 January 20209:00

Analysing ambiguity: understanding and managing complexity in the professional environment

Suggested participants: Mid/senior level managers, SMEs in any business sector, those seeking promotion to management levels or new to management, HR SMEs, Data scientists/analysts. Full details
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15 January 202013:00

Introduction to R for Social Scientists

This workshop is aimed at those who have no experience of R, and will provide a solid introduction to using it for data analysis by covering how to handle data structures such as vectors, matrices, and data frames. Full details
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3 December 201912:30

Introduction to LaTex

LaTex is a document preparation system for high-quality typesetting that is used extensively in academia and elsewhere for technical and scientific documents. This workshop is aimed at those with little-to-no experience of LaTex, but who wish to develop a working understanding of it in order to produce high-quality documents. Full details
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27 November 201912:30

Elena Gadjanova -Title tbc.

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22 November 201915:30

Data Analysis & Q-Step Alumni Careers Q&A Discussion

Come along to our Q&A event and speak to a number of recent Exeter Q-Step and Politics graduates who have taken different career routes into social data science since graduating! This event is intended for any students, UG or PG, interested in a career in data analysis. You will have the opportunity to find out about a range of careers, and learn about what you can do, both now during your studies and after graduation, to follow a similar path.. Full details
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20 November 201910:30

Who do we think you are? Detecting salient identities in text

Behaviour differs between social groups – this appears to be true for linguistic style as well. Recent research has shown differences between age, gender, religious and political groups in the way group members speak. Since we are members of many different social groups, the question arises whether group membership affects our linguistic style constantly or whether our style shifts towards the group membership most relevant to the situation. Full details
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12 November 201913:00

Ronald KREBS (University of Minnesota) - Title tbc

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8 November 201915:30

The case against perfection in the mean: Why it is time for an individualised approach to evidence for education

Analyses of educational interventions need to produce evidence that is relevant to specific groups of students. When a group is not the target population of an intervention, any analysis involving just that group is called subgroup analysis, which is often regarded as a statistical malpractice, as its findings are often underpowered, unreliable, prone to overinterpretation at best, or misleading at worst.. Full details
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6 November 201913:00

Data Analysis and visualisation with Python for Social Scientists

Building upon the basic introduction offered to Python in workshop 1, this workshop will cover exploratory data analysis, quantitative data analysis, and visualising data in Python and the Seaborn package. Full details
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6 November 201910:30

Worlds Colliding: Examining the social networks and linguistic patterns of a merging organization through email

During a merger the acquiring organization is often a dominant force. It overwhelms the target organization and replaces its norms, routines, and formal structures. I will present the results from an ongoing analysis of a massively rich dataset of emails, longitudinal surveys, individual performance, and ethnography that paints a detailed picture of an unfolding organizational merger.. Full details
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30 October 201913:00

CAIS meeting

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29 October 201913:00

When politics and diplomacy collide; the conflict spiral in the Cuban Missile Crisis 1962

An investigation into the conflicting interests and powerplay revealed in the behaviour of the main protagonists- USSR and USA. A brief overview of this dangerous incident will be provided, but the main focus will be an analysis of public versus private decisions. We'll look at the personal drives and motivations of key figures such as John F Kennedy and Nikita Khrushev and discover why was not all as it seemed... Full details
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28 October 201919:00

Customization and output legitimacy in the European Union

Dr. Eva Thomann, senior lecturer in Politics, will deliver a lecture on customisation and output legitimacy in the European Union at SOAS on 28 October. Full details
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23 October 201912:30

Stephane Baele, Gregorio Bettiza, and Todd Hall (Oxford) - Emotions Entrepreneurs in World Politics

Emotions have garnered increasing attention in IR, yet the dynamics through which some emotions become prevalent in certain situations are not yet fully conceptualized. We highlight the role of “emotions entrepreneurs”, i.e. political figures who instrumentally prompt a certain emotional experience among audiences. Full details
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16 October 201912:30

SWDTP Information Session

Gabriel Katz, Exeter's Institutional Academic Lead for the ESRC-funded South West Doctoral Training Programme (SWDTP), has organised an information session on the SWDTP PhD and MA Programs, scholarships and selection procedures. Full details
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9 October 201912:30

Beverley Loke - China, the US and the Politics of Hegemonic Ordering in East Asia.

How can we best conceptualize China and the US’s great power role within contemporary regional dynamics and developments in East Asia?. Full details
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2 October 201913:00

Introduction to Python for Social Scientists

This workshop is aimed at those who have no experience of Python and little-to-no experience of computer coding. The workshop will provide a practical introduction to the Python programming language, and cover a host of the major operations a user will need to do in Python; ranging from assigning variables and working with lists, through to writing to/reading from a file, producing graphs, and debugging. Full details
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27 September 201915:30

Debate with your lecturers!

A student-lecturers debate, followed by a pub crawl. Full details
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25 September 201916:00

Religion and US Foreign Policy in a Postsecular World: Book Launch followed by Reception

The University of Exeter Politics Department is hosting a book event based on Gregorio Bettiza's new book, "Finding Faith in Foreign Policy: Religion and American Diplomacy in a Postsecular World" (Oxford University Press: 2019), followed by a drinks reception.. Full details
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17 - 19 September 201911:00

Welcome Week Events and Schedule

Events for incoming and current students hosted by the Department of Politics. Full details
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12 September 201914:00

Politics of Wonder: Difference and Dignity in Nature and Society

Half Day Workshop Hosted by the Dept of Politics' Centre for Political Thought & Egenis' Centre for the Study of Life Sciences, featuring a range of guest speakers including Prof. Jeremy Bendik-Keymer (Case Western Reserve University, Ohio, USA), Prof. Amy Linch (Pennsylvania State University, USA), Dr. Urszula Lisowska (University of Wrocław, Poland), Prof. Christopher Gill (University of Exeter, UK), Dr. Jack Griffiths (University of Exeter, UK). Full details
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9 - 13 September 201911:30

Q-estival 2019: People, Data and Society

The Exeter Q-Step Centre is celebrating six years of teaching and research and our move to a new home. We are holding a series of workshops, seminars and keynote addresses around our key research labs: Education and Life Course Studies, Policing in Practice and Computational Social Science. We will also be hosting a related Arts & Culture stream. Full details
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25 July 201913:00

Understanding women's mental health across the lifecourse

The aim of this workshop is to bring researchers together across the University of Exeter, and beyond, with an interest in understanding women’s mental health. The workshop will convene a multi-disciplinary group with shared substantive interests, but who take different approaches to research on this topic.. Full details
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16 July 201911:15

Class of 2019: Summer Graduation Ceremony for Politics and IR graduates

Graduation Ceremony for the conferment of honorary and substantive degrees. Full details
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27 - 29 June 2019

European Society for Central Asian Studies 2019 Conference (ESCAS)

The 16th biennial conference of the European Society for Central Asian Studies (ESCAS) will be held at the University of Exeter, 27–29 June 2019. ESCAS seeks to support the study of Central Asia — Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and adjacent regions of the Caucasus, Russia, China, Afghanistan and Iran. The theme for the 16th conference is "The Globality of Central Asia". Our conference will assess globalizations from below as well as those from above. We ask how individuals and communities of Central Asia are related to global processes.” Registrations now open. Full details
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24 June 2019

Institute of Coding Summer School 2019 at the University of Exeter

For students with little or no experience of programming or coding, the Institute of Coding Summer School at Exeter is an opportunity to enhance your digital skills through a course designed to introduce you to the fundamentals of computer programming and social data analysis. Full details
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18 June 201918:00

Athanassios Gouglas: Party Change in Europe since 1945

These seminars provide a series of academic talks into the changing politics and policies of Europe including Brexit and the UK’s changing relationship with the EU.. Full details
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13 June 201912:30

The Rise of ‘Populist Internationals’?: Exploring Transnational Activism from Left to Right

The aim of the workshop is threefold: 1. To empirically identify and map: (i) what are the main critiques offered by these left and right-wing strands of activism and what alternative visions do they articulate and advance; (ii) what are the main international networks and transnational connections between different left and right movements across Europe and North America; and (iii) identify and highlight the main practices of contestation. 2. To complicate the present conceptual understanding of populism in political science and IR, by exploring and identifying the key connections and differences between North American and European populist movements, leaders and agendas on the left and on the right. 3. To contribute to debates about the crisis, transformation and future prospects of the liberal international order and globalization. Full details
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12 June 201916:00

Louise Richardson-Self: Offensiphobia is a Red Herring

In a recent article in The Journal of Ethics, J. Angelo Corlett (2018) offers a critique of what he calls ‘offensiphobia’: the belief that people have a right not to be offended.We argue that offensiphobia doesn't really exist in higher educational institutions (which Corlett takes this to be the main context for his paper).We therefore attempt to amend his points in such a way that they purport to offer some criticisms of existing university policies and practices. However, as we demonstrate, even with these amendments Corlett’s critique will fail, since his argument that hate speech should not be censured is a bad argument. Finally, we wish to demonstrate that the term 'offensiphobia' is not only misleading, but ideological.It conflates hate speech with offense, and in so doing implies that hate speech cannot seriously harm its targets (beyond those forms of speech already unprotected by the First Amendment).This failure of recognition may even constitute a form of willful ignorance. Full details
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5 June 201913:00

CANCELLED: Introduction to SQL for Data Science

Unfortunately this workshop has been cancelled. We apologise for any inconvenience caused. Full details
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4 June 201918:00

Lamprini Rori: Mapping the European far right in Europe.

These seminars provide a series of academic talks into the changing politics and policies of Europe including Brexit and the UK’s changing relationship with the EU.. Full details
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3 June 201914:00

CAIS/ SSI Workshop: Reinventing Grand Strategy

Workshop on Grand Strategy, featuring a presentation from Thierry Balzacq, Professor of IR at Sciences Po and Professorial Fellow at CERI-Sciences Po, Paris, and Simon Reich, Professor in the Division of Global Affairs and Department of Political Science at Rutgers, Newark and Associate Research Fellow at CERI-Sciences Po. The presenters will draw on material from their forthcoming book, Comparative Grand Strategy: A Framework and Cases, Oxford University Press. For further details see the attachment. Full details
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29 May 201914:00

When States Come Out: Europe's Sexual Minorities and the Politics of Visibility. Talk by Phillip M. Ayoub, PhD Associate Professor of Diplomacy and World Affairs, Occidental College

In the last two decades, the LGBT movement has gained momentum that is arguably unprecedented in speed and suddenness when compared to other human rights movements. This book investigates the recent history of this transnational movement in Europe, as well as backlashes to it, focusing on the diffusion of the norms it champions and the overarching question of why the trajectories of socio-legal recognition for LGBT minorities are so different across states. The book makes the case that a politics of visibility has engendered the interactions between movements and states that empower marginalized people - mobilizing actors to demand change, influencing the spread of new legal standards, and weaving new ideas into the fabrics of societies. It documents how this double-edged process of 'coming out' empowers some marginalized social groups by moving them to the center of political debate and public recognition and making it possible for them to obtain rights to which they have due claim. Full details
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13 May 201916:30

Professor Richard Foltz (Concordia University) presents "What is the meaning of 'Tajik'?"

Richard Foltz (Ph.D., Harvard, 1996) is a cultural historian specializing in the broader Iranian world and his work highlights the wide-ranging influence of Iranian civilization on diverse societies stretching from the Balkans to China.. Full details
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7 May 201918:00

Sandra Kröger: Membership in the EU post Brexit

These seminars provide a series of academic talks into the changing politics and policies of Europe including Brexit and the UK’s changing relationship with the EU. Full details
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17 April 201913:00

Detecting trolls on Reddit: Introduction to Computational Text Analysis and Supervised Machine Learning in R

Computational propaganda is becoming a non-negligible presence on news forums and social media, and it is crucial to be able to separate between real users and social bots or trolls. Following Twitter, Reddit released a list of accounts suspected of being state-sponsored trolls, users who wrote more than 15.000 posts and comments between 2015 and 2018. How precisely can these posts be detected based on their content and the available metadata and what techniques can be used to achieve maximum accuracy?. Full details
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28 March 201917:00

Brexit Politics Staff/ Student Event

An evening of talks, debate and film showing on the eve of Brexit day. Full details
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28 March 201913:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Rebecca Baker

Rebecca discusses her PhD work which examines the effects of a politics focused civic education curriculum on political engagement amongst young people in the South West of England. Full details
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27 March 201912:30

Sally Murani on Rogers Brubacker

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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21 March 201912:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Andreas Karoutas

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Probing the Nature of Democratic Change: The Insurgent Minorities in the Political Theory of Gilles Deleuze and Jacques Ranciere. Full details
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20 March 201913:30

Longitudinal Data Analysis for Social Scientists

In this workshop you will learn about the principles of longitudinal data analysis; when it should be used and the advantages and disadvantages of longitudinal methods. Full details
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20 March 201912:30

Giovanni Navarria

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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14 March 201912:00

Are you listening? Crisis Negotiation Skills with Deborah Goodwin OBE

Join us as we welcome prestigious guest speaker Dr Deborah Goodwin OBE, to present her seminar on Crisis Negotiation Skills. Ever wondered how negotiators work? How do they even start to de-escalate something like a siege or a conflict? Would you know what to do? No? Well, here's a chance to learn! We're also throwing in a pizza lunch for attendees!. Full details
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13 March 201915:30

Seminar Series - “Can genetics tell us anything about voting patterns, including Brexit?”

Abstract TBC. Full details
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13 March 201912:30

Ed Langley on David Graeber and George Ellis on Stokely Carmichael

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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12 March 201918:00

Nicole Bolleyer: Shrinking Space for Civil Society in Europe? National Approaches to the Legal Regulation of Organized Civil Society.

Long considered a problem of ‘third countries’, concerns about ‘shrinking civil society space’ have moved to the heart of the European Union: confronted with the challenges of terrorism, financial crises and populist governments numerous member states have passed legislation constraining civil society organizations (e.g. EC 2018; CoE 2018; FRA 2018).. Full details
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6 March 201914:00

Departmental Seminar : Professor Lea Ypi, London School of Economics, Irregular migration, adverse possession, and the justification of the right to exclude

Lea Ypi is Professor in Political Theory at the London School of Economics, details of her research interests can be found here http://www.lse.ac.uk/government/people/academic-staff/lea-ypi. Full details
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6 March 201913:30

Data Analysis with R for Social Scientists

Building upon the basic introduction offered to R in workshop 4, this workshop will cover exploratory data analysis, quantitative data analysis, and visualising data using R, as well as introducing the various libraries that a user needs to be familiar with in order to carry out such tasks. Full details
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6 March 201912:30

Yuqing Cai on Joseph R. Levenson and Antonia Alecu on Peter Digeser

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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5 March 201918:30

Dr Marsha Henry: "Critical interventions: Returning to Theories of Gender, ‘Race’ and Militarisation in Peacekeeping Studies"

This open lecture argues for re-imagining peacekeeping, which starts with a return to critical theories and concepts in order to acknowledge the production of gendered, racial and classed inequalities in peacekeeping spaces and relations.. Full details
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5 March 201913:00

Gender, Sexual Orientation and Stereotypes: Challenges for Lesbian and Gay Candidates

This paper explores how the public stereotypes politicians based on gender and sexual orientation when cued about these identities in low information environments. While many studies examine high profile races to demonstrate the impact that media coverage and its potential to trigger stereotypes has on opportunities for female or queer candidates, few studies explore its implications in typical elections at the riding level.. Full details
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27 February 201915:30

Seminar Series - “Measuring global gender inequality indicators using large-scale online advertising data”

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are a key instrument in setting the agenda around global development until 2030. The promotion of gender equality features prominently in the SDGs, both as a standalone goal as well as in relation to other goals (e.g access to education). Full details
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27 February 201912:30

Dan Allum-Gruselle on Tocqueville

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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21 February 201913:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Nick Dickinson

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series From Representation to Meritocracy: conceptions of parliamentary work and the political class in the Boyle Committee reports, 1971-197. Full details
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20 February 201912:30

Joshua Dare on William Morris and David Farmer on Michael Sandel

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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13 February 201915:30

Seminar Series - 'Religious decline in the West: Unravelling age, period and cohort effects'

Old people tend to be more religious than young people, and Western societies today are less religious than they were in the past. Scholars disagree, though, about what’s changing and why.. Full details
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12 February 201918:00

Alison Harcourt: Brexit and the Single Digital Market.

Professor Alison Harcourt (University of Exeter) will speak about the roadmap for the EU's Digital Single Market (DSM) outlining different scenarios for the UK’s trade in digital services post-Brexit including discussion of the EU’s recent copyright package, the GDPR, e-privacy revision and audio-visual media services.. Full details
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7 February 201913:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Hannah Willis

Pizza and Politics – PGR Seminar Series - Hannah Willis. Title tbc. Full details
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6 February 201913:00

Introduction to Discourse Network Analysis (DNA)

Discourse network analysis is a toolbox of research methods for the analysis of actor-based debates, such as policy debates or political discussions. Examples include the policy debates on climate change, pension politics, or around the introduction of large infrastructure projects. Full details
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6 February 201913:00

Cake for Comments series: Thomann, E. Deruelle, T. and O. James

Ethnic and racial bias in frontline implementation: a systematic review of possible interventions. Full details
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6 February 201912:30

Christopher Richardson on Robert Nozick and Marina Lademacher on Iris Marion Young

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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30 January 201912:30

Ollie Dunn on Tom G. Palmer's "Are Patents and Copyrights Morally Justified?" and David Chalmers on Frederic Bastiat's "The Law"

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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29 January 201918:00

Michael Winter: The implications for CAP and the farming sector

Professor Michael Winter (University of Exeter) will explain why CAP is featured as ripe for reform and change in the context of the UK’s Brexit plans. He will consider what that might mean for the future of UK agriculture and the likely divergence in agricultural policy between the UK and the EU post-Brexit.. Full details
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24 January 201913:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR seminar Series - Virginia Thomas

Virginia Thomas (Exeter) will present a draft of her thesis’ research design 'The landscapes and limitations of rewilding'. Full details
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23 January 201913:00

Network Analysis for Social Scientists

This workshop provides an introduction for beginners to Social Network Analysis. It gives an overview of key concepts needed to design research that looks at social relations (networks) that connect individual units (actors), so that students can apply social network analysis to their own research.. Full details
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9 January 201913:00

Introduction to R for Social Scientists

This workshop is aimed at those who have no experience of R, and will provide a solid introduction to using it for data analysis by covering how to handle data structures such as vectors, matrices, and data frames. Full details
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19 December 201813:00

Cake for Comments Series: Nicole Bolleyer, Professor of Comparative Politics, “The ‘Shrinking Space’ for Civil Society in Europe: Drivers and Consequences”

Discussion of Professor Bolleyer's ERC Consolidator Grant Proposal “The ‘Shrinking Space’ for Civil Society in Europe: Drivers and Consequences”. Full details
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10 December 201816:30

Panel discussion: Under threat: the challenge to human rights with the rise of nationalism and ‘extremisms’

The Department of Politics invite you to a panel discussion to mark International Day of Human Rights. Full details
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5 December 201816:30

Roundtable: Human Rights and the Care of the Self

The Exeter Centre for Political Thought will host a roundtable on Alex Lefebvre's new book, Human Rights and the Care of the Self. Confirmed Speakers include Robert Lamb (Exeter), Sarah Lucas (Exeter), Ayca Cubukcu (LSE), and Alex Lefebvre (University of Sydney). Full details
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5 December 201814:00

Sentiment Analysis/Career as a Data Scientist

ASI Data Science utilise artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques in conjunction with large and small data sets in order to provide businesses with a competitive advantage. In this workshop, members of the company will provide an in-depth understanding of sentiment analysis, and how it can identify and categorise opinions from text data in order to understand the attitude of the individual(s) that wrote a piece of text. Full details
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5 December 201814:00

Departmental Research Seminar: 'Corporate and Public-Private Authoritarian Practices', Professor Marlies Glasius, University of Amsterdam.

Details of Professor Glasius' ressearch interests and work can be found here: http://www.uva.nl/profiel/g/l/m.e.glasius/m.e.glasius.html. Full details
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5 December 201813:00

Cake for Comments series: Bice Maiguashca, Senior Lecturer

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4 December 201815:30

Seminar Series - 'From riot police to tweets: How world leaders use social media during contentious politics'

Elite communication has the potential to influence public opinion, civil conflict, and diplomatic interactions. However, a comparative study of leaders' public rhetoric has proven elusive due to the difficulties of developing comparable measures across countries and over time. The advent of social media sites, and its widespread adoption by world leaders, offers a unique new source of data to overcome these challenges. Full details
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29 November 201813:00

Pizza and Politics – PGR seminars

Presenter: Sven Altenburger (University of Gottingen) : “The Constitutional Duties of Citizens". Full details
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28 November 201818:00

An Inaugural Lecture by Professor Jamie Shea

At a time when multilateralism and the value of international organisations are being questioned, not least by the United States, the nation that did more than any other to establish the global liberal order in the first place, Jamie Shea will examine whether NATO is still fit for purpose. Is the Atlantic Alliance resilient enough to withstand the shocks from within and without that are currently testing its solidarity? Will its current strategy be enough to guarantee Europe security and to rebuild a solid transatlantic partnership?. Full details
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28 November 201812:45

Lise Herman (Exeter) and Russell Muirhead (Dartmouth): The role of pluralist commitments and partisan agency

Weekly Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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21 November 201813:00

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Elena GADJANOVA – Pride, patronage, or policies? Mechanisms behind the politicization of ethnicity in the context of competitive elections in Africa

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21 November 201813:00

Cake for Comments series: Dr Matthias Dilling (University of Oxford), Parties under pressure: Organization, Factionalism, and Adaptability of Western European Christian Democracy

Parties under pressure: Organization, Factionalism, and Adaptability of Western European Christian Democracy. Full details
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21 November 201812:45

Clive Barnett: The Priority of Injustice

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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19 November 201815:30

"Squandered value? How to overcome the challenges of joining up government data for statistics and research", Ed Humpherson & Catherine Bromley (UK Statistics Authority)

To speak to people involved in linking Government datasets is to enter a world that at times seems so ludicrous as to be Kafkaesque. Stories abound of Departments putting up arcane barriers to sharing their data with other parts of Government; and of researchers waiting so long to get access to data that their funding runs out before they can start work. Full details
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14 November 201819:00

Can the UK be a world leader? Why a new Environment Act is needed now

Join Tony Juniper, campaigner, writer, sustainability adviser and well known British environmentalist as he delivers this public talk to raise awareness about the pressures faced by our natural environment, the current state of nature and how new laws can help us to restore it. The event will be chaired by Professor Matt Lobley of the Centre for Rural Policy Research, Department of Politics and will include Q&A. Come along to have your say and shape the future of the environment. It is hosted by the University of Exeter and Devon Wildlife Trust. The event starts at 7pm. Drinks from 6.30pm. Read more at https://socialsciences.exeter.ac.uk/research/centres/crpr/events/#Rjrux09liSA4IRwm.99. Full details
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14 November 201818:30

Can the UK be a world leader? Why a new Environment Act is needed now

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14 November 201815:30

Seminar Series - 'Connected networks, wellbeing and the power of representation: Qualitative and quantitative evidence from Facebook and social network data'

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14 November 201815:30

Polity. Demystifying Democracy in Latin America, Joe Foweraker (Exeter)

Exeter Centre for Latin American Studies Seminar.. Full details
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14 November 201812:30

Yutao Zhao: TBD

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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7 November 201813:00

Cake for Comments series: Sam Power, Lecturer in Politics, Kate Dommett (Sheffield), Lecturer, and Patrick Seyd (Sheffield), Emeritus Professor

‘Bringing a gun to a knife fight? Utilising 'triggers' to maximise membership potential’ (Draft Paper). Full details
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7 November 201813:00

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Brieg POWELL – Multiplicity of the Social and Temporal: How Multiplicity, IR, and Historical Sociology Can Help Each Other.

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7 November 201813:00

Data Analysis with Python for Social Scientists

Building upon the basic introduction offered to Python in workshop 1, this workshop will cover exploratory data analysis, quantitative data analysis, and visualising data in Python. It will also provide an introduction to the major Python packages used in data analysis; including NumPy, Pandas, and Seaborn. Full details
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7 November 201812:45

Sven Altenburger: The Civic Duty of Military Service

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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31 October 201812:45

Richard Seaford on Castoriadis and The Greek and Modern Political Imaginary

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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24 October 201815:00

POSTPONED: Carole Pateman: Fifty Years of Political Theory

This event has been postponed until further notice. Full details
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24 October 201813:00

Cake for Comments series: Dr Liam Weeks (Lecturer in Politics, University College Cork), 'Parliaments without parties’.

Draft Consolidator Grant to the Irish Research Council. Full details
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17 October 201813:00

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Jörn EGE – The Policy Influence of International Secretariat.

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17 October 201812:45

Kristen Walsh: The Darker Side of Baconianism

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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15 October 201811:00

The Tyranny of Distance: Assessing and Explaining the Apparent Decline in U.S. Military Performance

This is the first in a series of Q-Step Seminar talks for Autumn 2018. The talk will address the growing sense that U.S. military effectiveness has been on the wane in recent years. Is this the case? If so, what are the reasons for the decay in American combat performance?. Full details
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10 October 201816:00

Joint Book Launch: Trumping the Mainstream and Council Democracy

Come celebrate the launch of two new books from the colleagues in the Politics department: Trumping the Mainstream: The Conquest of Democratic Politics by the Populist Radical Right, edited by Lise Herman and James Muldoon and Council Democracy: Toward a Democratic Socialist Politics by James Muldoon.. Full details
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10 October 201813:00

Introduction to Python for Social Scientists

Python is increasingly used by social scientists to collect, process and analyse new types of unstructured or semi-structured data, such as online text and social media data. It is an accessible, yet versatile programming language which is also broadly used for data science and machine learning tasks, combining multiple types of data, simulation and visualization. This workshop provides an introduction to basic programming notions in Python, and introduces some of the most useful packages used in social science research. No previous programming experience is required.. Full details
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10 October 201813:00

Cake for Comments series: Dr Lise Herman, ‘Parties in the age of democratic crisis’ [book proposal]

For Dr Herman's research interests, see here: http://socialsciences.exeter.ac.uk/politics/staff/herman/. Full details
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10 October 201812:45

Robert Lamb: Pragmatism and Human Rights

Political Theory Reading Group. Full details
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3 October 201813:00

Introduction to Python for Social Scientists

Python is increasingly used by social scientists to collect, process and analyse new types of unstructured or semi-structured data, such as online text and social media data. It is an accessible, yet versatile programming language which is also broadly used for data science and machine learning tasks, combining multiple types of data, simulation and visualization. This workshop provides an introduction to basic programming notions in Python, and introduces some of the most useful packages used in social science research. No previous programming experience is required.. Full details
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3 October 201813:00

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Gregorio BETTIZA – State Might and the Almighty: Exploring State Power through Religion in 21st World Politics

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3 October 201812:45

Iain Hampsher-Monk: In Defense of Rhetoric

Political Theory Reading Group Meeting. Full details
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27 September 201818:30

Politics Speed and IR Careers Speed Networking

Come along to our Speed Networking evening and speak to a number of Exeter graduates who have taken different career routes with their Politics and IR degrees! This will be a fantastic opportunity to network with a number of prestigious Politics and IR Alumni, find out about their careers, and learn about what steps you can take to follow a similar path. All graduates are from within the last six years, so they will be able to provide perspectives and advice on translating an Exeter Politics or IR degree into a successful career. Full details
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18 - 25 July 2018

The ninth annual ECPR Summer School on Interest Group Politics

The ninth annual ECPR Summer School on Interest Group Politics is an eight-day intensive workshop held at the University of Exeter in southwest England. The school will provide graduate students with a firm understanding of the development, mobilization, agenda-setting role, advocacy efforts, and political success of interest groups and those that lobby for them.. Full details
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6 June 201812:00

Public Policy Seminar Series: Oliver James and Duncan Russel

Oliver James, Professor in Political Science: The Data Revolution in Government Performance Reporting: Evidence from Experiments with Citizens and Users. Duncan Russel, Associate Professor in Environmental Policy: The idea of valuing nature in policy making: reflections on 10 years of research. Full details
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24 May 20189:00

The German Revolution and the Radical Democratic Imaginary

The German Revolution and the Radical Democratic Imaginary This workshop aims to rejuvenate interest in the theorists and actors of the German Revolution and to place them in dialogue with conversations in radical democratic theory. The workshop will include panels on left-wing communism, radical democracy, Rosa Luxemburg and historiographies of the German Revolution. All interested scholars are welcome to attend. A preliminary draft schedule is included below: Panel 1: 9:30 – 10:45 - Rosa Luxemburg’s Radical Democracy Panel 2: 11:15 – 12:45 - Left-Wing Communism Panel 3: 2:00 – 3:30 - Revisiting the German Revolution: Berlin, Bremen and Beyond Panel 4: 4:00 – 5:30 - Radical Democracy and its Discontents Participants include: Mayra Cotta (NSSR), Thomas Jeffrey Miley (QMUL), Paulina Tambakaki (Westminster), Albert Dikovich (Konstanz), Clive Gabay (QMUL), Paul Mazzocchi (York), Jamie Melrose (Bristol), Merylin Moos, Donny Gluckstein (Edinburgh), Gaard Kets (Radboud), Joern Janssen, Regina Cochrane (Calgary), Felix Petersen (Jerusalem), Benjamin Popp-Madsen (Copenhagen), Olivier Ruchet (Zurich).. Full details
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22 May 20189:00

Challenging Dominant Discourses: Feminist Conversations Across Political Science and Political Theory

Feminist theory is an increasingly plural field, but it remains united by a commitment to challenging what passes for universal or impartial knowledge. This workshop seeks to map connections between feminist methods in political science and political theory in order to share resources for questioning dominant methods across the discipline of politics. We welcome papers that investigate feminist methods in a variety of approaches to politics, including democratic theory, international relations, quantitative measurement, environmental politics, public policy, and normative political philosophy. Submissions may be works-in-progress, finished papers, or even past work. Participants are encouraged to read their own work through the lens of the question “how is this work feminist?” We hope the workshop will address questions such as: What are feminist methods? How do dominant methods marginalize women’s experience? How have technological advancements in quantitative methods reproduced gendered relations of power? How might feminist methods or practices open up interdisciplinary pathways between political science and political theory? How can methods in political science and political theory be intersectional? How does work on gender differ from feminist work? Must feminist projects deploy feminist methods? The workshop will be divided into four sessions: 1) International Relations, 2) Political Theory, 3) Governance and Policy, and 4) Quantitative Analysis. We hope that conference attendees will commit to the whole day in the interest of making connections across different aspects of Politics as a discipline. Each session will culminate in a keynote from a senior scholar in the subfield. Full details
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16 May 201814:30

Politics Departmental Research Seminar (Term 3). Professor Sara Hobolt, LSE: 'Divided by the Vote: Affective Polarization in the Wake of Brexit'

Political theorists have long argued that a well-functioning democracy requires a degree of mutual respect and willingness to talk across difficult political divides. Yet these normative standards for political dialogue are difficult to meet when the public is deeply divided. Numerous empirical studies have documented that electorates, especially in America, are polarized along partisan lines, and this manifests itself as animus towards opposing party members. We extend this work by examining the emergence of affective polarization along lines drawn not by partisan loyalties but instead by identification with opinion-based groups formed in the wake of Britain's 2016 referendum on European Union membership.. Full details
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16 - 17 May 201814:00

Political and Philosophical Traditions in Comparison: Sino-European Dialogues on Liberty, Government and Community

The Workshop’s main focus is on the interaction between European and Chinese political languages and traditions. Its main aims are to assess processes of transculturation between Chinese and European, or more broadly Western, political discourses, and to investigate the different ways in which key political themes and ideas are conceptualised in Chinese and European languages and political experience. Full details
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10 - 11 May 2018

Social Sciences Graduate Conference

Graduate students in a changing world. Full details
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9 May 201810:15

Centre for Advanced International Studies (CAIS) workshop: World Order(s) in Crisis?

The Western-based world order is in crisis. Or so is relentlessly claimed from a growing range of quarters. Yet, what constitutes the Western-based world order and what its defining features are is generally poorly understood. Full details
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27 April 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Adrian Colston

Adrian Colston, ‘Stakeholder attitudes to the narratives of the Dartmoor Commons: tradition and the search for consensus in a time of change’. Full details
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20 April 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Rebecca Baker

Rebecca Baker - Measuring democratic quality? Youth participation in Plymouth. Full details
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17 April 201813:00

Cake for Comments Series: Anika Guaja (University of Sydney)

The Personalization of Political Parties: Opportunities for Participatory Renewal. Full details
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11 April 201813:00

Cake for Comments Series: Alice Moseley (Exeter), Alistair Clark and Emily Rainsford (Newcastle), Stuart Wilks-Heeg (Liverpool)

ESRC Draft Grant Application: Designing and Testing Interventions to Enhance Electoral Registration in Under-Represented Groups. Full details
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29 March 201816:00

Q-Step: Multilevel Modelling

In this tutorial, we introduce multilevel models as extensions of regression-type models suited to analyse hierarchical or nested data, such as children's SATs test scores nested within classes or schools, individual survey responses nested within interviewers, or, potentially, any measure taken repeatedly over time. I’ll demonstrate code on the spot in R, so you might find it helpful to bring your laptops (but it’s optional). Full details
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23 March 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentations by Francesca Farmer and Torill Stavenes

Francesca Farmer, ‘Cybercrime vs hacktivism: do we need a differentiated regulatory approach?’ Torill Stavenes, 'Money and members: An analysis of the influence of state funding on centralisation in new minor parties in Italy'. Full details
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21 March 201814:00

Politics Departmental Research Seminar (Term 2) - Professor Milja Kurki, Aberystwyth University: 'Sovereignty’s Unseen Battle Battalions: Democracy Support as a Practice of Sovereignty'

From Trump supporters to Brexiteers, last few years have seen a rise of ‘sovereigntism’, a renewed defence of the principle of sovereign statehood as a principle of governance. This has been surprising for many analysts and practitioners of politics as they had increasingly come to the view that the principle of sovereignty had either waned in its classical (Westphalian) meaning or had transformed into something new, at best a qualified, fragmented, externally-conditioned kind of sovereign principle. Yet, precisely this expectation reveals the lack of attention paid by analysts and political practitioners to a series of deep, and long-running, battle-battalions of the classical principle of sovereignty in global politics. These battle-battalions have remained ‘hidden’ and their defence of sovereignty has been by and large ‘implicit’; yet, they have been powerful and sustained in their efforts to stamp down on political struggles for forms of governance not premised on sovereignty. Focused on one such battle-battalion – the policy practice of democracy support and the attached agendas of development – this article seeks to both a. convey the intensity of hidden battles over sovereignty over the last three decades and b. the role seemingly innocuous, liberal, seemingly non-sovereigntist policy tools in elimination of actors and activities advocating non-or 'extra'-sovereign political imaginations. I argue that to understand the centrality of the defence of sovereignty for these efforts helps us understand the surprising resilience of sovereign political form. Furthermore, highlighting the role of the long-running battle-battalions for sovereignty ‘hidden in plain sight’ also helps us to grapple with the limits of global political imagination and democratic politics in 21st century international politics.. Full details
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21 March 201813:30

Rethinking Marriage: Theoretical and Policy Challenges

The Family Regulation and Society Network and the Gender Research Network are jointly running this interdisciplinary event entitled “Rethinking Marriage: Theoretical and Policy Challenges”. Following presentations from the four speakers, see below, the discussion will centre around theoretical and policy challenges to traditional conceptions of marriage, with speakers from Law, Sociology and Theology whose research interests include feminist and queer theory, gender studies, sexuality and marriage, civil and formalised partnerships, polygamy and the implications of intersex and transgender for theologies of marriage. Full details
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21 March 201813:00

Cake for Comments Series: Benjamin Lyons, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Exeter

Title tbc (draft article). Full details
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21 March 201812:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Oliver James, Professor of Politics

The Data Revolution in Government Performance Reporting: Evidence from Experiments with Citizens and Users. Full details
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21 March 201812:30

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Saipira FURSTENBERG & John HEATHERSHAW – Forms of State Repression and Practice in an Age of Globalisation: The Case of Central Asian Political Exiles.

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20 March 201818:30

War and Peace in the 21st Century

Question Time session with students from all years on 'War and Peace in the 21st Century', with Patrick Porter, Irene Fernandez-Molina, David Blagden, John Heathershaw and Doug Stokes.. Full details
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19 March 201818:00

“The Battle for Syria” – Public Lecture by Dr Christopher Phillips (University of London)

In this lecture, Dr Chris Phillips will provide an analysis of the crucial but underexplored roles foreign powers have played in shaping Syria’s ongoing civil war.. Full details
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9 March 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Milka Ivanovska Hadjievska

‘Professionalised but yet participatory? Membership involvement across parties, advocacy groups and service providing organisations in the UK and Norway’ (co-authored with Torill Stavenes). Full details
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8 March 201815:30

Q-Step: Text Analysis - Python

tbc. Full details
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7 March 201812:00

Special workshop on Spaces of Conflict, Security and Development

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6 March 201811:30

Q-Step : Agent-based modeling

Though models sit at the centre of lines of social inquiry as diverse as game theory, statistical analysis, qualitative analysis, and political philosophy, all involve an attempt to describe core elements of the world in a way that helps us to understand, value, and predict that world. With Agent Based Models, computer simulations of the behaviours of many agents work deductively from simplified assumptions to create dynamic interactions that can be examined over a range of conditions to make inductive arguments about the nature of the world. In this generative reasoning approach, agents with very simple micromotives can lead to complex adaptive systems in which qualitatively different macrobehaviours emerge. How do very simple assumptions about drivers, city dwellers, and voters lead to complex emergent phenomena like traffic jams, housing segregation, and party realignment? In this lecture, I’ll introduce answers to these questions by building models of these problems and highlight tools you can use to develop your own agent based models. Full details
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1 March 201817:30

Careers in lobbying and advocacy with Danny Kushlick (Transform Drug Policy Foundation)

Join Danny Kushlick (Founder and Head of External Affairs at Transform Drug Policy Foundation) for a workshop focusing on a career in lobbying and advocacy. Transform is a charitable think tank that campaigns for the legal regulation of drugs both in the UK and internationally. Transform aims to educate and inspire policymakers to explore and implement the effective legal regulation of drug markets. Danny will speak about his diverse career and experiences, give an in-depth look into the work of organisations such as Transform, and give his tips on being successful in the industry. There will be a Q&A after the talk, and a drinks reception where you will have the chance to speak to Danny further. Danny Kushlick bio: Danny is the founder of Transform Drug Policy Foundation, which he started in 1996, after working in a variety of jobs in the drugs field. It was his clients' experience that led him to the understanding that prohibition is a social policy catastrophe. He worked for Bristol Drugs Project, the Big Issue Foundation, Bath Area Drugs Advisory Service and the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders (NACRO). He is now an internationally recognised commentator on drug and drug policy issues, with a unique combination of personal experience and broad, global view. Please ensure that you arrive promptly for the start of this event and that you have your University ID card (UniCard) with you. Your attendance at this appointment/event will be recorded. If you are recorded as absent your ability to book further events and appointments may be temporarily revoked. If you are unable to attend, please cancel your booking as soon as possible. Please see attendance policy at http://www.exeter.ac.uk/careers/exeter/aboutus/policies/. Full details
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27 February 201811:30

Q-Step : Network Analysis

The workshop provides an introduction for beginners to Social Network Analysis. It gives an overview of key concepts needed to design research that looks at social relations (networks) that connect individual units (actors), so that students can apply social network analysis to their own research. The workshop focuses on the description and visualisation of social network data, looking at structural properties of a network, as well as ideas of centrality in the network. To understand the SNA perspective, practical examples are given from academic literature, illustrative graphics from the media, and source material visualised through R. Experience in R is expected although not required. We will use a combination of slides and R code exercise. Full details
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23 February 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Nick Dickinson, PhD Candidate

Parliamentarians and their Regulators: dilemmas of accountability, legitimacy and credibility inside ‘the regulatory state within Westminster’ in the UK and Australia. Full details
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21 February 201812:30

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Bice MAIGUASHCA – Feminism In and Against Neoliberalism

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20 February 201817:00

Q-Step: Longitudinal Data Analysis

In this workshop you will learn about the principles of longitudinal data analysis, when it should be used and the advantages and disadvantages of longitudinal methods. You will also be introduced to event history analysis and learn how to construct a person-year data file. Finally, you will learn to run common hazard models and create a survival curve. The workshop will be taught using STATA software with examples from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS). Please note that a prior experience with regression analysis is required. Full details
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20 February 20189:30

Technology and Electoral Research: Perspectives from Industry and Academia

This conference is the closing event for VOTEADVICE, a four-year research project funded by the European Commission to investigate the impact of new technologies on political behaviour. The scientific objectives of VOTEADVICE have been to produce research related to how new technologies and social media influence political and social behaviour. In order to achieve this aim the Research Network developed and applied techniques for the analysis of non-probability samples, online surveys and experiments and eye tracking tools.. Full details
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14 February 201812:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Michael Winter, Professor of Land Economy and Society

Agriculture and the Environment in Uncertain Times: Competing Positions in the Brexit Debate. Full details
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9 February 201816:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Natália de Almeida Moreno, visiting researcher

Regulatory Decision-making: parameters of good regulation. Tracing the coordinates of a comprehensive theory on regulation, investigating substantive and procedural parameters of good regulation. Full details
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8 February 201818:30

The Italian national elections 2018: What is at stake?

A Public Engagement Event Chair: Valentina Todino, Italian Cultural Association Guest Speakers: Gregorio Bettiza, Claudio Radaelli, and Claudia Zucca (Politics, University of Exeter) Italy goes to the polls on 4 March 2018. In the current stage of European integration and with the process of Brexit-ing under way, these elections are relevant for a large audience: the Italian citizens of course, but also the Italians living in Britain, and the citizens and leaders of the EU countries. The purpose of this event is twofold. First, to provide plain information on the new electoral system, how Italians living abroad can exercise their right to vote, and the options available. Second, to discuss the Italian elections from the perspective of their European and international salience. Populism, anti-politics, and at the same time the possible re-launch of the European ideal: these are not just issues underlying the politics of the Italian elections, they resonate with deeper political changes across the European Union and the UK. To look at the Italian elections in 2018 is also a way to raise more general questions about our identity and international politics. Hence our title: What is at stake in the 2018 Italian elections? Come and join us to find out more. We asked three university lecturers to kick off the evening with plain-language presentations, and to share with us their perspective (including why not fears, doubts and hopes!) on these forthcoming elections, as seen from Exeter, UK. Their introduction will be followed by Q&A from the public. We invite all university students, staff and citizens.. Full details
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7 February 201813:00

Patricia Correa, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Exeter

‘Electoral strength and internal party asymmetry in the Spanish Popular Party’ (draft article). Full details
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7 February 201812:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Sandra Kröger, Senior Lecturer in Politics

The Legitimacy of the Brexit Referendum. Full details
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7 February 201812:30

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Aneta BROCKHILL – Title tbc

Full details
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6 February 201811:30

Q-Step: Data Analysis - Python

TBC. Full details
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31 January 201812:45

Brexit: Understanding, Legitimacy and Implications

Workshop organised jointly by the Centre for Political Thought, The Centre for European Governance and the Centre for Rural Policy Research. Full details
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31 January 201811:30

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Janyl MOLDALIEVA (UNU-MERIT) – Playing the “Game” of Transparency and Accountability: The Agency of Communities in Kyrgyzstan’s Natural Resources Governance

Please note special time. BREXIT workshop begins at 1PM Reed Hall that day). Full details
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30 January 201811:30

Q-Step : Designing Experiments

At the workshop we will consider basic principles of designing field and survey experiments. We will start with discussing the idea of causal inference and randomisation. Then we will review several experimental designs: completely randomised, stratified, paired, cluster randomised, factorial. Next, we will discuss statistical power in experiments and conclude with a review of the methods for the analysis of experimental data, such as ANOVA and linear model. The workshop will be useful for Q-Step undergraduate students planning to use experiments for their dissertations, as well as for postgraduate students.. Full details
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24 January 201813:00

Cake for Comments Series: Nicole Bolleyer, Professor in Politics, Exeter; Valeria Smirnova, University of Dusseldorf; Fabrizio di Masco, University of Turin and Alessandro Natalini, Parthenope University

‘Parliamentary Ethics Regulation in Europe: Studying the Evolution of Complex Regulatory Regimes’ (draft article). Full details
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19 January 201813:30

Journalism Workshop: Getting a story on air with Simon Vigar (5 News)

Join Exeter alum Simon Vigar (Royal Correspondent for 5 News) for a workshop focusing on delivering a news story, analysing different scenarios and practical ways of dealing with them. There will also be time for a Q&A with Simon about careers in broadcast journalism. Full details
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17 January 201812:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Alison Harcourt, Professor of Politics

State Steer and IPR Policy in Standard Developing Organisations. Full details
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17 January 201812:30

CAIS Brownbag Seminar: Delacey TEDESCO – Fashioning Spatiotemporal Politics in an Urban World.

Contemporary urbanization has become a global political problem, not least through its claimed transformation of the spatial and temporal configurations of world politics. Full details
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15 December 201716:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Amina Ghezal, PhD Candidate

The Risk of Statelessness and Identity Disappearance: Tuvalu's Oscillation Between Rising Sea Levels and a Ramshackle Habitat. Full details
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8 December 201716:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by William King, PhD Candidate

‘A Comparative Study of the ‘Yes’ vote for the 2011 AV Referendum and the same areas for the 2016 EU Referendum’. Full details
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7 December 201716:30

Q-Step: Collecting Social Media Data

This workshop provides an introduction to the main methods used to access, download and store social media data. You will learn how to use Twitter's APIs to collect tweets and user details, and how to collect Facebook posts and comments. Basic knowledge of programming in Python is required, and participants are required to attend the "Intro to Python" workshop first.. Full details
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6 December 201714:30

Governance in Turbulent Times – and how to deal with it

My talk focuses on public governance in turbulent times and how to deal with it. I aim to suggest the contours of a design approach in political science with the backing of organization theory. The ambition is to use insights from my latest work on governing turbulence and then to set out design implications from an organizational approach to public governance. Arguably, even in turbulent times research(ers) might specify and advice on how governance processes might be deliberately designed organizationally. I hereby draw a middle-ground in an old turf-war in organization studies and public administration between ‘science’ and ‘craft’. Insights into how organizational factors affect public governance is a necessary precondition for using organization theory to meta-govern. I will advocate that organization theory as ‘craft’ requires organization theory as ‘science’. ‘’Science’ and ‘craft’, or understanding and design, are thus complementary and not opposing as too often assumed.. Full details
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6 December 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Giulia Bazzan, Visiting PhD Candidate

Towards effectiveness of food safety regulation across Europe. Full details
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6 December 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Daniel Kapust (University of Wisconsin)

“The tragedy of Imperial Republics”. Full details
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6 December 201712:00

Catarina Thomson: Foreign Policy Attitudes and Security Policy Preferences in the United Kingdom: Applying Latent Class Models to Elite and General Audience Samples.

CAIS Brownbag seminar. Full details
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30 November 201714:30

Q-Step : Designing Experiments

At the workshop we will consider basic principles of designing field and survey experiments. We will start with discussing the idea of causal inference and randomisation. Then we will review several experimental designs: completely randomised, stratified, paired, cluster randomised, factorial. Next, we will discuss statistical power in experiments and conclude with a review of the methods for the analysis of experimental data, such as ANOVA and linear model. The workshop will be useful for Q-Step undergraduate students planning to use experiments for their dissertations, as well as for postgraduate students. Full details
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29 November 201712:45

New Approaches to Political Cohesion in Democratic Processes

This workshop places an emphasis on the relationship between democratic processes and political cohesion that goes beyond the simplistic formula of competitive democrats. Political cohesion, or the commitment to a common political project, is a matter of degree and processes leading to the peaceful resolution of conflict are just one way of contributing to this phenomenon. Indeed, political processes can embody values and produce norms that may legitimate the political system in one way or another and lead to much deeper forms of political cohesion among members of a political community than that which is allowed for by the mere avoidance of violent conflict. On the one hand, we consider the circumstances under which competitive elections can do more than peacefully resolve conflict by contributing in a deeper sense to citizens’ commitment to democratic values. On the other hand, as procedural and substantive democrats recognise, there is much more to democracy than free and fair elections. We therefore expand our inquiry beyond election to understand how other democratic values and activities may contribute towards political cohesion.. Full details
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24 November 201716:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Andreas Karoutas, PhD candidate (Political Theory)

Full details
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22 November 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Amy McKay, Senior Lecturer in Politics, and Antal Wozniak, Research Fellow in Politics

Article Draft Title TBC. Full details
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22 November 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Robert Lamb (Exeter)

Conal Condren’s Political Vocabularies. Full details
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22 November 201712:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Roberto Baldoli and Claudio Radaelli

What's Nonviolence to do with the European Union?. Full details
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22 November 201712:00

Alex Prichard - The Virtues of Anarchy Reconsidered: On Waltz, the Kantian Moralist of Anarchy.

CAIS Brown bag seminar. Full details
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20 November 201711:30

Q-Step: Intro to Python

Python is increasingly used by social scientists to collect, process and analyse new types of unstructured or semi-structured data, such as online text and social media data. It is a an accessible, yet versatile programming language which is also broadly used for data science and machine learning tasks, combining multiple types of data, simulation and visualization. This workshop provides an introduction to basic programming notions in Python, and introduces some of the most useful packages used in social science research. No previous programming experience is required. NOTE: This workshop is a prerequisite for the following Q-Step workshops (to be offered this and next term): Collecting Social Media Data, Data Analysis in Python, Text Analysis.. Full details
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15 November 201717:30

Carne Ross to introduce screening of The Accidental Anarchist (2017)

Carne Ross, diplomat, author and now filmmaker, will be in Exeter on the 15th of November to introduce a screening of his new film Accidental Anarchist for staff and students. Carne Ross will take part in a Q&A afterwards, chaired by Dr Alex Prichard, senior lecturer in International Relations in the Department of Politics. The event is supported by the Security and Strategy Institute, Center for Advanced International Studies, and the Department of Politics at the University of Exeter. 'Carne Ross was a government highflyer. A career diplomat who believed Western Democracy could save us all. But working inside the system he came to see its failures, deceits and ulterior motives. He felt at first hand the corruption of power. After the Iraq war Carne became disillusioned, quit his job and started searching for answers. This film traces his journey across the globe as he tries to find an answer to the question so many people today are asking themselves - isn't there a better way? For Carne there is. Anarchism offers a solution to the brutalities of Capitalism and the dishonesties of Democracy. It offers a world where people have control over their own lives. From the protesters of Occupy Wall Street, to an anarchist collective in Spain, to Noam Chomsky, the grand old man of anarchism himself, Carne finds people who are putting the theory into practice. His journey eventually takes him to one of the most dangerous places on earth - Syria, eight kilometers from the front line with Isis, where a remarkable anarchist state has risen phoenix like from the flames. A powerful film about one man's epic journey from government insider to anarchist.'. Full details
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15 November 201717:30

Carne Ross to introduce free screening of The Accidental Anarchist (2017), plus Q&A afterwards

Carne Ross, diplomat, author and now filmmaker, will be in Exeter on the 15th of November to introduce a free screening of his new film Accidental Anarchist for staff and students. Full details
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15 November 201712:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Sarah Cooper, Lecturer in Politics & Claire Dunlop, Professor of Politics and Public Policy

Evaluating the Stages Heuristic in Policy Teaching: An Experimental Analysis. Full details
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14 November 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Peter Stone (Trinity):

TBD - please note this is a Tuesday. Full details
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10 November 201716:30

Politics PGR Research Seminar Series: Presentation by Rebecca Mavin, PhD Candidate in Politics (Security, Conflict and Justice)

Since the 1990's, the number of actors working in the field of migration management in Europe has rapidly grown and diversified. This does not only refer to state actors- such as central governments, local governments, and street-level bureaucrats- whose roles and responsibilities in the management of migration have become increasingly confused and disparate; but also to the growing number of non-state actors involved in managing migration, such as private security companies, civil society organisations, and NGOs. This paper frames the diversification and growth of actors in the terms of New Public Management, suggesting that the management of migration has been increasingly dominated by a 'businesslike' approach, characterized by a focus on costs/expenditures and a demand for increased efficiency- thus rendering the management of migration into a complex 'industry'. Through mapping the types of actors involved in this migration industry, and comparing the specific actors involved in three EU states (Italy, Germany and the UK) we show how- despite the different forms of government and types of actors working in each context- this diffuse and monetised approach to managing migration has led to common structural problems, including a lack of clarity concerning who is responsible and accountable for decisions; a lack of consistency in the implementation of policies; and, often, a lack of consideration of the justice of decision-making and the wellbeing of migrants. We therefore conclude that the current, dominant approach to managing migration in Europe is inherently flawed, on account of both its lack of clear organisation and accountability, and it's inability to adequately meet the needs of migrants.. Full details
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9 November 201716:30

Q-Step: Data visualisation in R

We will introduce the common approaches to data visualisation in R, including line / bar charts, scatterplots, histogram and density plots in base R and using the ggplot2 package. We will also discuss the aesthetics, geoms and faceting systems in ggplot2. Please bring your own laptop with R, RStudio, and the following packages installed: "tidyverse", "titanic". Full details
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8 November 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Prof Clare Saunders, Professor of Environmental Politics, Politics Cornwall

“Corbyn's Cornish Comrades. A preliminary exploration of a survey of rally participants” (draft article). Full details
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8 November 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Teresa Bejan (Oxford)

TBD. Full details
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8 November 201712:00

Shahar HAMEIRI (University of Queensland) – International Intervention and Local Politics

Cais Brownbag seminar. Full details
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1 November 201712:00

Irene Fernandez-Molina – A Neighbourhood Issue? Mediation and Conflict Management by Regional Actors in the Libyan Civil War or The Multilevel Politics of Recognition in Protracted/Frozen Conflicts.

CAIS Brownbag seminar. Full details
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26 October 201716:30

Q-Step: Data management in R

In this workshop, we introduce some of the most popular functions and packages for data management/manipulation including fast data cleaning, recording a number of variables simultaneously, aggregating or summarising data by groups, merging tables, reshaping tables. Using an example data set provided on the spot, we will go through (s/t)apply functions, and functions provided by the dplyr package and the data.table package. Participants will be able to use their own laptops during this workshop and receive support with software installation. Full details
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25 October 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Eva Thomann, Senior Lecturer in Public Policy

Europeanized solutions to common problems? The customization, outputs and outcomes of EU food safety directives (chapter draft). Full details
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25 October 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: James Muldoon (Exeter)

Full details
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25 October 201712:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Angela Cassidy, Lecturer in Politics

History Repeating (Itself?) Badgers, Bovine TB and Long Term Environmental Controversies. Full details
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18 October 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Elena Isayev (Exeter)

Migration event. Full details
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18 October 201712:30

Public Policy Seminar Series: Eva Thomann, Senior Lecturer

The necessity of discretion: a behavioral evaluation of bottom-up implementation theory. Joint paper by Eva Thomann (Exeter), Nadine van Engen (Erasmus University Rotterdam) and Lars Tummers (Utrecht University). Full details
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18 October 201712:00

Owen THOMAS – Troops on Trial: Responding to the UK’s Armed Forces Juridification Crisis.

CAIS Brownbag seminar. Full details
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11 October 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Nicholas Dickinson, PhD Researcher in Politics, Exeter ,and Felix Christopher von Nostitz, Teaching Fellow, University of Lille

Full details
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11 October 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Sarah Drews Lucas (Exeter)

Linda Zerilli on Political Judgment. Full details
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10 October 201714:30

Professor Arjen Van Wittlestoojn Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands; Antwerp Management School, University of Antwerp

The Ecology of Government, Law and Polity. Full details
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4 October 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Martin Moorby (Exeter)

Marx. Full details
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3 October 201714:00

Professor Arjen Van Wittlestoojn, Tilburg University

Science’s Credibility Crisis: Why we have to change our publication practices. Full details
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27 September 201713:00

Cake for Comments Series: Dr Eleanor Gao, Lecturer in Middle Eastern Politics, IAIS

ESRC Grant Proposal: 'Not Free and not Fair: The impact of elections and appointment on legislative behaviour'. Full details
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27 September 201712:45

Political Theory Reading Group: Robin Durie (Exeter)

Complexity Theory and Health Care [Exact title TBC]. Full details
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25 July 201713:00

Cemap/Q-Step 'Cake for Comments' Session

We will discuss Nena Oana's (CEU Budapest) Marie Curie Fellowship Grant Proposal on "Dynamic Representation: Collective Mobilization and Party Support". Full details
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13 July 201710:30

Global China Seminar Series - Roundtable on Chinese One Belt One Road Initiative

An Informal Discussion with Prof Zhiqin SHI, Dr Jiahan CAO and Dr Bin MA. See event flyer for more information. Full details
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30 June 20179:15

Collecting and Analysing Social Media Data

This workshop, taught by Prof. Robert Ackland (ANU and Uberlink), provides an introduction to social media analysis using the R package SocialMediaLab. The package provides an easy way to collect text and network data across multiple popular social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram). You will learn how to collect the data, analyse and visualize it, and generate different types of networks for analysis.. Full details
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27 June 2017

Symposium: Transparency: Where art thou in consumer protection

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12 June 201711:00

DOCTORAL CONFERENCE: Civil Society, State and Democratic Politics: Challenges and Opportunities

PROGRAMME: 11:00 – 12:30 PANEL 1: CIVIL SOCIETY RESPONSES IN THE UK 1. Nick Kirsop-Taylor, Land, Environment, Economics and Policy Institute Diversify, Specialize, Reform, Avoid, or Co-operate: Analysis of the Strategic Responses From Environmental Voluntary Sector Organisations Living under the shadow of austerity 2. Joshua Garland, Department of Politics The Mobilisation of Anti-Fracking Campaigns: Experiences from the United Kingdom 3. Milka Ivanovska Hadjievska, Departement of Politics The Impact of State benefits on Membership Involvement and Political Activities: A Study of Voluntary Membership Organizations in the UK 12:40- 14:10 PANEL 2: DEMOCRATIC POLITICS AND REPRSENTATION 1.Nick Dickinson, Department of Politics Independent Regulation of Political Actors: Symptom or Solution to the Problem of Public distrust in the ‘Political class’ 2.Keith Sutherland, Department of Politics Deliberation and Representation: Squaring the Circle 3.Andreas Karoutas, Department of Politics (TBA) 14:50 – 15:50 PANEL 3: TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS 1. Gertjan Hoetjes, Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies Information Technology and Transnational Political Activism in the GCC states 2. Sidan Wang, Department of Politics The Rise of China in the Global Governance of Climate Change 16:00-17:00 ACADEMIC CAREERS EVENT “Life after a PhD: Everything You Wanted to Know But Were Afraid to Ask” Talks by Director of Doctoral Studies prof. Duncan Russel and lecturer Dr. Irene Fernandez-Molina followed by a Q&A-session. Full details
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23 May 201716:00

John Heathershaw’s new monograph Dictators without Borders: Power and Money in Central Asia (co-authored with Alexander Cooley)

The department will celebrate its publication with a seminar featuring John in conversation withguest speakers, an open discussion/Q&A, followed by a wine reception. Full details
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22 May 201714:00

Exeter MPA External Speaker Series: Transparent and Open Government

Professor Suzanne J. Piotrowski , School Public Affairs and Administration at Rutgers University. Full details
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16 May 201711:00

Trump's 2016 Victory: Rethinking Theories of Ad Persuasion

Professor Travis Ridout is Thomas S. Foley Distinguished Professor of Government and Public Policy in the School of Politics, Philosophy and Public Affairs at Washington State University. He is also co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project, which tracks political advertising. Ridout's research on political campaigns and political advertising has appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, Political Communication, Political Behavior, Political Psychology, Annual Review of Political Science, and in several book chapters. Full details
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11 May 201714:00

Professor He Baogang : The Authoritarian and Democratic Pathways to Meritocratic Political Rule: What Can We Learn from China?

Workshop on Democracy in China organised by Centre of Political Thought. Full details
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4 May 201717:00

Global governance in Autocratic Context: The Implementation of EITI in Kazakhstan

Abstract: The paper evaluates the functioning of global standards arrangements in an autocratic context. Through the case of an international governance initiative the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), the paper investigates how the standardised practices of global governance arrangements are implemented in post-Soviet state autocratic state of Kazakhstan. In doing so the present paper analysis the transnational character of the initiative and how it operates within the recipient country. The findings of the EITI in Kazakhstan illustrate, that domestic context and regime type influence the operationalisation of the initiative. The paper argues that the adoption of EITI standardised requirements follow a specific internal logic that disconnects from its initial purpose. The paper as such urges scholars and policy advisers to further investigate on how global governance arrangements transcend at domestic levels this particularly within autocratic regimes. The paper draws its analytical findings from interviews and survey analysis conducted in Kazakhstan in 2015.. Full details
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22 March 201715:30

Careers in International Justice and Human Rights

On behalf of the International Law Forum at Exeter Law School and Department of Politics, we are pleased to invite you to an expert panel on careers in International Justice and Human Rights, with drinks reception. Event open to students in the College of Social Sciences and International Studies. Full details
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20 March 201713:00

The London 2012 Olympic Games' Legacy: Researching Homeless Youth in East London

Open to students and staff from all departments on the Penryn Campus. Full details
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17 March 201715:00

The symphonic aesthetic and the challenge of big data

Guest lecture with Professor Mike Savage from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Full details
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16 March 201717:00

PGR-seminar: PhD-student in Politics, Nicholas Dickinson presents his paper:Advice-Giving and Party Loyalty: An Informational Model for the Socialisation Process of New British MPs

Abstract for presentation: Post-election socialisation has frequently been identified as a source of parliamentarians’ disposition towards party loyalty. Yet a recent study of the socialisation experiences of new members in the British Parliament, using tenure as proxy for socialisation, found little evidence of an effect on party loyalty (Rush and Giddings, 2011). This paper develops a new model of parliamentary socialisation and uses the same data to demonstrate that post-entry socialisation did in fact change legislators reported likeliness to behave in accordance with their party leadership’s wishes. Specifically, a framework based on information exchange (advice giving) is used to show that positive interactions with party actors are associated with increased loyalty. Controlling for initial levels of loyalty, members who received more useful advice from party actors were more likely to rate themselves as highly influenced by the party leadership. Full details
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7 March 201711:30

Mr Adrian Colston: Beyond preservation: the challenge of ecological restoration: can you live with ambiguity or do you want to be in charge?

The seminar will cover the story of some new approaches developed in the mid 1990s to address habitat and species loss in England.. Full details
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3 March 201711:30

A Barrister's perspective on working with tribal communities

Gordon Bennett is a human rights lawyer who works closely with Survival International. He recently published an article in the Guardian on the rights of tribal people to hunt. In this talk, Gordon will reflect on his work as a barrister and how his role interacts with other agencies involved in supporting the human rights of indigenous people. This event is designed to give you a flavour of some of the roles and activities involved in working in human rights with indiginous communities. Students from all disciplines are welcome to come and hear Gordon speak and discuss issues of tribal human rights. Full details
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3 March 20179:30

Network Analysis

The workshop provides an introduction for beginners to Social Network Analysis. Full details
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3 March 2017

Food and Circular Economy South West: All Partners Workshop

Do you run a bakery or dairy business? Attend our free event examining food and the circular economy in the South West. Full details
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24 February 20179:30

Analysing Text as Data

The workshop will introduce and provide hands on applications of various techniques of content analysis especially focusing on the analysis of texts.. Full details
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17 February 20179:30

Data Visualisation in R

In this workshop we will introduce you to data visualisation in R with two popular packages, dplyr and ggplot2. We will cover most main types of statistical graphics. Full details
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13 - 17 February 201710:30

SSIS Careers Week 13th - 17th February 2017

If you are in Politics, International Relations, Law, Sociology, Anthropology, Criminology, Philosophy or Arabic & Islamic Studies, you will find the SSIS Careers Week events and drop-ins designed to help at all stages of your career planning. Full details
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10 February 20179:30

Presenting and Visualising Regression Results

This workshop introduces various ways of automating regression output from Stata and R.. Full details
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10 February 2017

Food and Circular Economy South West: All Partners Workshop

Do you run a bakery or dairy business? Attend our free event examining food and the circular economy in the South West. Full details
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9 February 201717:00

PGR Seminar: Dr. Huseyn Aliev ( Post-doc) Blood Revenge and Violent Mobilization: Evidence from the Chechen Wars

Full details
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7 February 201711:30

Dr Angela Cassidy: Building a public controversy: advocacy, media and politics in UK debates over bTB since 1971

The contemporary history of bovine TB (bTB) in the UK. Full details
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3 February 20179:30

Data Analysis in R

Building upon the 'Introduction to Programming in R' and the 'Data Visualisation in R' sessions, this workshop provides a brief introduction to major data analysis topics and their implementation in R. Covered topics include: probability distributions, regression analysis, models for binary and categorical data. Full details
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20 January 201714:00

ESRC SWDTP Studentships Info Day

An afternoon to experience and learn more about what Social Sciences and International Studies Postgraduate Research in Exeter can offer. Full details
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20 January 20179:30

Introduction to R

This workshop provides an introduction to basic programming notions and their application in R.. Full details
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13 January 20171:30

Journalism workshop: A practical approach to dealing with a story

Simon Vigar, Politics alumnus and Royal correspondent for 5 News, will be running a journalism workshop focused on delivering a news story. Through analysing different scenarios, you will have the opportunity to look at practical ways of dealing with them. The workshop will finish with a Q&A session. Full details
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9 December 201612:30

Qualtrics surveys and survey experiments

Students and research staff in the College of Social Sciences and International Studies now have access to the online survey platform Qualtrics. In this tutorial you will learn how to use Qualtrics to design customized surveys and survey experiments, distribute them, collect the data and report the results. Full details
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6 December 201611:30

Dr Keith Howe: Farming on Exmoor: Towards Brexit

The presentation outlines some of the main physical and financial characteristics of Exmoor farming and explores some of the consequences of policy intervention in this context. Full details
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21 November 201612:00

What I did with my Politics and International Relations degree

Come along to hear from two alumni from the Politics Department about the variety of things you can do with your degree. This informal event is open to all Politics students. 12.00– 2.00pm Discussion and Q&A with tips on applications, internships, career decision making and more. Networking lunch: time to speak individually to our panel and have some lunch. Due to catering for lunch, booking is essential. Full details
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17 November 201610:30

SPSS Intermediate

This workshop introduces you to the basics of statistical analysis using SPSS focusing on cross-tabulations and correlations in particular. The workshop is taught at the intermediate level and requires basic knowledge of SPSS or the attendance of SPSS Beginners Workshop. For materials and further information visit Q-Step's ELE page. Full details
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9 November 201610:30

SPSS Beginners

This Q-Step workshop offers a brief guidance on how to get started with SPSS. It reflects on the drawbacks and benefits of the software and explains how to prepare your data to use in SPSS. The workshop then moves on to demonstrate how you can describe the data in SPSS. There are no pre-requisites for taking the workshop, and no prior knowledge of data analysis is assumed. For materials and further information visit Q-Step's ELE page. Full details
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8 November 201613:30

Graduate Careers in Local Government

The National Graduate Development Programme (NGDP) is a two-year graduate management development programme for individuals who want to make a difference. We train high-calibre managers who can influence and implement the huge change programme facing local government. Full details
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1 November 201611:30

Mr Gavin Huggett (SIP Project Manager): The Sustainable Intensification Research Platform: One Year to Go (barring any SIP-ups)

A highly requested update on the Sustainable Intensification Research Platform (SIP). Full details
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20 October 201616:00

Data Analysis in Practice: Examples from the Fire Service

Data Analysis in Practice is a series of talks designed to showcase how a range of organisations and industries use data analysis to inform best practice and improve performance. Full details
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13 October 201617:30

What I did with my Politics and International Relations degree

Our panellists will reflect on their own experiences and share any tips + advice on how you can also get into their career sector. The talk will also include a Q&A session.Please sign up to this event on My Career Zone. The discussion will last an hour, followed by drinks and networking. Full details
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5 October 201618:00

Sir Jon Day: "What keeps me awake at night?”

Sir Jon Day - Formerly Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee at the Cabinet Office in March 2012. Prior to his appointment, Sir Jon was 2nd Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Defence (MOD).. Full details
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4 October 201612:00

Professor Brett Day: The Value of the English Outdoors: A Cross-Nested Logit Model of Recreation Demand for Greenspaces in England

This paper reports on the development of a recreation demand model for outdoor greenspace in England. Full details
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3 October 20166:45

Alison Harcourt - Global activism: A case study rights technologies

The lecture shows a gradual move away from international treaties agreement to self-regulatory of copyright protection in standard developing organisations (SDOs). Full details
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29 September 201616:30

The Law on Data - exploring a career in this specialist area of law

Travers Smith provides data protection advice to clients in a diverse range of sectors, covering retail, financial services, online start- ups, pension funds and insurance. This regularly involves giving advice in relation to data protection audit and policy work, online privacy policies, data collection and exploitation, information security breaches and international data transfers. Recent work includes advising: Office in relation to a data security incident; Shazam on obtaining and using geo-tracking data; and A number of financial institutions and private equity houses on their international transfers of data. Our speakers will provide insights in to this complex area of work and you will have the opportunity to ask questions about law and data.. Full details
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5 July 201612:00

Governing agriculture for rural community sustainability: a case study in the Australian dairy industry

Visiting Lecturer Dr Michael Santhanam-Martin from the University of Melbourne will deliver a seminar for the Land, Environment, Economics and Policy Institute in July. Full details
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29 June 201612:00

Valuing Nature in Decision Making

World-leading researcher Professor Gretchen Daily presents 'Valuing Nature in Decision Making' as a guest of Exeter's new LEEP Institute. Full details
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9 - 10 June 201614:00

Translating Political Langauges: A Sino-European Workshop

The workshop is organised by the Centre of Political Thought in collaboration with Chinese scholars from various universities in Beijing. Full details
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8 June 201613:00

Stephen Greasley and Gabriel Katz: "Estimating the Link between Public Scrutiny and Share Prices"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: "Public Service Corporations: Estimating the Link between Public Scrutiny and Share Prices". Full details
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6 June 201612:30

Workshop on quantative approaches to gender research

This interdisciplinary workshop introduces early career researchers to quantitative approaches to the study of gender and politics. There is a long tradition of examining issues such as women's representation, participation and policy outcomes using quantitative methods. Full details
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2 June 201612:00

Ecosystem Services and Human Health: From Big Data to Less Big Case Studies

Dr Brendan Fisher, an internationally renowned academic visiting from the University of Vermont, will deliver a seminar for the Land, Environment, Economics and Policy Institute. Full details
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2 June 201611:30

Sequence Analysis — Alexey Bessudnov

This workshop offers an introduction to sequence analysis in social sciences. This type of analysis is applied to longitudinal data to model patterns of transitions between states. The usual applications in social sciences are in life course studies for the analysis of labour market trajectories, family dynamics, and other historical sequences. The workshop use the TraMineR package for R. Full details
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31 May - 1 June 2016

Global Uncertainties Workshop: "Contentious Politics and New Dimensions of Diffusion"

Full details
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25 May 201619:00

The UK and the EU: Ask the Experts

Take the opportunity to ask a leading panel of specialists about possible implications of the EU Referendum. Full details
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25 May 201613:00

Joost van Spanje (VU Amsterdam) "On parrots and pariah: Legal, media and political reactions to anti-immigration parties in Western Europe"

Joost will talk about research on legal reactions (eg party bans; hate speech prosecution), media reactions (eg silencing; stigmatizing) and political reactions (eg coopting their policy proposals; cordons sanitaires) to anti-immigration parties in Western Europe, and about their electoral effects. Full details
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23 - 24 May 20169:00

IAIS and Politics Postgraduate Conference

The Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies and the Politics Department of the University of Exeter will be holding a conference on 23-24 May 2016 to address the current state of uncertainty in Europe, the Middle East and world, and to understand how we, as researchers, should conduct our work within these complex dynamics. Full details
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19 May 201614:30

Professor Lars-Erik Cederman (ETH Zurich) "Inequality, Grievances, and Civil War"

Global Uncertainties Conflict and Methods Seminar Series. Full details
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18 May 201613:00

Catarina Thomson: Title TBC - draft paper discussion

Draft paper by Catarina Thomson for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series. Full details
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12 May 201617:00

Ana Almuedo-Castillo (Exeter): Resisting the sectarian: A paradigm for peacebuilding in Lebanon

The politisation of sectarianism and the institutionalisation of confessionalism as a form of organisation for the political, social and economic life have encouraged the perpetuation of sectarian conflict as a form of interaction in Lebanon. The entrenchment of sectarianism in Lebanese politics and society have drawn a picture of immobile sectarian boundaries and conflict. However, the study of sectarian conflict requires the acknowledgement that sectarianism may not be the only political and social paradigm operating in Lebanon, whilst it is necessary that we study spaces where this paradigm is contested. Resistance and contestation of the sectarian conflict is an ongoing process in any divided society. Lebanese citizens marrying abroad as a way of avoiding the current Lebanese law by which all citizens have to marry under one of the 18 officially recognised religions represent a community that have made the informed decision of not abiding with the sectarian system. These Lebanese may not have mobilised as a group to claim their right to civil marriage; they do form not a collectivity of actors or a social movement, but through their act they have found the path of least resistance to the imposition of sectarianism upon their lives. Everyday forms of resistance against sectarianism happen at the bottom of the society as a quiet, invisible and even unintended practice of contestation. The study of this practice may in the first place provide us with a critical approach to sectarianism, while in the second place it advances a new paradigm for the study of peacebuilding as a bottom-up and intrinsic local process.. Full details
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12 May 201614:30

Dr Nils Metternich (UCL) "Ethnic Exclusion and the Logic of Political Survival"

Recent research provides increasing theoretical and empirical evidence that the exclusion of ethnic groups increases the risk of armed conflicts. This poses an important puzzle: Why do governments exclude ethnic groups in the first place?. Full details
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11 May 201613:00

Nicole Bolleyer, Nils Bormann and Felix von Nostitz: "Conflict and Conflict Regulation in Political Parties"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: "Conflict and Conflict Regulation in Political Parties". Full details
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5 May 201617:00

Jan Pieter Beetz (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam): Practice makes Perfect, or at Least More Realistic. On a Contribution of Political Realism to International Political Theory

In an age of globalization, the rise of International Political Theory (IPT) can hardly come as a surprise. Economic, technological, political and social developments act as catalysts for a new set of normative questions. The core task of normative political philosophy is to prescribe desirable forms of politics. On the one hand, this concerns the question what should a political order achieve? The contemporary debate surrounds the concept of justice, often understood in socio-economic terms. On the other hand, political philosophers reflect on the question of political legitimacy. When do subjects have to accept rule over them as authority?[1] The real-world developments that animate IPT, such as climate change or the legitimacy of European integration, require political philosophers to answer these questions in a novel and dynamic environment. My claim is that the dominant methodological approaches to reflect upon these normative questions – ‘idealism’ and ‘empiricism’ – are ill suited for the task at hand. These methods remain largely insensitive to the novel context or rely on a static account thereof. An international political theory that aims to contribute toward solutions should methodologically accommodate the dynamic environment at every stage. In this article, I propose that political realism offers a particularly attractive practice-dependent method to theorize norms in this dynamic context. I will illustrate my claim through an application of this method to a salient political challenge in IPT: the EU’s democratic deficit. Full details
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28 April 201616:45

Jelle Leunis (Vrije Universiteit Brussel): Managing the Use of Armed Force: From Democratic Control to Regulatory Governance

Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are now a familiar presence in complex security environments. Nevertheless, the past decade has illustrated that traditional mechanisms of managing the exercise of armed force, designed with the aim of controlling the uniformed military, were often ill-equipped to hold PMSCs to account. In reaction, diverse stakeholders joined hands to bring this governance framework up-to-date, resulting in several new regulatory initiatives including the Montreux Document and the International Code of Conduct for Private Security Service Providers. This paper maps the implications of these initiatives for the norm on the democratic control of armed force. It does so in three steps. First, on the basis of existing literature, it reviews the established ideal-type of democratic control of the military. Secondly, it develops a new ideal-type of regulatory governance of PMSCs, to help us make sense of the values that underlie the aforementioned regulatory initiatives. This ideal-type is tested in three case studies covering a broad spectrum of PMSC clients working in complex security environments, including a government agency, a private corporation and a non-governmental organisation. The paper concludes, thirdly, with comparing these two ideal-types. It reviews the opportunities for the stakeholders and the population to participate in the governance of armed force and maps the impact of the proliferation of PMSCs and of the instruments to govern them on the traditional norm of the democratic control of armed force. On the basis of this comparison, the paper argues that democratic involvement in the governance of PMSCs is no longer founded on a representational basis, as was the case with the military, but on a participatory basis. Since not all stakeholders have an equal opportunity to participate in these governance processes, this might endanger the democratic oversight of armed force. Full details
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25 April 201619:00

Ask the Experts: The UK and the EU

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31 March 201614:00

Laszlo Horvath, Susan Banducci, Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (Politics), Samuel Vine (CLES): Stereotype threat effects on women's political engagement

Research on symbolic or non-policy effects of gender-balanced legislatures documented 'role model effects', positively impacting women's political engagement as citizens. Yet most of the evidence relies on observational data making it difficult to disentangle whether gender balanced contexts are also cultures where women are simply more politically engaged. Similarly, little has been proposed as to what psychological mechanisms connect women's minority position in politics to citizen disengagement, and the presence of role models to more political engagement. I am presenting pilot study results of two experiments. Broadly, they propose Stereotype Threat accounting for women's decreased psychological engagement with politics, as well as impaired performance on and confidence about political knowledge tests, under numerical imbalance. The opposite, role model effects, are tested under improved numerical balance setups, ranging from ‘token’ (minimal) presence, ‘critical mass’ presence (roughly a third), and complete parity. The basic, ‘picture treatment design’ is administered on an online sample. Study 2 is a laboratory experiment which further investigates if ST processes still apply if the negative emotion of approach (anger), rather than avoidance (fear), was induced. In an attentional bias paradigm, we expose all subjects to image pairs containing one stereotyping and one non-stereotyping political group. With data collected through an eye-tracking device we are able to establish if subjects approach or avoid stereotyping imagery. We further investigate whether the challenge state reverses ST effects, with greater psychological engagement with politics, and improved performance on the political knowledge test. Full details
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22 March 201610:30

Presenting and Visualising Regression Results — Nils-Christian Bormann

This workshop introduces various ways of automating regression output from Stata and R. It will start by covering ways how to automate table creation for Latex and Word. It will then proceed to visualizing marginal effects and predicted probabilities from linear and binary dependent variable regressions and finally discuss visualization of interaction effects. If time permits, we will cover R's advanced plotting and data manipulation packages ggplot2 and dplyr/plyr. Full details
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11 March 201612:30

Arlinda Rrustemi (University of Leiden): State-Building through Life Stories: Incorporating Local Perspectives

The presentation focuses on an ongoing research about statebuilding in Kosovo using life stories, comparing the international and local perspectives of international statebuilding. The first stage of the project included the identification of the international perceptions (NATO, EU, UNMIK & EULEX) in state building and the second stage included the identification of the local perspectives (political elites, ngo's, etc) in state building through life stories. The talk will revolve around the design and objectives of the research project and some preliminary findings. The processes promoted by the international community in Kosovo focus mainly on institutions, and it uncovers the main similarities and differences with the emerging local perspectives. The latter emphasizes more the societal processes rather than institutional ones. Recommendations follow on how to bridge the gap between the international and local perspectives since they seem to differ on some aspects and correspond on others. Full details
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10 March 201612:30

Denise Laroze (University of Essex): Policy space and opportunity to enter: when a party collapses

The entry and success of new parties has become a regular event in modern democracies. From the emergence of green to protest parties, new movements have entered the electoral arena. This paper addresses one of the less studied aspects of new parties: the dynamic process of party exit and entry into politics. The paper argues that changes to the party system, produced by the collapse of a political party, can lead to the successful entrance of new parties in the next election. The premise is that one party’s loss is a future one’s gain. The empirical results provide strong evidence that the size of the collapsed party has a substantive impact on the level of new parties’ success. Full details
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4 March 201612:30

The Race for the White House 2016

Mr King will talk about the nomination contests and the 2016 general election. Full details
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4 March 201610:30

Alumni Presentation: Working in the Communications sector

Andrew Honnor is the founder and Managing Partner of financial communications firm, Greenbrook. In this talk, Andrew will discuss his career path working in the communications sector and highlight both the opportunities and challenges within this industry. The event will include a Q&A session. Full details
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4 March 201610:30

Alumni Presentation: Working in the Communications sector

Andrew Honnor (History and Politics, 1992) is the founder and Managing Partner of financial communications firm, Greenbrook. In this talk, Andrew will discuss his career path working in the communications sector and highlight both the opportunities and challenges within this industry. The event will include a Q&A session. Full details
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3 March 201617:00

Johannes Jaeger (Universität Würzburg): Party Regulations and the legality of Online Voting for Candidates, Leaders and Policy

Online participatory instruments are gaining popularity among political parties. After the German Piratenpartei’s temporary electoral success of the between 2011-2013, the interest of party scholars, journalists and practitioners across Europe on the topic has exploded. Online participation is considered, inter alia, to win (back) younger generations for the democratic process and to stop the “decline of party membership". It’s a matter of common knowledge that political parties and the democratic systems themselves in almost the entire Western world are experiencing similar processes such as the dissolution of social classes or religious traditions as well as low interest of citizens in traditional democratic participation. However, the legal systems in which political parties operate differ widely. Despite the strong international interest in the participatory and deliberative adjustments of the German Piratenpartei, the legal obstacles towards the establishment of a liquid intra-party democracy in Germany have received little attention. Unlike political parties in other jurisdictions, the German political parties are highly regulated by the German Political Parties Act and e.g. the Federal Elections Act. These Acts also include various provisions for the internal decision-making process. This short presentation seeks to explain the possibilities and the limits of modern forms of internet-based participation such as online-voting in leadership elections and candidate selection within German parties. Full details
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3 March 201616:00

A History of Political Television Advertising in America

Mr King will discuss the history of television advertising in American Politics. Full details
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2 March 201613:00

Patricia Correa Vila and Juan Rodriguez-Teruel: "Comparing Incentives and Party Activism in US and Europe: PSOE, PP and the California Democratic Party"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: ‘Comparing Incentives and Party Activism in US and Europe: PSOE, PP and the California Democratic Party’, by Patricia Correa Vila (Research Fellow, Politics) and Juan Rodriguez-Teruel (Politics, Universitat de València).. Full details
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1 March 2016

CRPR Discussion series: Dr Gordon Morris

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25 February 201617:00

Dr Anika Gauja (University of Sydney) - Researching Reform: A Qualitative Approach to Understanding Party Change

In this seminar, I discuss some of the theoretical and empirical challenges of studying how political organisations, such as parties, change over time. Reflecting back on a recently completed project on comparative party reform, I address three main questions: first, what is the nature of organisational change, and how can it be measured? Second, what do we mean when we speak of the political party in comparative research? Is it possible to reconcile structure with agency in these organisations? Finally, how can we study organisations that don’t want to be studied? To answer these questions I put forward a three-tiered theoretical framework for evaluating change that captures intra-organisational, competitive and systemic pressures for change, and argue the benefits of adapting heuristics and approaches from related disciplines in furthering our understandings of the internal workings of political parties. I outline a qualitative methodology for the study of parties that triangulates a diverse range of sources of evidence beyond formal rules changes, including interviews, ethnographic observations, and the systematic analysis of party documents and speeches as strategic rhetorical devices. Full details
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24 February 201613:00

Alexey Bessudnov, Susan Banducci and Dan Stevens: "Childbirths and Political Interest"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Alexey Bessudnov (Sociology) and Susan Banducci and Dan Stevens (Politics), ‘Childbirths and Political Interest’. Full details
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23 February 201617:30

How to get a career in (American) Politics and other reflections on Washington

Mr Petts will talk about his advice for getting a career in Politics - whether in America or elsewhere. Full details
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22 February 201616:30

Political Polling and Campaign Strategy

Mr Petts will talk about how political polling is conducted and used in American elections. Full details
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18 February 201617:00

Stijn van Voorst (Tilburg University, the Netherlands):To evaluate or not to evaluate: the initiation of ex-post legislative evaluations by the European Commission

Abstract: Theoretically there are many possible reasons for the European Commission to evaluate its legislation, including the desire to improve policy-making and the need to scrutinize implementation by national authorities. While the Commission nowadays has the norm that both spending and non-spending activities should be evaluated, its own data and existing research show that only a minority of major EU legislation is in fact evaluated. My paper tries to explain this variance in the initiation of ex-post legislative evaluations by applying a rational and political model of evaluation. It tests these models with the help of two datasets, one containing all major EU laws from 2000-2004 and one containing all ex-post legislative evaluations from the Commission from 2000-2014. Full details
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17 February 201612:00

John Maloney (Economics): "Are Marginals Different?"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: John Maloney (Economics), ‘Are Marginals Different?’. Full details
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12 February 201614:30

Data Analysis in R — Iulia Cioroianu

Building upon the "Introduction to Programming in R" session, this workshop provides a brief introduction to major data analysis topics and their implementation in R. Topics covered include: probability distributions, regression analysis, and models for binary and categorical data. Full details
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10 February 201614:30

External Speaker: Prof. Jonathan JOSEPH (Professor, University of Sheffield)

Governing Through Failure and Denial: The New Resilience Agenda. Full details
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9 February 201618:00

Ulrich Preuss @ Exeter to talk about Citizens in Europe: An interdisciplinary perspective.

This workshop will examine issues of citizenship, democracy and constitutionalism in Europe from legal, political and sociological perspectives. Professor Ulrich Preuss (Hertie) will discuss with us the themes explored in the new collection of his and Professor Claus Offe’s writings on: Citizens of Europe. Essays on Democracy, Constitutionalism and European Integration (ECPR Press, 2016). Full details
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3 February 201613:00

Katya Kolpinskaya (Q-Step, Politics): "Facets of substantive minority representation in Britain"

Draft grant proposal for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Katya Kolpinskaya (Q-Step, Politics), ‘Facets of substantive minority representation in Britain: Minority interests and their representatives in political and public debate, 1991-2015’. (Grant proposal for the Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship). Full details
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3 February 201612:30

Careers in the EU - Employer Presentation

Paul Kaye, London Office of the European Commission will be giving a talk on EU careers. He will provide information on where an EU career can lead, why it will be a fulfilling career choice, what involves and who they are looking to employ. He will also provide a very clear outline of the application process and the selection procedure, leading you straight into your career at the EU!. Full details
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2 February 201612:00

CRPS Discussion series: Mr Greg Smith

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28 January 201617:00

Felix-Christopher von Nostitz (University of Exeter): An Analytical Framework to study Primaries and their impact on Party Membership

The German Greens as Cases Study. Full details
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27 January 201614:30

Dr. Alexandra Lewis: Fundamental, not Universal: The Contested Nature of Education in Civil Wars.

The talk will expose and theorise the crucial role of education in intrastate conflict (in causing or becoming a target of violence), drawing on examples from Yemen to Ukraine, from Somalia to Bosnia-Herzegovina. Full details
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22 January 201613:30

Introduction to Programming in R — Iulia Cioroianu

This workshop provides an introduction to basic programming notions and their application in R. We will start with an overview of R objects and their attributes. You will then learn how to import data into R and perform simple data manipulations. Finally, we will go over a few simple examples of data analysis and visualization and introduce some of the most commonly used R packages. We will be using RStudio, a user-friendly interface to R. Full details
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21 January 201617:00

Claire Packman: The Engaged Researcher

Have you heard of the ‘impact agenda’? Have you thought about who the audience for your research might be? Have you ever considered ‘public engagement’? Whatever your answers to these questions, please come and share your thoughts with us as we discuss ‘The Engaged Researcher’, and what those words might mean for postgraduate scholars. With Claire Packman, Research Manager (Impact & Engagement) for the College of Social Sciences & International Studies, we’ll consider the merits and the difficulties of involving audiences beyond the academic community with your research. Full details
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20 January 201614:30

External Speaker: Dr. Petros SEKERIS (Principal Lecturer, University of Portsmouth)

Separatist Movements’ Logic of Violence. Full details
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14 January 201617:00

Thibaud Deruelle (Exeter):The Engineer and the Bricoleur: alternative policy solutions in the Multiple Streams Framework

This paper investigates the viability of alternative policy solutions before the decision-making process. Building on the literature about the Multiple Streams Framework, new conceptual elements are used to explain the lock-in of policy solutions. While policy solutions are generally perceived to be mere ideas, specific organizational elements of the policy network show that concrete initiatives can play the same role. In order to make sense of these engineered solutions, the decision-makers have to act as bricoleurs. They recombine initiatives and ideas to develop a fully fleshed policy. This paper is designed as a plausibility probe to determine whether the engineers and the bricoleur can be reasonably considered a relevant conceptual addendum in the field of organizational theory in public policy. It aims to reconstruct the process that led to the creation of a European policy for Disease Prevention and Control. More specifically the process tracing developed should lead to a clearer understanding of the formation of policy solutions, by identifying the work done by policy entrepreneurs and by labelling them either advocates or engineers. Then the role of the Bricoleur will be assessed in the light of the policy that was eventually adopted.. Full details
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12 January 201612:00

CRPR Discussion series: Nick Kirsop-Taylor

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10 December 201517:00

Claudia Zucca (Exeter): Does the Predisposition toward the Acquisition of Information Influence Citizens’ Political Learning? Evidence from Internet-based Exposure (Poster Presentation)

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9 December 201513:00

Claudia Zucca (Q-Step, Marie Curie fellow): "Measuring Party Competition through Network Modelling"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Claudia Zucca (Q-Step Marie Curie Early Career Researcher), ‘Measuring Party Competition through Network Modelling’. The discussion will be followed by Christmas drinks, 2-3pm in the same room. Full details
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8 December 201511:30

Analysing Text as Data — Ekaterina Kolpinskaya

This fifth Q-Step workshop of 2015–16 on Applied Data Analysis introduces and provides hands on applications of various techniques of content analysis especially focusing on the analysis of texts. It starts from outlining the key concepts, defining units of analysis and understanding measurement techniques and theoretical approaches. It then moves on to reviewing applications of content analysis to Social Sciences data (e.g., parliamentary records, political manifestos, policy documents). Finally, participants will be provided with textual data to practice the content analysis techniques.Feel free to bring your own documents (any type of text in digitised, preferably .txt, format) to the workshop. Full details
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2 December 201514:30

External Speaker: Prof. Jason SHARMAN (Professor, Griffith University & LSE)

Deceptive Studies or Deceptive Answers? Competing Global Field and Survey Experiments on Anonymous Incorporation. Full details
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2 December 201512:00

Travis Coan (Q-Step, Politics): "Tracing the Narrative of Hate in the Rising Greek Far-Right"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Travis Coan (Q-Step, Politics), co-authoring with Constantine Boussalis (Trinity College Dublin) and Elias Dinas (University of Oxford), ‘Tracing the Narrative of Hate in the Rising Greek Far-Right'. Full details
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1 December 201512:30

Network Analysis — Lorien Jasny

This fourth workshop of 2015–16 provides an introduction for beginners to Social Network Analysis. It gives an overview of key concepts needed to design research that looks at social relations (networks) that connect individual units (actors), so that students can apply social network analysis to their own research. The workshop focuses on the description and visualisation of social network data, looking at structural properties of a network, as well as ideas of centrality in the network. To understand the SNA perspective, practical examples are given from academic literature, illustrative graphics from the media, and source material visualised through R. Full details
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1 December 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Dr Rebecca Wheeler, CRPR

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26 November 201517:00

Alex Neads: Accountability, cohesion and reforming the military institution in Sierra Leone

Following Sierra Leone’s brutal Rebel War, the British government embarked upon a comprehensive programme of Security Sector Reform in Sierra Leone. Central to this was the British-led International Military Advisory and Training Team (IMATT), which sought to transform Sierra Leone’s rag-tag, predatory and coup-prone collection of militias into a cohesive, capable, and accountable armed force. This process sought to address a fundamental tension between civilian control and military potency which lies at the heart of democratic civil-military relations. Scholarly approaches to democratic civil-military relations have accounted for this tension variously; through reference to military demographics, professionalization and training, or direct political control of the armed forces. Instead, this paper argues that by focusing on the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF) as a bureaucratic institution, IMATT attempted to underpin both democratic accountability and sustainable military cohesion as mutually supporting facets of the military institution. Yet while the end result may have been a relatively accountable and cohesive armed force, this process fell short of professionalization in the western sense; indeed the process of institutional consolidation in the RSLAF proved to be inherently political. Full details
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24 November 201517:15

Careers That Make Society Work Panel

5.15-6.15pm – Arrival drinks and nibbles and networking 6.15 – 7.30pm - Panel discussion 7.30 – 8pm - Further networking time following panel discussion Discussion with panelists from charity, NGO and Public sectors. They will talk about the nature of their roles as well as offer insight into what life in their field is really like; including the opportunities, rewards, but also the challenges. Along with handy hints and tips as well as possible roles that are available within their companies. Between them they work across the spectrum of society to help individuals and communities to work better. Before the panel there will be an opportunity to speak with panelists and career’s consultants during the networking reception. As well as the discussion will be preceded by drinks and nibbles, and an opportunity to talk to the panelists individually after the event.. Full details
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19 November 201517:00

Dr Claire Dunlop and Professor Iain Hampsher-Monk: 'Meet the Editors'

This session will start with a short introduction of the two journaled by its respective editor, followed by a Q&A session on publishing in journals. This is an opportunity for you to ask any questions you have on academic publishing (process, when and how). Full details
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18 November 201514:30

Dr. Lorien JASNY:A Network Approach to Social Learning: An Application to Decision-Making in Collaborative Management

Collaborative management initiatives are increasingly being used in environmental policy with the aims of producing more favourable and more sustainable solutions. How this type of policy deliberation is successful in influencing participants, and whether this influence affects the solutions proposed, however, is unknown. This paper examines networks of mental models to understand deliberation and ‘social learning’ in a small group charged with collaboratively managing natural resources. Full details
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12 November 201517:00

Farhad Kerimov (Exeter): Pluralism, Discourse, and Democratic Politics

My dissertation is based on a distinction between plurality as an empirical fact and pluralism as a normatively defined idea of engagement and encounter across differences. I defend the thesis that one of the ways democratic politics can affirm pluralism is to incorporate the normative functions of openness, reflexivity, and agonism as expressed in the works by Iris Young, John Dryzek, and Chantal Mouffe. Full details
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11 November 201516:30

SPSS Intermediate — Katharine Boyd

This workshop introduces you to the basics of statistical analysis using SPSS focusing on cross-tabulations and correlations in particular. The workshop is taught at the intermediate level and requires basic knowledge of SPSS or the attendance of SPSS Beginners Workshop. Full details
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5 November 201517:00

Hilary Aked (Bath): “Pro-Israel lobby in the UK and its repression of the BDS movement”

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4 November 201516:30

SPSS Beginners — Katharine Boyd

This Q-Step workshop offers a brief guidance on how to get started with SPSS. It reflects on the drawbacks and benefits of the software and explains how to prepare your data to use in SPSS. The workshop then moves on to demonstrate how you can describe the data in SPSS using the 2010 British Election Study data. There are no pre-requisites for taking the workshop, and no prior knowledge of data analysis is assumed. Full details
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4 November 201514:30

External Speaker: Dr. Adrian BLAU (Senior Lecturer, Kings College London)

How (Not) To Draw Contemporary Insights From The History of Political Thought. Full details
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4 November 201512:00

Nicole Bolleyer and Raimondas Ibenskas (Politics): "New Party Survival in Advanced Democracies 1968-2013"

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Nicole Bolleyer and Raimondas Ibenskas (Politics), 'Political Parties - Just Electoral Vehicles? New Party Survival in Advanced Democracies 1968-2013'. Full details
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3 November 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Dr Tim Wilkinson, CRPR

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29 October 201517:00

Zhangmei Tang (Mei @Exeter): Hannah Arendt's Critique of Modernity in Light of Roman Political Thought

Without denying that Arendt’s identity and her indebtedness to Greek antiquity and Heidegger’s critique of modern technology have gained her original perspective on modernity, I will add the relatively marginal Roman factor into the scholarship, and try to prove that Rome is the constructive moment of her political endeavour and her departure from Heidegger.I will trace how Arendt turns to the historical-political situation of the Roman Republic because it faced similar crises to that of modernity in which the thread of ‘tradition, authority and religion’ was broken.. Full details
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29 October 201512:30

Jean Monnet Seminar: Dr Lorenzo Allio, International Consultant (AllioRodrigo Ltd. Switzerland)

Lorenzo will talk to us about his own experience with the tools of 'better regulation' in the EU and discuss where the EU is going with the recent Communication on better regulation (the Timmermans communication) and the negotiation of the inter-institutional agreement on better regulation. Full details
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28 October 201514:30

Dr. Katharine Boyd: Modelling Terrorist Attacks

Many terrorist groups conduct transnational attacks, some in countries very different from their country of origin. In this context, the presentation will explain what factors influence the rate of terrorist group violence. Using Multiple Membership Random Effects Modeling (MMREM), unique country level predictors are identified that influence the rate of terrorist group violence when transnational contexts are included in the analysis. Full details
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28 October 201513:00

Nils-Christian Bormann, HASS Fellow Politics ‘Internal Conflict Diffusion: Revisiting the Conflict Trap’ (an R&R article) Followed by CEMaP Annual Meeting 2-3pm (same room)

Draft paper for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Nils-Christian Bormann (HASS Fellow, Politics), ‘Internal Conflict Diffusion: Revisiting the Conflict Trap’. Discussion will be followed by CEMaP Annual Meeting, 2-3pm in the same room. Full details
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27 October 201510:30

Screening and discussion of Blueberry Soup (73mins) Directed by Eileen Jerrett.

Come and join us for a screening and discussion of this timely film. Full details
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22 October 201517:00

Sefinatu Dogo "Understanding the Evolving changes in the Nigerian Military from a Feminist Sociological Institutional Perspective".

The Nigerian Military changed from its gender position on combat to adopt a policy of inclusion of women in combat training in 2011, 53 years after its creation; with the implication of their deployment in combat roles. This has prompted a series of changes within the institution which are impacting on its gender culture.. Full details
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21 October 201514:30

Ian Bateman, Amy Binner, Brett Day and Carlo FezziI: Bringing the Natural Environment into Analysis and Policy Making

The UK Government recently announced that it will be “building on the work done by the Natural Capital Committee” to formulate a 25 year plan for the natural environment “which benefits people and the economy”. Our new colleagues, some of whom are Natural Capital Committee members/contributors, will showcase various of the methods they developed and applications they conducted for the Committee.. Full details
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20 October 201512:30

How to Read an Empirical Paper — Gabriel Katz-Wisel

Reading empirical articles can be intimidating. The new reader may be daunted by technical jargon, complex methodological procedures and statistical analysis. This workshop guides you through a process to make sense of the typical analysis in an empirical study. Full details
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14 October 201514:30

Seminar: Understanding and Challenging the Construction of Ebola as an International Crisis

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14 October 201513:00

Amy McKay (Politics): "Congruence Among the Policy Agendas of Citizens, Interest Groups, and Governments"

Draft grant proposal for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Amy McKay (Politics), ‘Distortion: Congruence Among the Policy Agendas of Citizens, Interest Groups, and Governments’. Full details
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9 October 201517:00

Martin Moorby "The Limits of Political Emancipation".

The presentation clarifies the themes of emancipation from alienation and the comparison of politics and religion in Marx’s ‘On the Jewish Question’. The author argues that ‘species being’ plays two roles in this text: as both an explanatory framework and as teleological conception of human emancipation. Marx thought the human essence the ensemble of social relations (namely, mental conceptions, the body of state institutions, and civil society), and this framed his response to the ‘Jewish question’ as well as yielding an analysis sensitive to the internal relation between these constitutive ‘moments’ of social life. Moorby argues that, rather than a causal account of the relation between civil society, the state, and social consciousness, Marx’s philosophy treats the relation between these elements as mutual and internal.. Full details
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6 October 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Dr Norman Dandy, CRPR

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30 September 201514:00

Jean Monnet Chair seminar: Sonja Puntscher Riekmann

Money, debt and democracy. How the Eurozone crisis management transforms the political economy and representative democracy of member. Full details
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30 September 201513:00

Gabriel Katz and Katya Kolpinskaya (Politics): "The effect of post-electoral communication frames on attitudes towards government"

Draft journal article for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Gabriel Katz (Politics) and Katya Kolpinskaya (Politics), ‘The effect of post-electoral communication frames on attitudes towards government: Evidence from a survey experiment after the 2015 British election’. Full details
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16 September 201513:00

Iulia Cioroianu (Politics): "Studying the 2015 Elections Using Automated Methods for Visual Content Analysis"

Draft grant proposal for discussion, in the CEMaP/Q-Step Cake For Comments series: Iulia Cioroianu (Q-Step, Politics), ‘The Role of Images in Online Political Communication: Studying the 2015 Elections Using New Automated Methods for Visual Content Analysis’ (a grant proposal). Full details
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2 September 201514:00

CRPR discussion series: Dr Anne Cassidy, NUI Galway

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11 June 2015

The Management of Intra-Organizational Dissent

Interdisciplinary workshop organized by Nicole Bolleyer (Politics) and Thomas Morton (Psychology), funded by a Humanities and Social Sciences Strategy (HASS) Development Fund. Full details
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9 June 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Impact of Forest Gardens on Raspberry production in the UK

Emma Pilgrim. Full details
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14 May 201516:00

(Guest Speaker) Claudio Radaelli, Editor of the European Journal of Political Research: Publication strategies for PhDs.

We have the pleasure to welcome Claudio Radaelli, co-editor of the European Journal of Political Research, to present “Publishing in political science journals: why, how, when". He will tackle both the process and stages to succeed from writing up a dissertation to publishing. Full details
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7 May 201516:00

Claudia Zucca: The Role of Trust in Technological Devices for Electoral Decision-Making.

The presentation aims at understanding the relevance of trust in technological devices for political decision-making.. Full details
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5 May 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Claire Dunlop title to be confirmed

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1 May 201511:00

Guest Speaker: Professor Julian Reiss (Durham)

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1 May 20158:30

SSIS Politics and International Relations Postgraduate Research Conference 2015

We are pleased to announce that the SSIS Politics & IR Postgraduate Research Conference will be held this year on Friday 1st May 2015.. Full details
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30 April 201516:00

Raluca-Florica Popp: Tapping political representation in different electoral setting using VAA generated data.

The aim of the paper is to inspect the relationship between institutional design settings and political representation at one hand, and the consequences of representation on European voters’ political behaviour on the other. Full details
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23 April 201516:00

(Guest Speaker) Molly Conisbee: Funding Opportunities supported by SWDTC.

Molly Conisbee is the Collaboration Facilitator for the SWDTC. The SWDTC has funding for four key priorities, including placements, academic-led collaboration, student-led collaboration and research co-operation.. Full details
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16 April 201516:00

Laszlo Horvath: Affect, political sophistication, and deliberation: Understanding emotions' role in political decision making.

The presentation outlines a series of studies investigating the effects of basic emotions on political cognition. Full details
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7 April 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Knowledge transfer in the agricultural sector

Paul Brassley. Full details
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26 March 201516:00

Keith Sutherland: Election by lot and the democratic diarchy

Much of the discontent with contemporary democracy centres on the belief that Members of Parliament do not represent voters 'descriptively'. This paper argues that descriptive representation could be best achieved by the adoption of 4th century Athenian practice, in which legislative judgment was enacted by large citizen juries, selected by lot. Full details
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19 March 201516:00

Kate Berrisford: Liberalism, Multiculturalism and FGM; normative political theory

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13 March 201511:00

Party Support and Party Evolution in Advanced and New Democracies

EU-funded workshop organized by Raimondas Ibenskas and Nicole Bolleyer (Politics). Full details
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12 March 201516:00

Rick Harmes: Community Energy in Question: Thinking Globally, Acting Locally

The seminar presents a cross-sectional analysis of sustainability, climate change and energy generation. The main focus is on localism and on community renewable energy in particular. Full details
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11 March 201519:00

Tiffy Allen: Discrimination, Degradation and Destitution: the life of refugees in the UK

Refugee week runs from the 9th to the 13th of March and there is lots going on in Exeter to raise awareness about refugees this year. This talk is part of a series of events for refugee week in Exeter which also includes a whole day of ‘craftivism’ to show that we welcome refugees in Exeter on Monday 9th March in the Forum at the University of Exeter, a talk by the British Red Cross on Tuesday 10th March, 6pm, in the Amory Moot room at the University of Exeter entitled ‘Trading in Flesh: human trafficking in the south West’ and other activities planned for the Thursday and Friday.. Full details
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11 March 201515:00

Dr. Madalina Busuioc: The Reputational Basis of Public Accountability

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10 March 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Doing TB Differently: unpacking viewpoints in the badger culling debate'

Clare Saunders & Stephan Price. Full details
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5 March 201516:00

Andreas Karouta: The People as One and Many: Issues of Finding the Source of the Political

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4 March 201515:00

Dr. Tarak Barkawi (London School of Economics & Political Science): Decolonizing the Soldier

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3 March 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Economics and animal health - a NEAT solution

Keith Howe, Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Rural Policy Research, Exeter University, and Honorary Research Fellow at the Royal Veterinary College, London University. Full details
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2 March 201514:00

Dr Theofanis Exadaktylos (University of Surrey): Greek Deal Explained

We are delighted to welcome back Dr Theofanis Exadaktylos (University of Surrey). He will explain the recent deal between the new Greek government and the EU in the context of the Greek political economy of the last decade. Fanis is a very knowledgeable scholar of European / comparative politics - and he is often on radio and TV commenting on Greek politics and the EU. Full details
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27 February 201515:00

Exeter City of Sanctuary: The Asylum Talks

Professor Mick Dumper and Dr Nick Gill will join Professor Mary Bosworth (Oxford) at the RAMM in Exeter to discuss the ongoing international refugee crisis, the reality of immigration detention and domestic asylum law.. Full details
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25 February 201516:00

Dr Christel Koop (Kings College London): The accountability of Independent Regulatory Agencies

Dr Koop has written on issues of public policy, democratic legitimacy, voting behaviour in the European parliament and electoral politics generally. Full details
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23 February 201515:45

CRPR Discussion series

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19 February 201516:00

Zhangmei Tang: Hannah Arendt and Roman Political Thinking.

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12 February 201516:00

Jack Griffiths: The Innate and Essential Self in Politics and Genetics: An Introduction to Neo-Darwinian Politics

This paper attempts to identify some relationships between political ideology and the public interpretation of contemporary biology. Full details
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5 February 201516:00

Laura Moralee: Understanding the role of ‘trust' in accountability and measurement

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4 February 201515:00

Prof. Vladimir Pryakhin, Professor, Russian State University for the Humanities & Former OSCE Ambassador to Armenia and Tajikistan: Title TBC

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3 February 201512:00

CRPR Discussion series: Doing TB Differently: Unpacking viewpoints in the badger culling debate

Clare Saunders & Stephan Price. Full details
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29 January 201516:00

(Guest Speaker) Tina Freyburg: conceptualization and operationnalization issues in research: translating Bourdieu’s practices into a questionnaire

To illustrate this practical session on conceptualization and operationnalization, Dr. Tina Freyburg accounts for Bourdieu's methodological operationnalization in the form of a questionnaire applying it to her own work on European diplomatic practices and the EU’s understanding of its image in the Arab world. Full details
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28 January 201515:00

Dr. Raimondas Ibenskas (Exeter): The Effect of Europarties on Inter-Party Cooperation in Central and Eastern Europe

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27 January 201513:00

Careers and Cake drop in: The Charity Sector

Come and have a chat over tea and cake with two recent (2012) alumni about working in the charity sector. The alumni: 1) Grace Brownfield, BA Politics 2012 Public Affairs Assistant, NSPCC https://uk.linkedin.com/pub/grace-brownfield/59/67... 2) Tom Reynolds I graduated with a BA in Politics in 2012. While at Exeter I was the RAG Chair and Politics Society Treasurer. I also worked at the RAM and the Lemmy. After graduation I went to work with the PSU - a legal rights charity representing people attending Family and Civil Courts without legal representation - to establish the charity's base in Birmingham. Following on from that I moved to the children's charity Barnardos, tasked with conducting an inquiry into how the charity across the country could work effectively with newly elected Police and Crime Commissioners. After leaving Barnardos, I took up the role of Parliamentary Researcher and Assistant to Andrew Griffiths MP in Westminster. In September last year I moved to the Medical Protection Society as Policy and Public Affairs Officer - an organisation representing, lobbying and defending almost 300,000 medical professionals around the world.. Full details
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22 January 201516:00

Felix Von Nostitz: The Merits and Perils of Intra-Party Democracy: Assessing the Effects of Organisational Reform for Party Members

The project aims to assess how the use of different type of primary rules (who can vote (selectorate) and how can run (candidacy requirements)) affect on party members. Full details
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14 January 201517:00

Getting the Long View of Politics and Life In and After Parliament: Former MPs Talk and Wine Reception

Alan Lee Williams and Sir John Hannam will share their views of politics past and present – both from inside the Westminster bubble and beyond it. They will also talk about the work of the Former MPs Outreach Association. The event will close with questions from the audience, and a wine reception. Full details
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10 December 201415:00

Professor Nick Rengger (University of St Andrews): 'On a post secular Global Order: Metaphysical Not Political? '

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4 December 201416:00

PGR Seminar: The Engaged Researcher Have you heard of the ‘impact agenda’?

The Engaged Researcher Have you heard of the ‘impact agenda’? Have you thought about who the audience for your research might be? Have you ever considered ‘public engagement’? Whatever your answers to these questions, please come and share your thoughts with us as we discuss ‘The Engaged Researcher’, and what those words might mean for postgraduate scholars. With Claire Packman, Research Manager (Impact & Engagement) for the College of Social Sciences & International Studies, we’ll consider the merits and the difficulties of involving audiences beyond the academic community with your research. Full details
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3 December 201415:00

Dr. John Heathershaw (Exeter): Fieldwork and Political Risk: Reflections on the Case of Alexander Sodiqo

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3 December 201413:00

Religion and World Affairs Seminar

Use this link to subscribe to the Religion and World Affairs Seminars newsletter http://eepurl.com/7dqRn. Full details
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2 December 201412:00

CRPR Discussion series: Duncan Russel and Rose den Uyl

A discussion on the findings so far for the BASE project on climate change adaptation strategies, in particular in the UK, and in 2 case studies, Dartmoor National Park and the South Devon Coast around Dawlish. Full details
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28 November 2014

Professor Claudio Radaelli presents to the Portuguese parliament

The report on lawmaking and smart regulation, Feitura das Leis, was inspired by ground-breaking research by the Centre for European Governance. Full details
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26 November 201415:00

Dr Rob Lamb (Exeter): Political Theory and the Idea of Expertise

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26 November 201413:00

Religion and World Affairs seminar series

Please subscribe to the Religion and World Affairs Seminars newsletter http://eepurl.com/7dqRn. Full details
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19 November 201415:00

Dr. Gregorio Bettiza (Exeter): America in a Post - Secular World. Understanding and Explaining the US Foreign Policy Regime Complex on Religion

Politics seminar. Full details
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13 November 201418:30

SWDTC Workshop: The 'constructivist turn' in the empirical and normative study of political representation

Lisa Dish is Professor of Politics at the University of Michigan in the Departments of Political Science and Women's Studies. Full details
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5 November 201415:00

Prof. Andre Kaiser (University of Cologne): Policy Making in Multilevel Systems. Federalism, Decentralization and Performance in the OECD Countries

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4 November 201412:00

CRPR Discussion series: Matt Lobley and Hannah Chiswell

Report on the impact of the Family Business Growth Programme on family farms in Devon and Somerset, and how the findings of this report could be translated into an academic journal article. Full details
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22 October 201415:00

Prof. Stijn Smismans (Cardiff University): Regulation and interest groups in the EU: towards American style proceduralisation?

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22 October 201412:15

SWDTC workshop: Universal legal capacity and mental disability: the arguments and the challenges

A discussion of a case against Hungary brought to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Full details
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8 October 201415:00

Dr. Stephane Baele: Security Through Numbers

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7 October 201412:00

CRPR Discussion series: Rob Fish and Eirini Saratsi

Experiences and observations with the Naturally Speaking project, which concerns public dialogue on ecosystem services. Full details
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10 September 201419:00

Jerusalem Unbound, book launch and lecture in Israel

The Kenyon Institute and the Educational Bookshop are pleased to invite you to a book launch and lecture on Wednesday 10th September 2014, 7pm.'Jerusalem Unbound: Geography, History and the Future of the Holy City' by Michael Dumper (University of Exeter, UK).This is a joint event with the Educational Bookshop, and will be held in the Kenyon Institute garden in Sheikh Jarrah. Please see the attached flyer for more information. Full details
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9 September 201412:00

CRPR Discussion series: Cheryl Wills

Upcoming ESRC research proposal on 'The significance of cultural ecosystem services for coastal and marine management'.. Full details
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26 - 27 June 2014

The Virtues of Anarchy Reconsidered: Workshop hosted by the Centre for Advanced International Studies

The concept of anarchy remains under-theorised in International Relations (IR) despite being central to the discipline for over a century. IR has tended to elaborate or reject realist accounts of anarchy. Debate has therefore tended to polarise around the acceptance of the tragic logic of anarchy, attempts to tame its worst effects or to move beyond it altogether. If anarchy has any virtues, following Bull and Waltz most argue that these lie in the defence of the autonomy of states. This stance generates predictable responses that question the ontological and/or normative virtues of both statism and anarchy. But does a rejection of the former necessarily entail a rejection of the latter? Few have taken up Ken Booths challenge to see anarchy as part of the solution to the problems of world politics, rather than the problem itself, and fewer still see anarchy as the constitutive feature of politics as such. This workshop will draw together scholars conducting research that raises challenging questions regarding the virtues of anarchy, from within IR and without. Full details
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20 June 2014

Thinking about a career in teaching: PGCE taster day

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16 June 20149:30

Cross-national Electoral Research & Advancing Understanding of Media Effects Research

Joint conference of the Comparative Cross National Electoral Research (CCNER) and Media Effects Research projects. Full details
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28 May 201412:00

SWDTC Workshop: The Right to Citizenship

This workshop will examine how practices of citizenship produce forms of exclusion and marginalisation and how marginalised groups contest forms of belonging by claiming and enacting a right to citizenship. Full details
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14 May 201414:00

SWDTC Workshop: The contactualist approach to democracy and democratic justice

Workshop on: The contractualist approach to democracy and democratic justice A discussion of Albert Weale (UCL) Democratic Justice and the Social Contract (OUP, 2013). Full details
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29 April 201418:00

Houses of Parliament Open Lecture: Parliament and Suffragettes

This lecture was hosted by the University of Exeter Politics Department as part of their 50th birthday celebrations. Full details
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20 March 201418:00

Tim Harford: Misinformation is Beautiful

The University of Exeter Q-Step Centre presents Tim Harford giving a lecture entitled Misinformation is Beautiful. Tim Harford is an economist, journalist and broadcaster. He is the author of The Undercover Economist Strikes Back and the million-selling The Undercover Economist; a senior columnist at the Financial Times, and the presenter of Radio 4s More or Less and Pop Up Ideas. Tim has spoken at TED, PopTech and the Sydney Opera House and is a visiting fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford.The lecture starts at 6pm but we invite you to join us for drinks beforehand which will be served outside the lecture theatre from 5pm.. Full details
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20 March 201410:45

Q-Step Launch Event

Over the course of the day there will be an introduction to the Q-Step programme, workshops, employability focused events and a prize draw.. Full details
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20 March 2014

Conducting Cross-Cultural Survey Research

This workshop aims to cover key methodological issues such as survey quality (comparability, translation), sampling and questionnaire design, data processing and statistical adjustment (i.e. survey weights). The session seeks to identify the challenges of this type of empirical research, discuss examples in social sciences and provide tools examining data from large N comparative data sets across cultures. This workshop is supported by the ESRC funded Comparative Cross-National Electoral Research (CCNER) project and the Centre for Elections, Media and Participation (CEMaP). Full details
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19 March 201417:30

What became of the Arab Spring? An audience with Frank Gardner OBE

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19 March 201415:00

Professor Doug Stokes - Title: US Grand Strategy and Great Power Relations: Assessing Americas Structural Power and Relative Decline After the Financial Crisis

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26 February 201413:00

Putins Eurasian Union: a divisive political project or a new impetus for regional coordination?: Dr Roy Allison, University of Oxford

Dr Roy Allison is Lecturer in the International Relations of Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS), University of Oxford. Full details
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19 February 201415:00

Dr David Lewis - Title: Conflict Management and the Authoritarian State

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17 February 201414:00

Centre for Advanced International Studies (CAIS) guest lecture: Dr Philip Cunliffe, University of Kent

Dr Philip Cunliffe's doctoral research, which was funded by the ESRC, examined developing countries personnel contribution to United Nations peacekeeping across 1997-2007. His third book Legions of Peace: UN Peacekeepers from the Global South,which is based on his doctoral research, is published in November 2013. Full details
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12 February 201412:00

Joint CAIS and Political Theory group lecture: Professor Kimberley Hutchings, LSE

Room tbc. Full details
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30 January 201417:15

The Political Culture in Cornwall a discussion panel

Our distinguished panel of guests gather to discuss the themes of the political landscape in Cornwall, including the question of Cornish devolution. Students are encouraged to come with questions to put to the panel.The panel will also talk about how to get involved in local politics and what students can do to enhance their career prospects.Panel Members:Chair: Lord Teverson, LibDem Spokesman for Energy and Climate Change in the House of Lords. Prior to being made a life peer in 2006, Lord Teverson served as an MEP for the Liberal Democrats, between 1994 and 1999 for the constituency of Cornwall and West Plymouth. Lord Teverson is also an Exeter alumnus who graduated in Economics in 1973.Cllr. Dick Cole, Leader of Mebyon Kernow. Cllr. Cole has been leader of Mebyon Kernow since 1997. He was first elected to Restormel Borough Council in 1999. Cllr. Cole currently represents the Parish of St Enoder on Cornwall County Council. He is also MKs spokesman on housing and planning matters. Dr Joanie Willett, Lecturer in Politics at the University of Exeter. Dr Willett has experience in local politics, and has stood for Mebyon Kernow in local elections in the past.Dr Garry Tregidga, Director of the Institute of Cornish Studies at the University of Exeter. Dr Treggidga has carried out extensive research on the political history of Cornwall, including publishing work on the history of the liberal party in the South West region.Cllr. Rob Nolan, LibDem representative for Truro Redannick. Cllr. Nolan is also Chair of Cornwall Council Strategic Planning Committee. Cllr. Hanna Toms (tbc), Labour representative for Falmouth Penwerris. Cllr. Toms has recently been selected to stand as the Labour Parliamentary candidate for Truro and Falmouth. Full details
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29 January 201415:00

Dr Nicole Bolleyer - Title: State Encroachment of Civil Society? The Regulation of Organizational Life in Advanced Democracies

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29 January 201412:30

Private Provision of Government Services: Developments and Limits

There will also be time for questions and discussion. Full details
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27 January 201414:30

Centre for Advanced International Studies (CAIS) guest lecture: Professor Trine Flockhart.

Trine Flockhart is Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS). Before joining DIIS she held positions as associate professor at universities in Australia, Denmark and Britain. Her research interests are focused on European Security, especially the EU and NATO, norms transfer and processes of change through intentional agent-led action. Full details
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22 January 201415:00

Professor Sarah Birch (external speaker) - Title: Cleaning Up Elections

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22 January 201413:00

Careers in the EU

John Evans, London Office of the European Commission will be giving a talk on EU careers. He will provide information on where an EU career can lead, why it will be a fulfilling career choice, what it involves and who they are looking to employ. He will also provide a very clear outline of the application process and the selection procedure, leading you straight into your career at the EU!. Full details
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11 December 201315:00

Dr Amy McKay - Title: Pressure Groups and Political Money

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11 December 201312:15

SWDTC Advanced Training Programme : Workshop on Debate on Political Reform in Chinese Universities

This workshop is part of a series of events for the SWDTC Advanced Training Programme in theoretical and normative-oriented research. The main topic of the series is the study of Democracy, Ideology and the Global Order. This Workshop is organized in collaboration with the the Centre of Political Thought (Exeter). Full details
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5 December 201314:30

Centre for Advanced International Studies (CAIS) guest lecture: Professor Sven Biscop: Peace without money, war without Americans: challenges for European strategy.

Sven Biscop is Director of the Europe in the World Programme at the Egmont Royal Institute for International Relations in Brussels, and Visiting Professor at Ghent University and at the College of Europe in Bruges.. Full details
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4 December 201315:00

Professor Peter John, UCL (external speaker) - Experimentation in Political Science and Public Policy: Costs and Benefits of the New Orthodoxy

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29 November 201313:00

Visiting speaker seminar, Exeter Central Asian Studies Network: Russian state strategy on the cheap: case studies of Central Asian corruption to defeat rival Western power plays: John Helmer, University of Melbourne

John Helmer was the longest-serving western correspondent in Moscow, starting from 1989 and specializing in the coverage of Russian business for media in London, New York, Hong Kong, Toronto, and Johannesburg. He is visiting professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Melbourne, where he lectures on grand strategy.. Full details
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29 November 201313:00

Visiting speaker seminar, John Helmer, University of Melbourne

John Helmer, University of Melbourne, Russian state strategy on the cheap: case studies of Central Asian corruption to defeat rival Western power plays. Full details
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27 November 201315:00

Professor Hans Lindahl (external speaker) - Roundtable/Book discussion

Book Title: Fault Lines of Globalization. Full details
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26 November 201313:00

Prof. Mick Dumper: Securing Sacred Sites: Comparing cultural property protection in the context of negotiations over the policing of holy sites in Jerusalem

Internal 'occasional seminars' hosted by the Centre for Advanced International Studies, in the Department of Politics. The second paper will be given by Prof. Mick Dumper (Exeter), and is entitled "Securing Sacred Sites: Comparing cultural property protection in the context of negotiations over the policing of holy sites in Jerusalem". Full details
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20 November 201313:00

Professor Cecile Laborde UCL (external speaker) - Workshop on Republicanism

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19 November 201313:00

Dr Jess Gifkins: Agreeing to disagree? The norm of consensus in UN Security Council decision-making

Internal 'occasional seminars' hosted by the Centre for Advanced International Studies, in the Department of Politics. The first paper will be given by Dr Jess Gifkins, Teaching Associate at the University of Exeter and Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Queensland. Her paper is entitled, "Agreeing to disagree? The norm of consensus in UN Security Council decision-making. Full details
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14 November 201315:00

Professor Joseph Liow : The US-China Strategic Relationship and the Imperative of Regional Security: A Southeast Asian Perspective

Professor Joseph Liow is Professor of Comparative and International Politics and Associate Dean at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University. He is visiting Exeter for a few weeks and has kindly agreed to interrupt his studies to give an open talk. Full details
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6 November 201315:00

Centre for Advanced International Studies (CAIS) guest lecture: Professor Martin Shaw: Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World

Martin Shaw is Research Professor, Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Professorial Fellow in International Relations and Human Rights, University of Roehampton, London and Emeritus Professor of International Relations, University of Sussex. His talk will be based around his new book, Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Late Modern World, Cambridge University Press, October 2013.. Full details
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30 October 201315:00

Dr Darren Schreiber - Title: The Emergence of Ideology: Unifying Theories from Formal Modeling and Political Behavior With an Agent-based Model

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29 October 201321:00

Hannah Arendt - The Movie

Screening in collaboration with Politics Society and Department of Politics. Full details
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29 October 201318:00

Hannah Arendt - The Movie with panel discussion.

Screening in collaboration with Politics Society and Department of Politics. Full details
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16 October 201315:00

Dr Jason Reifler - Title: The Effect of Fact-checking on Elites: A field experiment on U.S. state legislators.

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7 October 201314:30

Professor Michael Cox (LSE): Power shifts and the decline of the West: Myths, Predictions and Economists

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4 October 201311:00

Working for HM Government: a career in research and policy analysis in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office

If you are thinking long term about taking a Masters and PhD in international relations, then this talk may give you an idea of where it could lead.The talk will be given by Dr. Stuart Horsman, who is a principle research analyst working on Iran at the Foreign Office. If you are at all interested in working in foreign policy analysis and research, or working for the Foreign Office, or just think it sounds like an interesting topic, then do come along.. Full details
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3 October 201316:00

John Maloney: "Political Competition, Political Donations, Economic Policy and Growth

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12 - 13 September 2013

The strength of weak states in Eurasia

This conference is a collaboration between John Heathershaw of the University of Exeter and Edward Schatz of the University of Toronto.. Full details
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28 August 201310:00

CCNER short course New Approaches to Comparative Electoral Research

This short course provides an introduction to some of the most salient issues in cross-national electoral research and new methodologies that can be used to address them. Full details
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18 June 201310:00

CCNER workshop in Multi-level Data Structures in Cross-National Electoral Research

The workshop is aimed at providing training and support for postgraduate research students working with cross-national survey data.. Full details
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31 May 201312:00

Working in Westminster Workshop

Students are welcome to come along to hear about the experiences of two Exeter Alumni who are currently working as parliamentary assistants. David Hoy graduated in 2012 and completed a Westminster internship in 2011 with the Parliamentary Resources Unit. Murray McKirdle is also a recent graduate who nows works as the Parliamentary Assistant for Ben Bradshaw MP. If you would like to attend the event, please email to register: B.Hill@exeter.ac.uk so that we can ascertain numbers for lunch, which is provided. Full details
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16 May 201316:00

Professor Chris Anderson - The Numbers Game - Why Everything You Know About Football is Wrong

Professor Chris Anderson is a pioneer of quantitative football analytics. He has developed econometric models to study team dynamics and algorithms for evaluating player performance. He is passionate about understanding how complex match interactions can be observed and analyzed in a way that helps to optimize team performance in the context of global competition for talent and success. Anderson also is a Political Science professor at Cornell University working on comparative electoral behaviour. He has won a number of scientific awards for his research and is an internationally recognized expert on the application of multilevel statistical models of political behaviour. Full details
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15 May 201315:00

Professor Andrew Hindmoor - The Great Financial Crisis: What Do We Now Know and What Would it Have Been Nice to Have Known Before?

Professor Andrew Hindmoor, Professor of Politics, University of Sheffield. Full details
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10 - 11 May 2013

The SSIS Annual Postgraduate Research Conference

On Friday 10th and Saturday 11th May the SSIS Annual Postgraduate Research Conference will be held. The event will bring PGR students from across the college together to discuss their current research. Full details
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9 May 201313:30

Annual SSIS Research Methods Festival

The Annual College of Social Sciences and International Studies Research Methods Festival has been designed to complement the PGR research seminar training sessions which take place across the academic year. The event aims to introduce delegates to a range of contemporary research projects and methodological issues and to allow students further exploration and discussion of research related issues. Our keynote speaker for the event will be Professor Gaby Weiner, who will be speaking about her recently published text: Deconstructing and Reconstructing Lives. The event will end with a mock viva, which will enable students an insight into this process of examination. A drinks reception will also be held after this session. Full details
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8 May 201315:00

Dr Sandra Kroger - Who and How Civil Society Organizations Represent in the EU

Dr Sandra Kroger, Marie Curie Fellow, University of Exeter. Full details
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1 May 201313:00

Stephen Osborne (Edinburgh): It takes two to tango?

Understanding the co-production of public services by integrating the services management and public administration. Full details
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28 March 201310:00

Corporate-State Relations and Technological Innovation for Climate Change Mitigation:

Thursday 28 March at 10.00 in The Constantine Levantis Room, ONE/TR03, Building One, The Business School. Full details
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22 March 201314:00

Designing Research in the Social Sciences (Sage, 2012).

Centre for European Governance's seminar,Designing Research in the Social Sciences (Sage, 2012).. Full details
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20 March 201315:00

EXTERNAL SPEAKER: Dr Yang Cheng

Dr Yang Cheng is Associate Professor of International Relations, East China Normal University; Visiting International Fellow, University of Exeter (Spring 2013). Full details
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13 March 201315:00

Dr Gabriel Katz - Accounting for Individual and Contextual Heterogeneity in Electoral Behavior: A Hierarchical Mixture Model Analysis

Dr Gabriel Katz, Lecturer in Politics, University of Exeter. Full details
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13 March 2013

Rising Powers and Conflict Management in Central Asia

The project aims to explain the reason for and the consequences of the failure of Western approaches to conflict management to gain traction in Post-Soviet Central Asia. It contrasts these approaches with those promoted by Russia and China, both bilaterally and through regional organisations, and it looks at the effects of these rising powers on national conflict management strategies. Full details
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6 March 201315:00

Professor Anthony M Bertelli

Professor Anthony M Bertelli, C.C. Crawford Chair in Management and Performance in the School of Policy, Planning, and Development, University of Southern California. Full details
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6 March 2013

Leader of the UK Green Party to visit Cornwall campus

Natalie Bennett, the leader of the UK Green Party, will visit Tremough on Wednesday 6th March. In the afternoon she will be talking with History and Politics students in a series of workshops and then will give a public lecture 'Creating Sustainable Futures', in the evening on campus.. Full details
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4 March 20139:30

Can the European Union learn? Lessons from the Eurozone crisis

The Department of Politics has invited the Liberal-Democrat MEP Graham Watson to run a workshop with our undergraduate students. Full details
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25 February 201314:00

Outcomes, Process and Trust of Civil Servants and Local Governments

The contemporary performance movement has tended to assume that a key to restoringpublic trust in civil servants lies in a focus on outcomes or results. But there is growing evidence from various fields that trust in people and institutions of authority often depends more on process (such as fairness and equity) than on outcomes.. Full details
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9 February 2013

EU Studies Fair 2013

Colleagues from the University of Exeter will be attending the EU Studies Fair next month in Brussels. Full details
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30 January 201315:00

Professor Rod Rhodes - Administrative Leadership

Professor Rod Rhodes,Professor of Government, University of Southampton. Full details
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30 January 201314:00

Employer presentation: EU careers talk for social scientists

John Evans, London Office of the European Commission will be giving a talk on EU careers. He will provide information on where an EU career can lead, why it will be a fulfilling career choice, what it involves and who they are looking to employ. He will also provide a very clear outline of the application process and the selection procedure, leading you straight into your career at the EU!. Full details
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23 January 201315:00

Dr Chiara Cordelli - Distributive Justice, Associations and the State

Dr Chiara Cordelli, Lecturer in Political Theory, University of Exeter will deliver the seminar. Full details
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12 December 201215:00

Dr Matthew Eagleton-Pierce - Symbolic Power in the World Trade Organization

Dr Matthew Eagleton-Pierce, Lecturer in International Relations, University of Exeter. Full details
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10 December 201218:15

The Accidental Political Scientist: Inaugural Lecture of Professor Susan Banducci

Professor Susan Banducci, Professor in Politics and Associate Dean of Education, College of Social Sciences and International Studies, will deliver her inaugural lecture on Monday 10 December. Full details
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5 December 201214:00

FILM: My Perestoika

All Welcome. Full details
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28 November 201215:00

CANCELLED: Professor Matthew Watson - International Political Economy and the History of Economics Imperialism

This event is cancelled due to weather conditions.. Full details
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21 November 201214:00

The Politics of Competence: a comparative analysis of the costs of governing

Full details
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15 November 201213:00

David Graham, CEO, Attentional - the Neuroscience of Communications

Full details
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14 November 201214:00

An Exeter Central Asian Studies research group seminar

Bhavna Dave, School of Oriental and African StudiesAll welcome. Full details
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8 November 201214:00

Monica Horten, LSE - The Copyright Enigma

Full details
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7 November 201212:00

Policy Implementation and Political Trust: Greece in the Age of Austerity

A Politics department seminar. Full details
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31 October 201215:00

Dr Alex Prichard - Anarchism and Non-Domination

Dr Alex Prichard is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Exeter. Full details
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31 October 201213:00

Contemporary Ismaili Renewal: Khorog Events in Perspective

An Exeter Central Asian Studies research group seminar. Full details
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30 October 201210:00

Talking to Terrorists - A Discussion with General (Retd) Sir Paul Newton

The College of Social Sciences and International Studies is offering an exciting opportunity for Politics and IAIS students who are interested in contemporary approaches to world security. Full details
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29 October 201215:00

Talking to Terrorists - A Discussion with General (Retd) Sir Paul Newton

The College of Social Sciences and International Studies is offering an exciting opportunity for Politics and IAIS students who are interested in contemporary approaches to world security. Full details
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24 October 201212:00

What job would suit me?

Careers consultant Tom McAndrew will talk through how you can find out what your strengths and weaknesses are, what skills and attributes you possess and how you can match them to potential careers. This event is part of a series of talks delivered by the Careers team in the College of Social Sciences and International studies.. Full details
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23 October 201213:00

Half-day workshop: Neoliberalism and the state in Russia and Central Asia

All welcome. Full details
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16 October 201214:00

I'm Other Things As Well:

Helena Cook, University of Exeter. Full details
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16 October 201213:00

What Career can I do with a Social Sciences Degree?

Careers consultant Tom McAndrew will run through some of the ways you can research careers, find out what may suit you. This talk is aimed at penultimate and final year social sciences students - especially if you have no idea what you want to do! Materials will also be available. This event is part of a series of talks delivered by the Careers team in the College of Social Sciences and International studies.. Full details
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11 October 201217:00

Engagement and Disengagement in Politics

What is the difference between being involved in a political party and being an active member of a civil society organization or a social movement? What are the things we do when we engage in politics? How does our conventional academic knowledge of participation in politics fit in with the real-world experience of those who are active in Exeter? The Centre for European Governance invites you to share your personal experience at this round table discussion. Full details
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11 October 201212:00

Employability Guest Lecture - Joe Twyman, Director of Political and Social Research, YouGov

Joes talk is a light-hearted look at Joes own story from a Sheffield University undergraduate to founding director of YouGov. Joe will also explain the things everyone should remember when applying for jobs, attending interviews and dealing with prospective employers. Details about the YouGov internship scheme will also be given. Full details
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10 October 201215:00

Professor Richard Bellamy - The Democratic Legitimacy of International Human Rights Conventions:

Professor Richard Bellamy is a Professor of Political Science and Director of the European Institute, University College London; Visiting Fellow, University of Exeter. Full details
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9 October 201214:00

Is Expertise the Driving Force?

Whether we take a plane, eat food, or purchase medication in a pharmacy: each time we are affected by European regulatory agencies (ERAs). Full details
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3 October 201215:00

Non-electoral Protest Groups in an Electoral Environment: The New Settlements of Bishkek and the 2011 Presidential Elections in Kyrgyzstan

Dr John Heathershaw is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations, University of Exeter. Full details
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28 June 20129:00

Fairness and Responsibility in an Unequal Society

Fairness and Responsibility in an Unequal Society. Full details
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28 June 2012

Fairness and Responsibility in an Unequal Society

The conference marks the end of a four-year project on inequality, responsibility and fairness, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council at the University of Exeter. Four panels composed of prominent policy-leaders and academics will debate the issues, providing a forum for the exchange of ideas between policy and academy. Full details
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27 - 29 June 2012

4th Biennial ECPR Standing Group for Regulatory Governance Conference

The ECPR Standing Group on Regulation & Governance will be holding its 4th Biennial Conference at the University of Exeter from 27 to 29 June 2012. The European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) was founded in 1970 and supports the training, research and cross-national co-operation of political scientists throughout Europe. Full details
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13 June 201215:00

Does Political Change or Organisational Performance Determine Chief Executive Turnover in the Public Sector?

Oliver James works on the public policy and politics of public services, citizen-provider relationships, public sector organisation and reform, executive politics (particularly politician-administrator relations) and regulation of the public sector. Full details
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24 - 26 May 2012

Conference: New Trends in Political Representation in the EU

Sandra Kroeger and Dario Castiglione are organising a Conference on New Trends in Political Representation in the EU at the University of Exeter on 24-26 May 2012, organized with the support of the EU Jean Monnet Programme.. Full details
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16 May 201215:00

Non-Electoral Justice Movements in Electoral Environments: Understanding Political Instability in Kyrgyzstan since 2005

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2 May 20129:00

Constituent Power in World Politics

The workshop will bring together IR staff from Streaatham and Tremough to address the broad research theme of 'activist politics. Full details
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7 March 201215:00

Social Contracts and Economic Justice

Akbert Weale is ESRC Professorial Fellow & Professor of Political Theory and Public Policy, UCL. Full details
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6 March 201212:30

Recent Politics Alumni Careers Panel

This will be an opportunity for students to hear at first hand from a group of Politics graduates who have taken different career routes with their Politics degrees. All graduates are from within the last six years, so they will be able to provide perspectives and advice on translating an Exeter Politics degree into a career. There will be plenty of time for students to ask questions of the guests.Panel Members are: Kate Taylor (2007) Foreign and Commonwealth Office Alexandra Crook (2006) Transport for London Alexander Hurley (2011) TV Buyer for John Ayling & Associates Owen Thomas (2009) PhD Student, University of Exeter Daniel Hooper. Full details
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8 February 201215:00

Politics Department Seminar Series - Cycles and Curses: Rethinking the International Politics of Oil

Roland Dannreuther is Professor and Head of the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Westminster. Full details
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1 February 201215:00

Strategies of Survival East Jerusalemite Responses to the Israeli Occupation

Craig works alongside Professor Mick Dumper in a 5 year ESRC funded project, Conflict in Cities and the Contested State: everyday life and the possibilities of transformation in Belfast, Jerusalem and other divided cities. The project focuses on divided cities as key sites in territorial conflicts over state and national identities, cultures and borders. Full details
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1 February 201213:30

Central Asian Studies seminar series.

Our first Central Asian Studies seminar series of the year will be:'Of national fathers and Russian elder brothers: conspiracy theories and political ideas in post-Soviet Central Asia'. Full details
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18 January 201215:00

The Liberal Cosmopolitanism of Thomas Paine

Senior Lecturer in Political Philosophy; Director of Education, Politics. Full details
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11 January 201215:00

Cosmopolitanism and Nationhood in the Political Thought of Thomas

Dr Robert Lamb is Senior Lecturer in Political Philosophy. His research and teaching interests are in the history of modern political thought and contemporary political philosophy. Please note room change. Full details
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5 - 7 January 2012

SUNY Model EU

Suny Model EU. Full details
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16 December 201116:30

International Relations and the British Academy: Distinctiveness in the past, present and future.

The discipline of International Relations has a longstanding relationship with the British academy, and British IR has a distinct self-image. The British tradition, or way of doing IR, is renowned for its pluralism and interdisciplinary nature as well as its connection to a certain body of work that is perceived as distinctly British. Following a one-day workshop exploring emerging trends in postgraduate International Relations (IR) research, this roundtable offers reflections on the impact and influence of the British Academy on the field, and what is at stake in this so-called distinctiveness.Professors Chris Brown, Andrew Linklater and David Armstrong will reflect upon past, present and future trajectories for International Relations in the British Academy; the speakers will discuss how their work has shaped the British discipline of International Relations, future paths open to the field and their reactions to the contemporary academic climate. This roundtable is the culmination of a one-day workshop focussed on what makes British IR distinctive and diverse from other academic communities and what form this diversity takes.This event is a rare opportunity to hear three distinguished professors, renown for their influential contributions to British IR, speaking together. If you would like to attend please RSVP to lgf202@exeter.ac.uk This event is sponsored by the University of Exeter, the British International Studies Association Postgraduate Network and Poststructural Politics Working Group. Full details
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16 December 201112:00

Monitoring the media during elections: method, purpose, goals

Dr Gillian McCormack is Training Coordinator of the EU's Network for Enhanced Electoral and Democratic Support project. She has over ten years' experience in training design and coordination and is a specialist in media frameworks for elections and media monitoring methodologies. She led 12 media monitoring missions for elections in the former Soviet Union for the European Institute of Media and participated in four EU EOMs as Media Expert. Most recently she was Director of Development and Team Leader for an EU technical assistance project for the media in the Russian Federation. Gillian holds a PhD from Glasgow Caledonian University and has published extensively in the field of elections and media. Full details
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15 December 201117:00

Special Politics event

Professor Cerny will be presenting a recent paper published in the St Antony's International Review (STAIR) and expanding on the themes of the article. The paper looks at the recent financial crisis and argues that the 'financial system constitutes a public good essential to contemporary society'. It seeks to address a range of questions that have arisen following the financial crash, including ideas linked to the concept of efficiency. Full details
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15 December 201111:00

EU careers' paths

John Evans, Permanent Representation of the EU, London Office. Full details
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7 December 201115:00

Refugee Entitlement and the Passage of Time: Waldrons Supercession

Professor Michael Dumper ia Professor in Middle East Politics. His research interests are the Permanent Status Issues of the Middle East peace process, the Arab-Israeli conflict, religious institutions in the Middle East and the urban politics of the Middle East.. Full details
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7 December 201114:00

Analytical Tools at the European Commission

Robert Scharreborn, Secretariat General of the European Commission. Full details
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1 December 201111:00

Social change in progressive political thought: How to avoid determinism without falling into the idealist trap

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30 November 201119:30

Bonnie Honig, 'From Lamentation to Logos: Antigones Offensive Speech.'

Bonnie Honig is the The Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor, Political Science, Northwestern University and Research Professor, American Bar Foundation, Chicago. Full details
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23 November 201115:00

Rising China and Global Justice

Ian Holliday is the Dean of Social Sciences and Professor of Political Science, University of Hong Kong. Full details
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2 November 201115:00

On the Origins and Saliency of the Concept of Governance

Dr Matthew Eagleton-Pierce is Lecturer in International Relations. His primary research interests are in the field of international political economy, particularly the politics of world trade. He also have strong interests in the conceptual analysis of power and legitimacy, international relations theory, and political sociology. He has a particular interest in applying the ideas of Pierre Bourdieu to world politics.. Full details
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12 October 201115:00

The Language of Political Representation in Transformation

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5 October 201115:00

Politicisation of Government Appointments and Democratic Accountability

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