We would like to invite you to join the GCSJ Research Festival ‘Engaging Research on Global Challenges and Social Justice’ between 14 and 21 June 2023. The festival will include both in person and online elements and will bring together a variety of speakers and formats to showcase exciting OU research and give researchers a platform to exchange tips and tricks, and expand their networks.
Time | Title and Speakers |
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2.00-3.00pm |
Roundtable ‘Not quite real life: accessing authenticity through digital research methods’ will explore the practice and ethics of conducting research in an online environment. It will consider not only the practical but also the ethical, methodological and theoretical rationales for conducting research in this way. Rather than conceptualising the internet as a substitute or stand in for ‘real life’, it will locate this practice within an understanding of the power of this medium as a fundamentally relational technology. Speakers: Rose Capdevila, Lisa Lazard Building upon her award-winning Enduring Love? study, Jacqui Gabb worked with a start-up tech company to develop Paired, which is now the global #1 couple relationship app. Her current research is pioneering conceptual tools to examine contemporary relationship quality and digital intimacies. Speaker: Jacqui Gabb |
3.00-3.30pm | Coffee break |
3.30-4.30pm |
Roundtable ‘Research that reaches a general audience: tips and tricks to make media commentary work for you’. Speaker: Precious Chatterje-Doody ‘Forest and Trees’: doing feminist and queer public sociology on Chinese social media. Speaker: Ling Tang ‘The research-policy nexus’: This talk will outline Prof Nicola Yeates’ experience of working with advocacy actors across different social policy worlds. Speaker: Nicola Yeates Chair: Umut Erel |
Time | Title and Speakers |
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11.00am-12.30pm |
Roundtable ‘Arts into Acts’ is an action participatory research investigating how young people, refugees and locals, create belonging and enact citizenship. Located in Lesvos, Greece it has taken place online through creative and digital methods. Speaker: Elena Boukouvala ‘Participatory photography for peace’: navigating methodological and ethical challenges when using images as part of socio-political transformative research agendas. The presentation draws on PhotoVoice projects working with refugee women and youth in Uganda and trans-community members in Mozambique. Speaker: Craig Walker Critical reflections on participatory visual methods and voice: This presentation offers some critical reflections on the relationship between participatory visual methods and voice. Drawing on research which aimed to explore this relationship from the perspective of researchers, participants and audiences, it also considers why it matters that we ask critical questions about this supposed relationship in our own research. Speaker: Daniel McCulloch Chair: Melis Cin (Lancaster University) |
1.00-2.00pm |
Co-hosted by the REDEFINE Project and the GCSJ Centre Re-orienting global development: the multiscalar narratives of Chinese infrastructure investment in Europe In the current conjuncture a core set of political narratives concern how the US and China confront one another across myriad scales and places, wherein Europe writ large is one of the principal regions where this plays out. Infrastructure becomes one of the material interventions that is ‘weaponised’ in these rival narratives. Narratives of China-Europe relations are often analysed at the geopolitical or national level, but what is missing are the ways in which local sites of Chinese intervention in Europe – in our case transport infrastructure projects - shape narratives. Yet infrastructures are complex spatial arrangements which are place-based, may involve forms of territorialisation, and are networked across space. Hence, we examine China-Europe narratives as ‘polymorphic’, involving other socio-spatial framings around territory, place and network. Together these analytical moves generate much more variegated and temporally unstable narratives. Through an analysis of three cases – focusing on Germany, Hungary, and Italy - we argue that large infrastructure projects can become conduits for wider narratives, or they are used strategically by political actor to leverage investments in spite of concerns at inter-national scales. Speakers: Giles Mohan, Ran Hu & Weiwei Chen |
Time | Title and Speakers |
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12.00-1.30pm |
Roundtable ‘The high seas, the deep-sea bed, Antarctica, the atmosphere, and outer space are all defined as “global commons”. That is, they belong to no particular jurisdiction and we all (seem to) have rights concerning them. Where did the idea come from, and where is it going? What light can we throw on the concept and its relations to current controversies and debates?’ Details Who owns the global commons? Speaker: Derek Matravers Chair: Giles Mohan |
1.30-2.15pm |
Research in Focus How do international organisations (IOs) survive during times of global crisis? In this paper Dr Georgina Holmes examines how the UN system bureaucracy continued to function in the first 18 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Adopting a feminist ethics of care and drawing on field research conducted with UN Women, the paper critically analyses staff perceptions of their experiences of operating in UN ‘virtual offices’ between March 2020 and August 2021, when the UN Secretary General called for a system-wide adoption of the Alternative Working Arrangements Directive. It is argued that business continuity is a necessary component of IO survival, and that staff efforts to secure their own employee survival at the micro-level supports system-wide IO organisational survival. Yet if not effectively designed and implemented, business continuity processes can come at a cost to staff well-being. Speaker: Georgina Holmes Chair: Filippo Boni |
Time | Title and Speakers |
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12.00-1.30pm |
Research practices The workshop will give an overview of main funding opportunities and introduce the research bidding support team who are available to help colleagues who are considering applying for research grants. It will also include the perspectives of experienced academics who have successfully received funding for their research and the best practices they have developed in this process. Speakers: Suzanne Duncanson-Hunter, Simon Usherwood, Sophie Watson |
1.30-2.15pm |
Research in Focus This talk provides a historical and social scientific examination of climate activism in Britain through the prism of the demonstrations and protest actions carried on in London since the first Extinction Rebellion mass protest in 2018. I will offer context by discussing the preceding Global Days of Action, which started in the early 2000s, with my own ethnographic data going back to December 2007. Descending onto the capital, often in pilgrimage-like fashion, should not suggest that the Houses of Parliament represent a sacred site where protestors can claim justice, but increasingly a global stage for performing new protest repertoires oriented against what activists understand as political injustice fuelled by fossil fuels. I am particularly interested in examining what the various strategies of conducting protest by the British Houses of Parliament, from carnivalesque processions, to being arrested, can tell us about the cultural heritages of alternative and mainstream political cultures today. Speaker: Maria Nita Chair: Mark Lamont |
Time | Title and Speakers |
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12.00-1.30pm |
Research practices The 'Publishing in Academic Journals’ roundtable features contributions by experienced editors and authors from different backgrounds. Speakers will be happy to engage with hands-on examples from participants. The aim is to give researchers a platform to exchange tips and tricks and expand their networks. Speakers: Les Levidov, Arabella Fraser, Aiora Zabala Chair: Umut Erel |
1.30-2.15pm |
Research in Focus Contemporary innovation theorists tend to defend a combination of Schumpeterian and Keynesian politics of innovation as a solution to the problem of directionality of new technologies towards socially just outcomes. Their hope is that the Schumpeterian motor of innovation would keep entrepreneurs incentivised to take market opportunities and the Keynesian state would invest in infrastructure, redistributing risks and rewards of new technologies. In contrast, Hayekian theorists of innovation insist that top-down state interventions aiming at directionality suffer from epistemological and moral problems. For them, politics of innovation ought to abandon the idea of directionality towards social justice altogether because it is morally questionable and creates disincentives for taking up new risky ventures in the market. Instead, politics of innovation ought to be restricted in promoting an institutional environment that is conducive to entrepreneurship. I will argue that despite differences, both theoretical camps rely on liberal notions of morality and politics which justify predominantly distributional currencies of justice, overlooking questions of relational equality in innovation. Therefore, they fail to go far enough to eliminate unjust relations of private ownership, domination, and oppression within processes of production of novel technological goods and services (e.g., IPRs). Speaker: Theo Papaioannou Chair: Jamie Gaskarth |
Time | Title and Speakers |
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10.30am-12.00pm |
Roundtable Speakers: Charlotte Vincent, Artistic Director/CEO, Vincent Dance Theatre |
12.00pm |
Lunch break |
1.00pm |
Welcome speech by Kevin Shakesheff, OU Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research & Innovation) |
1.00-2.00pm |
Keynote speech I Keynote Speaker: Gary Younge (University of Manchester): The anti-racists uprisings of 2020 galvanised large numbers of people worldwide, raised consciousness, elevated more diverse groups to leadership positions and have managed to clear significant political space. But in the absence of longstanding institutions to incubate and democratise this energy, this new consciousness has failed to find an organisational home. As a result, we have proved unable to build on the space that has been cleared. About the keynote speaker: Gary Younge is an award-winning author, broadcaster and professor of sociology at the university of Manchester. He has published six books, most recently Dispatches from the Diaspora: From Nelson Mandela to Black Lives Matter. Chair: Umut Erel |
2.15-3.15pm |
Keynote speech II Keynote Speaker: Youngsook Choi (Artist/Researcher): Whilst we are responding to the climate crisis with technical innovations for eco-friendly solutions, there is an absolute lack of critical reflection on the loss and trauma within nature and surrounding communities. We tend to move on as usual and progress with the technocratic illusion. The ongoing long-term project 'In Every Bite of the Emperor' proposes the loss as the critical ground for structural changes and reclaims grief as a socio-political autopsy upon lands and rivers of environmental destruction. Weaving through different geographical sites that share the ecological trauma and broken communities caused by neo/colonial extraction, this presentation looks into grief as a portal to recover multi-species perspectives, build inter-species solidarity and conspire different futures. About the keynote speaker: Youngsook is a London-based artist/researcher with a PhD in human geography. Under the umbrella theme of political spirituality, her performances and multi-faceted installations explore intimate aesthetics of solidarity actions and collective healing. More recently, grief has been the focus of Youngsook's practice, posing collective grief as the process of socio-political autopsy around certain types of death and environmental loss. Not This Future (2020), commemorating the Essex 39 incident, and In Every Bite of the Emperor (2021-current), the ecological grief project that weaves transnational narratives of damaged ecosystems and broken communities, are in tandem with this inquiry. Youngsook is also co-founder of a research-practice working group, Decolonising Botany. Chair: Shonil Bhagwat |
3.15-4.00pm |
Networking and refreshments |
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