Janette Rutterford (The Open University) 'Women: the forgotten investors'
Seminar Room 2, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 16.00
Janette Rutterford (The Open University)
'Women: the forgotten investors'
Seminar Room 2, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 16.00
Janette Rutterford (The Open University)
'Women: the forgotten investors'
Seminar Room 4, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 16.00
Declan O’Reilly (University of East Anglia)
'Good law but bad politics: The 1971 Industrial Relations Act and modern British Labour policy'
27 Sept
Seminar Room 1, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 13.00-14.00
Rachel Bell (Edinburgh) ‘Growing up in Scotland, 1930-1980’ Gayle Davis (Edinburgh) ‘A biography of the 1967 Abortion Act’
[Economic and Social History seminars]
Thursday 21st of September
Dr. Colin Wastell and Zoe Purcell (Macquarie University (Australia): "Complex Emergent Modularity Theory of Thinking: Its origins and initial scrutiny" (see abstract below).
HCN Seminars
06/11/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 6th Floor staff room.
Jon Agar (UCL): How to kill AI: James Lighthill and the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Winter.
13/11/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 6th Floor staff room.
Amy Hinterberger (University of Warwick): Marked ‘h’ for human: Chimeric Life and the Politics of the Human.
23/10/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 6th Floor staff room.
Laurens Klerkx (Wageningen University): Lost in translation or lack of translation? Replication of co-innovation in international research collaborations.
16/10/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 6th Floor staff room.
Abigail Nieves Delgado (Ruhr-Universität Bochum Wortmarke): Facial recognition technologies and the old problem of human categorization.
9/10/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, Chrystal MacMillan Building, 6th Floor staff room.
Anna Krzywoszynska (University of Sheffield): Caring for soil life, surviving the Anthropocene.
02/10/2017 - 15:30
3.30pm, G009 at 7 Bristo Square
Balazs Vedres (Central European University): Forbidden triads and Creative Success in Jazz: The Miles Davis Factor.