Dr Alyosxa Tudor speaking at LSE: Critical differentiations of racism and migratism

By Emily Jones|January 28, 2017|Faculty, Lectures/Talks/Conferences, Our Work|0 comments

Dr Alyosxa Tudor, Lecturer at the Centre for Gender Studies at SOAS, will speak at LSE on ‘Critical differentiations of racism and migratism’ Date: Wednesday 1st February Time: 6 – 7.30pm Room: NAB.1.15 My paper revisits (Western European) critical migration studies and feminist approaches to migration with the insights from postcolonial theories and transnational feminism. I suggest that a critical differentiation of racism and migratism is needed in postcolonial and

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Publication – Young grassroots activism on the rise in Iraq: voices from Baghdad and Najaf

By Akanksha Mehta|May 11, 2016|Our Work, PhD Students, Publications|0 comments

Former PhD student at CGS Zahra Ali writes about her recent trip to Iraq – Young grassroots activism on the rise in Iraq: voices from Baghdad and Najaf – for Open Democracy. Through banners and slogans, grassroots groups find new, inclusive ways of being Iraqi in a country traumatised by authoritarianism, occupation and sectarian war. Tahrir Square, April 2016. Image: Zahra Ali. All rights reserved.Last month, I returned to Iraq to both

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Publication – ‘The Devil is in the Details’: development, women’s rights and religious fundamentalisms

By Akanksha Mehta|May 11, 2016|MA Students, Our Work, PhD Students, Publications|0 comments

Former MA student and research associate at CGS, Isabel Marler, has co-authored a piece – ‘The Devil is in the Details’: development, women’s rights and religious fundamentalisms – for Open Democracy. Dealing with the escalation of violence against women across the world requires a wider adoption of a feminist approach to working at the nexus of development, religious fundamentalisms and women’s rights. Kurdish women march against “ISIS” in London on International Women’s

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Photographs from the Book Launch of Katie Natanel’s book Sustaining Conflict: Apathy and Domination in Israel-Palestine

By Akanksha Mehta|April 29, 2016|Book Launch, Events, Our Work, PhD Students, Publications|0 comments

On April 28, 2016, CGS was proud to host the book launch of our former PhD student and Senior Teaching Fellow, Dr Katherine Natanel. The event was introduced by the Chair of the centre, Dr Gina Heathcote. The evening was chaired by Katie’s PhD supervisor, Professor Nadje Al-Ali who was beaming with pride through the evening. Katie introduced the book and then engaged in an enriching conversation with Professor Clare

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Our Work – Activism, Art, Research – A blog on Kashmiri Half Widows by MA Student Niharika Pandit

By Akanksha Mehta|April 16, 2016|Activism, Creative Projects, MA Students, Our Work, Teaching|0 comments

CGS MA student, Niharika Pandit, has put together a project for her Gender, Armed Conflict, and International Law module. The project, on the topic of half widows in Kashmir, is in the form of a live blog with sections arranged like that of an essay. However, it will be more interactive, beginning conversations on research, art, methods, and activism. Visit the project here.  About this project This blog is an attempt to

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Event – Book Launch: Sustaining Conflict: Apathy and Domination in Israel-Palestine

By Akanksha Mehta|April 16, 2016|Book Launch, Events, Our Work, PhD Students, Publications|0 comments

Book Launch: Sustaining Conflict: Apathy and Domination in Israel-Palestine 28 April 2016 5 PM, DLT, SOAS To celebrate the launch of her new book, Dr Katherine Natanel will discuss her work with Professor Clare Hemmings (LSE). Chair: Professor Nadje Al-Ali (SOAS) Abstract Sustaining Conflict develops a groundbreaking theory of political apathy, using a combination of ethnographic material, narrative, and political, cultural, and feminist theory. It examines how the status quo

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Our Work – Awards – PhD Candidate Akanksha Mehta wins the third place in the Rachel Tanur Memorial Prize for Visual Sociology

By Akanksha Mehta|April 15, 2016|Awards, Creative Projects, Our Work, PhD Students|0 comments

PhD candidate Akanksha Mehta won the third prize in the Rachel Tanur Memorial Prize for Visual Sociology awarded by Social Science Research Council (USA). The prize is given to students who incorporate visual analyses in the social sciences. She will be collecting her prize at the International Sociology Association’s Annual Conference in Vienna. Here entry can be accessed here.  Between Home and Away – An Everyday Narrative of Migrant Communities in London [2016: Third

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Our Work – Lectures/Talks by Professor Nadje Al-Ali

By Akanksha Mehta|April 15, 2016|Faculty, Lectures/Talks/Conferences, Our Work|0 comments

In April 2016, Professor Nadje Al-Ali gave two talks at the Simon Fraser University. See the details below – https://www.sfu.ca/fass/events/protest–body-politics-and-authoritarianism–a-gendered-perspect.html https://www.sfu.ca/fass/events/a-seminar-by-dr–al-ali–gendering-the-kurdish-turkish-conflict-.html She also gave a lecture about the Turkish-Kurdish conflict and a conference paper on gender-based violence in Iraq at a conference on “Bodies living with violence” at the University of Connecticut (15-16 April 2016).

Our Work – Publication by Dr Gina Heathcote

By Akanksha Mehta|April 10, 2016|Faculty, Lectures/Talks/Conferences, Our Work, Publications|0 comments

New Publication: The text of Dr Gina Heathcote‘s talk (March 2016) – The Protection of Civilians and Protection of Peacekeeping Mandates: Gender and Ethics in Collective Security – now published in feminists@law. Access it here.  Abstract This lecture considers how Security Council authority and legitimacy gain traction through the deployment and development of normative provisions. I focus on the robust peacekeeping mandates in the UN Security Council Resolutions on the

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Our Work – Publication – New Book by Dr Afaf Jabiri

By Akanksha Mehta|April 10, 2016|Our Work, PhD Students, Publications|0 comments

Forthcoming Publication – Postdoctoral Associate and former PhD student Dr Afaf Jabiri’s book – Gendered Politics and Law in Jordan: Guardianship over Women – will be published later this year. More details are here.  This book analyzes how the state constructs and reproduces gender identities in the context and geopolitics of Jordan. It addresses the relevance of the state and its web of relations in understanding the politics of gender

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