How corporate concentration and power shape food systems and why it matters Jennifer Clapp will discuss how corporate concentration and power shape food systems and why it matters.
Dr Richard Williams teaches at the Rajasthani Bhasha Academy in Udaipur, India Dr Williams explored archives relating to music history in Rajasthan.
School of Arts PhD candidate at the School of Arts, has been awarded an NIAS-NIOD-KITLV Fellowship Panggah Ardiyansyah has been awarded the fellowship: Moving objects, Mobilising Culture in the Context of (De)colonisation.
Dr Yaser Alashqar Dr. Yaser Alashqar is Senior Lecturer in the School of Law at Independent College Dublin in Ireland. His teaching and research focus on law and dispute resolution, including mediation, negotiation, international arbitration and conflict analysis.
Emergent Genders: Living Otherwise in Tokyo’s Pink Economies Michelle Ho traces the genders manifesting alongside Japanese popular culture in Akihabara, an area in Tokyo renowned for the fandom and consumption of anime, manga, and games.
MA Anthropology of Food and Intensive Language MA Anthropology of Food and Intensive Language at SOAS University of London
The other China or an emerging Taiwan? Democratic Taiwan in British foreign policy In this talk, Max Dixon will explore how British parliamentarians and British and Taiwanese policymakers view Taiwan, and how perceptions of Taiwan will inform the trajectory of peace and stability in cross-Strait relations.
The Time Inheritors: How Time Inequalities Shape Higher Education Mobility in China Dr Cora Lingling Xu will introduce key arguments of her latest book, 'The Time Inheritors: How Time Inequalities Shape Higher Education Mobility in China'.