Archive
Events related to the discipline Political Science
Results 21 - 40 of 171
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23Feb2015
Read moreYoga, Bingo and Prayer in Urban Renewal Areas
15:30 - 17:00 | Event
Linda van de Kamp reflects on her new research project that starts with the observation that the way people relate to and imagine urban spaces, and thus how people influence the development of urban areas, results ...
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17Feb2015
Read morePublic policy: new approach, new solutions
20:00 - 21:30 | Event
When we think about public policy, two narratives seem persistent: that of market fundamentalism and government control. These approaches however seem to restrict the creativity of policy makers. Roland Kupers puts ...
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16Feb2015Read more
Choose your Master's in Social Sciences on 16 February (UvA Master's Week)
18:30 - 21:30 | Information event
Have you chosen your Master's programme yet? Join us on 16 February during the UvA Master's Week to find out which programmes of the Graduate School of Social Sciences best match your skills and interests.
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12Feb2015 13Feb2015
Read moreJerusalem - a city disunited
20:30 | Symposium
In this symposium we will discuss the often unseen or hidden aspects of the current political and social situation in Jerusalem, such as human rights issues, settlements, and urban planning. We will also look at the ...
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10Feb2015
Read moreHumanities in the news: Europe after Charlie Hebdo
20:00 - 21:30 | Event
Researchers Marieke de Goede, Francesco Ragazzi, Jolle Demmers, Mark Deuze and Julien Jeandesboz discuss civil liberties, Islamophobia and the temptation of vigilantism in Europe in the aftermath of the attack on ...
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06Feb2015
Read moreState violence and the ethics of the minority question in Turkey
15:00 - 17:00 | Lecture
Kabir Tambar (Stanford University) analyses how the category of 'minority' has been constitutive of 'the people' in Turkey, distilling those who do not belong to the history and destiny of the nation from those who ...
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29Jan2015
Read moreEconomic integration and solidarity after the Euro crisis: re-aligning facts, principles and politics
15:30 - 18:30 | Lecture
Maurizio Ferrera, advisor to the European Commission and the Italian government, will give the first ACCESS EUROPE Annual Lecture. He will examine the conflict between the logic of 'opening', which drives the ...
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27Jan2015Read more
National experience with war influences post-war grant strategies
12:00 - 13:00 | PhD defence ceremony
Paul van Hooft investigates how national experiences with war shape post-war grand strategies, and specifically how the experiences with victory and defeat in the Second World War shaped the post-war beliefs and ...
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26Jan2015
Read moreOf city lounges, assembly-prohibitions and musclemen in pink stilettos
15:30 - 17:00 | Lecture
Class, race and gender in productions of space for Rotterdam’s post-industrial future
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19Jan2015 20Jan2015
Read moreSecurity at Large: Violent Exchanges and Citizenship beyond the State
09:30 | Conference
In cities across the world, security has become one of the most prominent concerns in people’s everyday lives. In an increasingly pluralized landscape of security, people rely on a broad range of security providers. ...
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14Jan2015
Read morePriority or Equality for Possible People?
17:00 - 18:45 | Lecture
Suppose that under conditions of risk, you must make choices that will influence the utility and the identities of the people who will exist—though not the number of people who will exist. How ought you to choose? In ...
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12Jan2015
Read moreHow propaganda works
17:00 - 18:45 | Lecture
Jason Stanley (Yale) will discuss a couple of chapters of his forthcoming book 'How Propaganda Works'. The two chapters together give his account of the problems for democracy raised by flawed ideological belief.
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09Jan2015 16Jan2015
Read moreWorkshop on Negotiation and Conflict Resolution
Workshop
This intensive workshop on negotiation and conflict resolution combines skill building with the developing of a command of analytic theory in a ‘hands-on’ format. It follows what is sometimes referred to as the ...
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20Dec2014
Read moreHands off our girls - Social Sciences supports Serious Request
11:00 - 15:00 | Symposium
Sexual violence against women is the featuring topic of this symposium organised by the Social Sciences of the University of Amsterdam. It is a benefit symposium, which means that all visitors can make a voluntary ...
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17Dec2014
Read more‘China’s Continuing Urban Transformation’ with George Lin
20:00 - 21:30 | Event
The field of international development studies must evolve to stay on top of the many changes affecting the world of today. This second lecture of a lecture series about the future of international development will ...
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12Dec2014
Read moreAISSR Annual Harvest Day-inaugural edition
10:45 - 18:00 | Event
The Harvest Day showcases new research results selected from different AISSR programme groups but focused on a shared research theme. This year’s themes are: (1) Migration; (2) Conflict and Post-conflict life; and ...
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11Dec2014
Read moreCrisis in the EU’s neighbourhood: Who lost Ukraine?
17:00 - 18:30 | Event
The March 2014 annexation of Crimea has raised tensions between the 'West' and Russia, with the EU having to play a key role in the situation. Did the EU adopt the right strategies? With: Ulrich Schneckener, Aaron ...
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11Dec2014
Read moreThe American Non-Dilemma: Racial Inequality without Racism
15:30 - 17:00 | Lecture
Professor Nancy DiTomaso (Rutgers Business School) will discuss her 2013 book entitled 'The American Non-dilemma: Racial Inequality without Racism' (New York: Russell Sage Foundation). She will focus on her argument ...
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10Dec2014
Read moreCritical Theory in the Social Sciences
15:00 - 17:00 | Lecture
Professor Rosi Braidotti (Utrecht University) will present her most recent book, The Posthuman. The Posthuman offers a major contribution to contemporary debates on the posthuman and explores the extent to which a ...
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08Dec2014
Read moreRacializing Security: Plural Policing and Differentiated Citizenship
15:00 - 17:00 | Lecture
If protecting citizens and maintaining public order have traditionally been seen as core state functions, what does it mean when the state actively shares this monopoly and encourages "plural policing"?
