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WEDNESDAY 9 JANUARY 2019 • SUPPLEMENT (1) TO NO 5225 • VOL 149 Gazette Supplement

Lectures and Seminars, Hilary term 2019

Humanities 186 Social Sciences 193 Colleges, Halls and Societies 200

Rothermere American Institute Anthropology and Museum Ethnography All Souls Classics Education Corpus Christi English Language and Literature Geography and the Environment Green Templeton English/History/History of Art/Theology/ Interdisciplinary Area Studies Kellogg Music International Development Mansfield History Law St Antony’s Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics Social Policy and Intervention St John’s Medieval and Modern Languages Socio-legal Studies Somerville Medieval and Modern Languages/ Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics Sociology Wolfson Music Worcester Oriental Studies Institutes, Centres and Blackfriars Hall Theology and Religion Museums 198 Campion Hall Mathematical, Physical and Other Groups 204 Life Sciences 190 Hebrew and Jewish Studies Friends of the Bodleian Chemistry History of Science Museum Earth Sciences International Gender Studies Centre Engineering Science Islamic Studies Mathematical Institute Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism Plant Sciences Martin School Zoology – Besterman Centre Medical Sciences 192 for the Enlightenment

Cross-divisional workshop Pathology Pharmacology Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics Population Health Psychiatry

185 186 Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Humanities Dr Rachel Herrmann, Cardiff American history graduate seminars 5 Mar: ‘Maritime and riverine borders These seminars will take place at noon and the problem of settler colonialism’ Rothermere American Institute on Mondays, are open to all and feature American literature research seminars presentations and discussion led by The following events will take place at the postgraduate, junior and senior researchers. The following seminars will take place at Rothermere American Institute. Sandwich lunch provided. 5pm on Thursdays, unless otherwise noted. Winant Lecture in American Government Dr Jonathan Schroeder, Warwick Faculty of Classics Professor Stephen Skowronek, Yale, Tue, 15 Jan: ‘The whiteness of the will: will deliver the 2019 Winant Lecture in race and the matter of monomania’ APGRD American Government at 5pm on Professor Lytle Shaw, NYU LECTURES 12 February. Tue, 29 Jan: ‘Third personism: the FBI’s Subject: ‘Has American democracy The following lectures will take place at 3pm poetics of immediacy in the 1960s’ outstripped its institutional foundations: in the Lecture Theatre, Ioannou Centre, principles without traction in 21st- Book launch and colloquium unless otherwise noted. Free; all welcome. century governance’ Dr Nicholas Gaskill Melinda Powers, CUNY 7 Feb: ‘Chromographia: American Special events 21 Jan: 'Diversifying Greek tragedy on the literature and the modernisation of contemporary US stage' John Price, former Special Assistant for colour’ (readings circulated in advance: Urban Affairs to President Richard Nixon [email protected]) Martin Revermann, Toronto 1pm, 30 Jan: ‘The long-term implications 25 Feb: 'Translation prefaces' Colloquium of President Nixon’s healthcare Professor Elisa Tamarkin, Berkeley Olga Taxidou, Toronto programme’ 11am, Fri, 8 Feb: ‘Apropos of nothing in 5pm, 28 Feb, Outreach Room: 'The dancer Book discussion the 19th century’ (readings circulated in and the übermarionette: Duncan, Craig Dr Michèle Mendelssohn with Dr Natalia advance: [email protected]) and modernist performance' Cecire, Sussex; Dr Elizabeth Kiss, Rhodes Dr Edward Sugden, KCL LECTURE/PERFORMANCE House; and Professor Barbara Savage, 28 Feb: ‘New York, 1891: extract from Pennsylvania The following event will take place at Moby-Dick: a biography’ 5pm, 8 Feb: ‘Making Oscar Wilde’ 3pm on 11 January in the MBI Al Jaber Oxford early American Republic seminars Auditorium, Corpus Christi. Includes lecture American history research seminars by Nancy Felson, Georgia, and performance The following seminars will take place at The following seminars will take place at directed by Helen Eastman with music by 5pm on Wednesdays. 12.30pm on Tuesdays. Alex Silverman. Free; all welcome. Nicolas Bell-Romero, Cambridge Subject: 'Performing Pindar' Professor Diana Paton, Edinburgh 23 Jan: ‘Growing pains: epithets and 15 Jan: ‘The driveress and the nurse: the problem of American nationhood, Faculty of English Language and childcare and other work under 1776–82’ Literature Caribbean slavery’ (pre-circulated paper: [email protected] or Adam McNeil, Delaware Professor of Poetry Lecture [email protected]) 6 Feb: ‘Black patriotic masculinity: black military and maritime performances as Professor Simon Armitage will deliver the Professor Sarah Knott, Indiana citizenship in the Age of Revolution’ Professor of Poetry Lecture at 5.30pm on 22 Jan: ‘Mother is a verb: British and 21 January in the Examination Schools. North American histories since the 17th Jack Campbell Tracey, Kent Subject: ‘ “Undisfigured by false or vicious century’ (pre-circulated paper: katherine. 20 Feb: ‘Loyalism in motion: the cultural ornaments”: clarity and obscurity in the [email protected] or stephen. rituals of Georgia loyalists, 1779–82’ age of formlessness’ [email protected]) Sveinn Jóhannesson, IHR DF McKenzie Lecture Professor Konstantin Dierks, Indiana 6 Mar: ‘Science, the War of 1812 and the 5 Feb: ‘Archiving globalisation of the hidden transformation of America’s Professor Kate Nation will deliver the United States, 1815–61: who was “global” central state, 1812–20’ DF McKenzie Lecture at 5pm on 7 February and who was not’ in Lecture Theatre 2, St Cross Building. American politics graduate seminars Subject: ‘Learning to read: linking biology Dr Karen Jones, Kent These seminars will take place at 1pm on and culture via cognition’ 19 Feb: ‘Lungs, bodies and green visions: Wednesdays, are open to all and feature healthy cities, park-making and the Lecture presentations and discussion led by urban metabolic landscape in London postgraduate, junior and senior researchers. Professor Fiona Stafford will lecture at and New York’ Sandwich lunch provided. To register: john. 6pm on 8 February at the Museum of Professor Damian Pargas, RIAS, Leiden [email protected] or todd.carter@ Natural History. 26 Feb: ‘Beacons of freedom: runaway univ.ox.ac.uk. Subject: ‘Ruskin’s trees’ slaves and spaces of freedom in North America’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 187

Bateson Lecture Postcolonial writing and theory seminars Carlyle Lectures

Professor Dinah Birch will deliver the The following seminars will take place at THE END OF ENLIGHTENMENT Bateson Lecture at 5pm on 13 February in 5.15pm on Thursdays in Seminar Room A, Professor Richard Whatmore, St Andrews, the Corpus Christi Auditorium. St Cross Building. will deliver the Carlyle Lectures at 5pm on Subject: ‘Utopian topics: Ruskin and Karin Amatmoekrim, Leiden Tuesdays in the Examination Schools. Oxford’ 24 Jan: ‘Anil Ramdas: hope and despair in 15 Jan: ‘Unnatural histories and political Clarendon Lectures Dutch postcolonial literature’ thought: Pufendorf to Bentham’

MESSING ABOUT IN BOATS Alexandra Effe, Giessen 22 Jan: ‘Natural histories: the crisis of the 31 Jan: ‘J M Coetzee’s fictional self- republics’ Professor Michael Hofmann will deliver inscriptions’ the Clarendon Lectures at 5.30pm in the 29 Jan: ‘Death and the philosophers’ Examination Schools. Emelia Quinn, Wolfson 5 Feb: ‘The collapse of the 22 Jan: ‘Rilke’s Auswanderer-Schiff or 21 Feb: ‘The monstrous vegan’ commonwealth tradition’ Emigrant Ship’ Kelly Tse, St Antony’s 12 Feb: ‘Patriots, cosmopolitans and 24 Jan: ‘Rimbaud’s Bateau Ivre or 28 Feb: ‘Timothy Mo’s fiction and terrorists’ Drunken Ship’ witnessing injustice’ 19 Feb: ‘Caesars, Scots and utilitarians’ 29 Jan: ‘Montale’s Barche sulla Marna or Faculties of English/History/History of Boats on the Marne’ James Ford Lectures in British History Art/Theology/Music 31 Jan: ‘Solie’s The World’ AFTER THE BLACK DEATH: SOCIETY, The Bible in Art, Music and Literature ECONOMY AND THE LAW IN 14TH- Eighteenth-century literature and culture interdisciplinary seminar CENTURY seminars The following seminars will take place at Professor Mark Bailey, East Anglia, will The following seminars will take place at 5pm on Mondays at Trinity. Convener: deliver the James Ford Lectures at 5pm on 5.30pm on Tuesdays in the Massey Room, Dr C Joynes Fridays in the Examination Schools. Balliol. 18 Jan: ‘Old problems, new approaches’ Dr Naomi Billingsley, Manchester Professor Thomas Keymer, Toronto 21 Jan: ‘ “The best edition of the best of 25 Jan: ‘Reaction and regulation’ 22 Jan: ‘Civil rage: poetry and war in the books”: Thomas Macklin’s Bible (1790– 1740s’ 1 Feb: ‘A mystery within an enigma: the 1800)’ economy, 1355–75’ Professor Sean Silver, Michigan Professor Susan Gillingham 5 Feb: ‘Jane Austen and the novel as 8 Feb: ‘Injustice and revolt’ 4 Feb: ‘Artistic depictions of exile in complex system’ illuminated Psalters’ 15 Feb: ‘A new equilibrium, c1375–1400’ Dr Georgina Lock, Nottingham Trent Rowena Loverance, formerly British 22 Feb: ‘The end of serfdom and the rise 19 Feb: ‘Lady in a Wall: performance Museum of the West’ based on the life and works of Lady Mary 18 Feb: ‘The day the sun stood still: Wortley Montagu’ Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine representations of Joshua in Byzantine Early Modern English literature seminars and Crusader art’ HISTORY OF SCIENCE, MEDICINE AND TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH SEMINARS The following seminars will take place at Dr Nicholas Shrimpton 5.30pm on Tuesdays in the Mure Room, 4 Mar: ‘Blake’s Jesus’ The following seminars will take place at Merton, unless otherwise noted. 4pm on Mondays in the Lecture Theatre, Faculty of History History Faculty. Coffee from 3.30pm in the Eric Langley, UCL Common Room. Conveners: Professor Rob 15 Jan: ‘To stretch; to flinch: Inaugural Lecture Iliffe, Dr Sloan Mahone Shakespearean tenderness’ Professor Julia Smith, Professor of Dr Jonathan Topham, Leeds Helen Smith, York Medieval History, will deliver her Inaugural 14 Jan: ‘Radical artisans, divine design 29 Jan: ‘ “Being thus poetically Lecture at 5pm on 31 January in the and evolution in Britain, 1819–36’ composed”: early modern women’s Examination Schools. elemental poetry’ Professor Judith Rainhorn, Paris Subject: ‘Thinking with things: reframing 21 Jan: ‘The history of poisons: toxic Mary Nyquist, Toronto relics in the Early Middle Ages’ matters, scientific actors and socio- 26 Feb, Fitzjames I, Merton: ‘Tyrannicide, political processes, 19th–20th century’ sacrifice and law in Shakespeare’sJulius Caesar’ Dr Roderick Bailey 28 Jan: ‘Murder in Palestine? Revisiting Lena Cowen Orlin, Georgetown the causes of the Acre/Akka typhoid 5 Mar: ‘What Shakespeare’s funerary outbreak of 1948’ monument tells us about his overnights in Oxford’ Professor Roberta Bivins, Warwick 4 Feb: ‘ “Whipping boy” to “envy of the world”: promoting the NHS at home and abroad, 1948–98’ 188 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Professor Pietro Corsi Global and imperial history research Dr Guido van Meersbergen, Warwick 11 Feb: ‘German science, French seminars 12 Feb: tbc translations and the global market of The following seminars will take place at Dr Amanda Power books (1810–50)’ 4pm on Fridays in the Colin Matthew Room, 26 Feb: ‘Towards the Anthropocene: Dr Koen Vermeir, Paris unless otherwise noted. Tea/coffee available state-formation and environment in the 18 Feb: ‘Charlatan epistemology’ in the Common Room from 3.30pm. All global Middle Ages’ welcome. Conveners: Professor James Dr Simon Werrett, UCL Belich, Dr Peter Brooke History of War/Oxford Centre for Global 25 Feb: ‘Thrifty science: making the most History of materials in the history of experiment’ Professor Saul Dubow, Cambridge 18 Jan: ‘Global science, national horizons: SEMINAR Dr Mateja Kovacic paleontology, astronomy and Antarctic Dr Andrew Buchanan, Vermont, will give 4 Mar: ‘Transnational history of research in South Africa' a seminar at 5.15pm on 23 January in the automata: Europe and Japan’ Wharton Room, All Souls. Conveners: Dr Faridah Zaman History of the exact sciences seminars Professor Peter Wilson, Dr Marianne Klerk, 25 Jan: 'Redefining the Caliphate: Indian Dr Alexander Morrison The following seminars will take place at Pan-Islamism in the early 20th century' Subject: ‘Globalising World War II’ 5pm on Tuesdays in the Hovenden Room, Dr Andrew Edwards All Souls. Conveners: Dr P Beeley, Faculty of History/Oxford Centre for Global 1 Feb: Dr C Hollings, Dr B Wardhaugh 'Cash rules: money and the British History Empire in the age of revolutions' Jim Bennett CONFERENCE Dr Faizah Zakaria, Nanyang TU 15 Jan: ‘Mathematicians on board: 8 Feb: ‘The colonisation of elephants in The 2019 History of War Conference will introducing lunar distances to life at sea’ making of modern Malaya, c1500–1900’ take place 9.30am–6.30pm on 19 March at Yelda Nasifoglu All Souls, in association with the Sir Michael Dr Peter Brooke, Professor Simon Potter, 22 Jan: ‘Vitruvius in 17th-century Oxford: Howard Centre for the History of War, KCL. Bristol, Dr Kristin Roth-Ey, UCL, Dr notes on the manuscript of the first More information: http://global.history.ox.ac. Alasdair Pinkerton, RHUL, and Stephen English translation of the De architectura uk or [email protected]. by Christopher Wase (1625–90)’ Hocking 2–6pm, 15 Feb: ‘Broadcasting Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and June Barrow-Green, Open decolonisation: the radio boom and the Phonetics 29 Jan: ‘ “The instrument that excited end of Empire’ the keenest interest”: Olaus Henrici’s harmonic analyser’ Dr Federica Gigante General linguistics seminar 22 Feb: tbc The following seminars will take place Brigitte Stenhouse, Open at 5.15pm on Mondays in Room 2, Taylor 5 Feb: ‘Understanding the differential in 10am–5pm, 1 Mar: Global and Institution. Conveners: Professor A Lahiri, Dr Mary Somerville’s Theory of Differences’ Imperial History graduate student research presentations K Hoge, Professor W de Melo Frédéric Brechenmacher, École , QMUL Polytechnique, Paris 10am–5pm, 8 Mar: Global and Dr Daniel Harbour 14 Jan: ‘Frankenduals and feature theory’ 12 Feb: ‘On the history of linear algebra: Imperial History graduate student research presentations the emergence of a global discipline from Dr Richard Ashdowne local mathematical cultures’ Transnational and global history 21 Jan: ‘-mannus makyth man(n)? Latin as an indirect source for English lexical Norbert Schappacher, Strasbourg seminars: Scaling global history history’ 19 Feb: ‘Bartel L Van der Waerden: The following seminars will take place algebraic geometry, physics, statistics at 5pm on Tuesdays in the Butler Room, Professor Yan Huang, Auckland and the ancient history of science’ Nuffield, unless otherwise noted. Wine 28 Jan: ‘I like you may implicate I love you: a reconsideration of some scalar Dalia Deias, Centre Alexandre Koyré, Paris and soft drinks provided; all welcome. implicatures’ 26 Feb: ‘Inventing accuracy in Giovanni Conveners: Harriet Mercer, Sean Phillips Domenico Cassini’s Paris observatory: an Dr Mandy Izadi Dr Laurence White, Newcastle analysis of a sample of letters (1667–1712)’ 4 Feb: ‘What does prosodic distance 15 Jan: 'Indigenous survival: a history of between languages tell us about cross- Daniel Mitchell, Aachen Seminoles in the American Southeast linguistic speech processing?’ 5 Mar: ‘The second quantification of and Greater Caribbean' physics’ Professor Angelika Kratzer, Massachusetts, Jan-Georg Deutsch Annual Debate and Professor Elizabeth Selkirk, Professor James Belich and Dr Stephen Massachusetts Tuffnell 11 Feb: ‘Deconstructing information 29 Jan: ‘The macro scale of global history structure’ obscures more than it illuminates’ Professor Larry Hyman, Berkeley Book launch 18 Feb: ‘Are prosodic domains universal? Professor Konstantin Dierks, Indiana A problematic case from Uganda’ 12.30pm, 5 Feb, Rothermere American Institute: ‘The globalisation of the United States’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 189

Dr Ranjan Sen, Sheffield Faculty of Music Seminars in music theory and analysis 25 Feb: ‘Feeling the irresistible Latin beat: The following seminars will take place at the role of the grammar in diachrony’ Graduate research colloquia 4.30pm on Wednesdays in the Committee Dr Jan Fellerer The following colloquia will take place at Room, Faculty of Music. 4 Mar: ‘Dialect-internal v contact- 5.15pm on Tuesdays in the Denis Arnold Julian Horton, Durham induced syntactic change: pro-drop in Hall, Faculty of Music. 13 Feb: ‘Rethinking sonata failure: borderland Polish’ Professor Sarah Collins, Western Australia structure and process in Mendelssohn's 15 Jan: ‘What's the use of musical Overture Die schöne Melusine’ Faculty of Medieval and Modern autonomy?’ Languages Emily Tan Dr Tom Western 27 Feb: ‘Analysing late Strauss’ Taylor Lecture 22 Jan: ‘Aural borders, audible migrations: Lieder workshop sound and citizenship in Athens’ Yanis Varoufakis will deliver the 2019 A workshop with Alice Privett, soprano, Taylor Lecture at 5pm on 12 February in the Alice Little and Sholto Kynoch, piano, will take place at Taylor Institution. Registration required. 29 Jan: ‘John Malchair, William Crotch 10.30am on 29 January in the Jacqueline du More information: www.mod-langs.ox.ac. and “national music” in Oxford, 1790– Pré Music Building. uk. 1805’ Subject: ‘Realistic utopias versus dystopic New music workshops Dr Chris Tarrant, Anglia Ruskin realities: reflections on writing about an 5 Feb: ‘Carl Nielsen, musical vitalism and A mixed ensemble composition workshop alternative economic present’ reactive modernism’ with members of Ensemble ISIS, conducted by Dr John Traill, will take place at 1.30pm Faculties of Medieval and Modern Professor Emma Hornby, Bristol on 31 January in the Denis Arnold Hall, Languages/Linguistics, Philology and 12 Feb: ‘Processional chants in early Faculty of Music. Phonetics medieval Iberia: adventures in musical analysis’ An orchestral workshop with the Oxford Romance linguistics seminars Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor Dr Marian Jago, Edinburgh Dr John Traill will take place at 12.15pm on The following seminars will take place at 19 Feb: ‘Disability, authenticity, recording 22 February in the Centre for Music, 5pm on Thursdays at 47 Wellington Square. and the location of the work in jazz: the Bayswater Road. Convener: Professor Martin Maiden case of Lennie Tristano’ Composer speaks series Serena Romagnoli, Zurich Professor Stephen Downes, RHUL 24 Jan: ‘Morphology and syntax of the 26 Feb: ‘Two sentimental Englishmen in The following events will take place at 4pm verb in the Italo-Romance variety of the 1930s: music, class and dignity in the on Mondays in the Faculty of Music. Castelcavallino’ Merchant–Ivory adaptation of Ishiguro's John Pickard The Remains of the Day’ Dr Jenelle Thomas 4 Feb: ‘Rain steam and speed: brass bands 31 Jan: ‘Reporting the past in colonial Professor Matthew Head, KCL and the contemporary composer’ Louisiana: evidence from French and 5 Mar: ‘The American “lady composer” Debbie Wiseman Spanish epistolary and legal texts’ in Hollywood musicals of the 1930s: 11 Feb: ‘In conversation: from page to towards a history of fictitious female Nicola Swinburne screen’ composers’ 7 Feb: ‘The semantics of questions with do-support in the North Italian Camuno Seminars in medieval and Renaissance Faculty of Oriental Studies dialect’ music Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies Dr Alessandra Petrocchi The following seminars will take place at 21 Feb: ‘Reconstructing the lexicon of a 5pm on Thursdays in the Wharton Room, OSAJS: THE MISHNAH BETWEEN vernacular manuscript from Renaissance All Souls. CHRISTIANS AND JEWS IN EARLY Italy: between multilingual influences MODERN EUROPE John Milsom, Liverpool Hope and local traits’ 24 Jan: ‘Polyphony, in four parts: The following seminars will take place Dr Chiara Cappellaro and Dr Sandra Kotzor composing, performing, listening, at 2.15pm on Tuesdays at the Clarendon 28 Feb: ‘Effects of knowledge of French reflecting’ Institute. Conveners: Professor Joanna on the recognition of Romance loans in Weinberg, Dr Piet van Boxel Étienne Anheim, EHESS English: behavioural evidence’ 7 Feb: ‘The musical chapel of the popes in Dr Piet van Boxel Avignon during the 14th century’ 15 Jan: ‘Surenhusius and his Mishnah edition in context’ Roger Bowers, Cambridge 21 Feb: ‘The household chapel at the turn Dr Omer Michaelis, Harvard Divinity of the 15th century: John of Gaunt, “Roy School Henry” and John Dunstable’ 22 Jan: 'Juda ha-Nasi, author Mishnae: authorship discourses between Medieval Laurence Libin, Metropolitan Museum of al-Andalus and Early Modern England’ Art 7 Mar: ‘Reconstructing medieval instruments: why bother?’ 190 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Robert Madaric Beer, Tübingen Dr Vincent Goossaert, Ecole Pratique des Mathematical, Physical 29 Jan: 'Jacob Judah Leon and his models Hautes Études of the Temple and the Tabernacle in 14 Feb: ‘Mapping the late imperial and Life Sciences 17th-century scholarship’ Chinese religious literature’ Department of Chemistry Scott Mandelbrote, Cambridge Professor Pei-Chia Lan, National Taiwan 5 Feb: 'Humphrey Prideaux and the 21 Feb: ‘Raising global families: parenting, Organic Chemistry and Chemical Biology history of Judaism in the 17th century’ immigration and class in Taiwan’ research colloquia Dr Marcello Cattaneo Dr Helena Lopes The following colloquia will take place at 12 Feb: ‘The first English translation of 28 Feb: ‘Neutrality and collaboration in 2pm on Thursdays in the Dyson Perrins the Mishnah: the scholarly contexts of an “East Asian Casablanca”: Macao in the Lecture Theatre. Conveners: Dr Jim William Wootton’s version of Shabbat Second World War’ Thomson, Dr Paul Roberts and Eruvin (1718)’ Dr Parag Khanna, FutureMap Professor James Naismith, Harwell Guido Bartolucci, Calabria 7 Mar: ‘From transatlantic to Eurasian: Research Complex 19 Feb: 'A German student of Isaac global order in the 21st century’ 17 Jan: ‘Manipulation of peptidase: a lazy Abendana: Theodor Dassow and the (and incompetent) chemist speaks’ Latin translation of the Mishnah’ Faculty of Theology and Religion Professor John Denu, Wisconsin Dr Theodor Dunkelgrün, Cambridge 31 Jan: ‘Biochemical mechanisms of McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics and 26 Feb: ‘Isaac Abendana’s Mishnah protein acetylation in metabolism, Public Life translation (1663–76) and Judaic studies ageing and epigenetics’ in Restoration Cambridge’ PUBLIC LECTURES: THE GREAT WAR: ITS Professor Olivier Baudoin, Basel END AND ITS EFFECTS Professor Yosef Kaplan, Hebrew 7 Feb: ‘Palladium(0)-catalysed C(sp3)-H 5 Mar: ‘Haham Jacob Abendana, the The following lectures will take place at functionalisation’ author of a Spanish translation of the 4.30pm on Tuesdays in the Sir Michael Professor Igor Alabugin, Florida State Mishnah. Steps towards an intellectual Dummett Lecture Theatre, Christ Church. 14 Feb: ‘Finding the right path: profile’ Convener: Professor N Biggar Baldwin “Rules for Ring Closure” and JEWISH STUDIES LUNCHTIME SEMINAR Professor Gary Sheffield, Wolverhampton stereoelectronic control of cyclisations’ 15 Jan: ‘Britain and the First World War: Dr Chen Bar-Itzhak, Ben Gurion, will Professor Jonathan Burton was it all worth it?’ lecture at 1pm on 7 February at the 28 Feb: ‘Oxonium ions, rearrangements Clarendon Institute. Professor Margaret MacMillan and natural products’ Subject: ‘Breaking borders, becoming 22 Jan: ‘How far did the Versailles Treaty Dr Robert Phipps, Cambridge equal: nostalgia for the British mandate make peace?’ 7 Mar: ‘Harnessing non-covalent in contemporary Israeli culture' Professor Mark Chapman interactions to address selectivity China Centre seminars 29 Jan: ‘The impact of the Great War on challenges in catalysis’ the Christian religion’ The following seminars, jointly organised Professor Don Coltard, Houston with the Oxford School of Global and Area Professor Martin Ceadal 14 Mar: ‘From enantioselective Studies, will take place at 5pm on Thursdays 5 Feb: ‘The inter-war peace movements’ carbonyl α-functionalisation to the in the Lecture Theatre, China Centre. All stereocontrolled synthesis of chiral N- Professor Annika Mombauer, Open welcome. and O-heterocycles’ 12 Feb: ‘Changing German views of the Professor Rian Thum, Nottingham Great War’ Department of Earth Sciences 17 Jan: ‘The textual world of Chinese Professor Hew Strachan, St Andrew’s Muslims, written and read’ 19 Feb: ‘Changing British views of the Departmental seminars Dr Nicola Leveringhaus, KCL Great War’ The following seminars will take place at 24 Jan: ‘Chinese perspectives on the Dr Robert Johnson noon on Fridays in the Lecture Theatre, bomb in the early atomic age, 1945–53’ 26 Feb: ‘The war in the Middle East’ Department of Earth Sciences. Conveners: Dr Tarryn Li-Min Chun, Notre Dame Professors Richard Katz, Nick Tosca Dr Ali Allawi 31 Jan: ‘Scripted technologies: 5 Mar: ‘The McMahon Correspondence, Leverhulme Trust Lecture engineering the real in Chinese spoken the Sykes-Picot Agreement and the Professor Katsumi Matsumoto, Minnesota drama, 1930s–40s’ Balfour Declaration: British policy on the 18 Jan: ‘Impacts of flexible plankton Dr Hannah Theaker Middle East’ stoichiometry on global ocean 7 Feb: ‘How the northwest was made: biogeochemistry’ exploring the legacies of the great Professor Eleonore Stutzmann, Institut de northwestern Muslim rebellion (1860– Physique du Globe de Paris 72)’ 25 Jan: tbc Dr Tracy Aze, Leeds 1 Feb: ‘Can the fossil record help to inform modern day conservation efforts?’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 191

Professor Rachel Wood, Edinburgh Mathematical Institute Seminar series 8 Feb: ‘The Ediacaran-Cambrian rise of The following seminars will take place at early animals’ Professor James Maynard will lecture at 1pm on Mondays in the Seminar Room, 5pm on 5 February in the Mathematical Professor Carrie Lear, Cardiff Zoology Research and Administration Institute. To register: external-relations@ 15 Feb: tbc Building, 11a Mansfield Road. Coffee/tea maths.ox.ac.uk. and cake with the lecturer following each Dr Owen M Weller, Cambridge Subject: 'Prime time: how simple seminar. Organisers: Dr Sebastian Shimeld, 22 Feb: tbc questions about prime numbers affect Dr Sonya Clegg us all’ Lobanov-Rostovsky Lecture Professor Stephen Ellner, Cornell Professor Alex Halliday, Columbia Department of Plant Sciences 14 Jan: ‘Using structured population 1 Mar: tbc models to help understand individuals Dr Kate Littler, Exeter Departmental research seminars and communities’ 8 Mar: ‘Climate and carbon-cycle change The following seminars will take place at Professor Anne Stone, Arizona State in the Paleocene-Eocene: what can the 12.30pm on Thursdays in the Large Lecture 21 Jan: ‘Insights from ancient DNA “boring background” tell us?’ Theatre, Department of Plant Sciences, into the evolutionary history of M unless otherwise noted. Organiser: Professor tuberculosis’ Department of Engineering Science Andrew Smith Professor Rosemary Gillespie, Berkeley Solid Mechanics and Materials Dr Maria Dornelas, St Andrews 28 Jan: ‘Origins of diversity in islands: Engineering seminars 17 Jan: tbc the nexus of ecology and evolution in community assembly’ The following seminars will take place Professor Fangjie Zhao, Nanjing at 2pm on Mondays in Lecture Theatre 1, Agricultural Dr Abderrahman Khila, ENS Lyon Thom Building, unless otherwise noted. Fri, 18 Jan: ‘Poisonous grains: how heavy 4 Feb: ‘Development, selection and Convener: Professor A Cicirello metals get into rice and the ways to species diversification: semi-aquatic bugs reduce their accumulation’ as models’ Professor Andreas Menzel, TU Dortmund 14 Jan: ‘Modelling and simulation of Dr Pierre-Marc Delaux, Chargé de Dr Simone Immler, East Anglia electroactive polymers’ Recherches CNRS 11 Feb: ‘Haploid gametic selection 31 Jan: ‘Evolution of plant symbiosis’ in animals and its evolutionary Professor Bartolomeo Civalleri, Turin consequences’ 21 Jan: ‘Ab initio modelling of materials Dr Aurélien Boisson-Dernier, Cologne with CRYSTAL: metal-organic 7 Feb: ‘Conservation of cell wall integrity Professor Geraldine Wright frameworks as a case study’ sensing mechanisms in tip-growing cells’ 18 Feb: ‘The sweet taste of nectar: novel mechanisms for encoding taste revealed Professor Kenneth S Suslik, Illinois Professor Yves van der Peer, Gent in bees’ 28 Jan: ‘The mechanochemistry of 14 Feb: ‘The evolutionary significance of metal-organic frameworks and of polyploidy’ Professor Illick Saccheri, Liverpool crystals’ 25 Feb: ‘The evolutionary genetics of Dr Jay Biernaskie industrial melanism – an unfolding story’ Professor Davide De Foctaiis, Nottingham 21 Feb: ‘The social lives of plants’ 4 Feb: ‘New test fixtures and methods for Professor George Bassel, Birmingham testing polymeric materials: miniature 28 Feb: tbc bending, biaxial and tack’ Dr Miriam Gifford, Warwick Dr Ole Nielsen, BOSE Acoustic Research, 7 Mar: ‘Timing and coordination of USA cell type environmental response 11 Feb: ‘Bose waveguide technology’ mechanisms in roots’ Dr Pete Green, Liverpool 18 Feb: ‘On the adoption of machine Department of Zoology learning for engineering applications’ Jenkinson Lecture Dr Alessandro Cabboi, Delft UT 25 Feb, Hume Rothery Builidng: Professor Andrea Brand, Cambridge, will ‘Identification of dynamic friction deliver the Jenkinson Lecture at 4pm on laws and prediction of the squealing 4 March in the Natural History Museum. phenomenon’ Drinks reception following. Subject: ‘Time to get up: awakening stem Dr Elli-Maria Charalampidou, Heriot-Watt cells in the brain’ 4 Mar: ‘Deformation processes and flow within stressed rocks: a non- conventional lab-scale approach’ Professor Kristin M Myers, Columbia 11 Mar: ‘Computational biomechanical models of human pregnancy – evaluating the risk of preterm birth’ 192 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Medical Sciences Professor David Sheppard, Bristol Professor Dr Claus Hilgetag, UKE 29 Jan: ‘Cystic fibrosis: restoring function Hamburg. Host: Professor Kristine Krug to faulty channels with small molecules’ 25 Jan: ‘An architectonic type principle Cross-divisional workshop integrates cerebral cortical architecture Professor Kevin Murphy, Imperial. Host: and connectivity‘ Oxford workshop on ageing Dr Liliana Minichiello 5 Feb: ‘Nutrient sensing in the gut in the Professor Holly Bridge. Host: Professor A workshop will take place 2–5pm on regulation of appetite’ Kristine Krug 13 February at the Oxford Martin School. 1 Feb: ‘Understanding the pathways Introduction by Professor Patrick Grant Professor Kirill Volynski, UCL. Host: underlying residual visual function after with speakers from all four divisions. Panel Professor Nigel Emptage damage to primary visual cortex’ discussion will follow; members include 12 Feb: ‘Regulation of neurotransmitter Professor Sarah Harper, Professor Chas release by Ca2+-sensitive Professor Dr Magdalena Sauvage, Leibniz Bountra and Professor Sunetra Gupta. oligomerisation of synaptotagmin 1’ Institute for Neurobiology. Host: Professor Followed by drinks reception. Free; to Kristine Krug Professor Dame Carol Robinson. Host: register: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/oxford- 8 Feb: ‘Medial temporal lobe networks Professor Antony Galione ageing-workshop-tickets-53638783044?af and memory: processing spatial and non- 19 Feb: ‘Capturing drug targets in flight’ f=ebdssbdestsearch. Convener: Professor spatial information over time’ Tim Coulson Professor Andrea Németh. Host: Professor Professor Theresa Burt De Perera. Host: Rebecca Sitsapesan Professor Andrew Parker Sir William Dunn School of Pathology 26 Feb: tbc 15 Feb: ‘Navigating in a three- Dr Alexandra Mazharian, Birmingham. dimensional world’ Seminar programme Host: Dr Rebecca Burton Marianne Fillenz Lecture The following seminars will take place at 5 Mar: ‘New insights into the Professor David Bannerman. Host: Cortex 2pm on Fridays in the Medical Sciences mechanisms regulating megakaryocyte Club Teaching Centre. development and platelet production’ 1 Mar: ‘Attention: hippocampal long-term Professor Maya Schuldiner, Weizmann Professor László Csanády, Semmelweis. potentiation (LTP) might be important Institute of Science Host: Professor Paolo Tammaro after all!’ 1 Feb: ‘New concepts on targeting of 12 Mar: tbc Professor Ana Domingos. Host: Professor proteins to organelles’ David Paterson Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Professor Madeline Lancaster, Cambridge 8 Mar: ‘Sympathetic neuroimmunity for Genetics 8 Feb: ‘Modelling human brain obesity’ development and connectivity in The following events will take place in cerebral organoids’ the Large Lecture Theatre, Sherrington Nuffield Department of Population Health Professor Blanche Schwappach, Göttingen Building. All welcome Sir Richard Doll Seminars in Public Health 1 Mar: tbc Mabel Fitzgerald Lecture and Epidemiology Professor Kikue Tachibana-Konwalski, Professor Annette C Dolphin, UCL, will The following seminars (www.ndph.ox.ac. Institute of Molecular Biotechnology, deliver the annual Mabel Fitzgerald Lecture uk/rdseminars) will take place at 1pm on Vienna at 4pm on 21 January. Host: Professor Tuesdays in the Lecture Theatre, Richard 5 Apr: tbc Stephanie Cragg Doll Building, , unless Subject: ‘Neuronal calcium channel otherwise noted. All welcome. Conveners: Department of Pharmacology trafficking and function: relevance to Dr Julie Schmidt, Professor David Preiss, chronic pain’ Louisa Gnatiuc Pharmacology, Anatomical Neuropharmacology and Drug Discovery Charles Sherrington Lecture Dr Tyler Seibert, California at San Diego seminars 15 Jan: ‘A genetic risk score to guide Dr Carla J Schatz, Stanford, will deliver the personalised, age-specific prostate The following seminars will take place at annual Charles Sherrington Lecture at 4pm cancer screening’ noon on Tuesdays in the Lecture Theatre, on 25 April. Host: Professor David Paterson Department of Pharmacology. Subject: ‘Synapses lost and found: Professor Alan Dangour, LSHTM developmental critical periods and 22 Jan: ‘Sustainable and healthy food Dr Mikhail Shchepinov, Retrotope Inc. Alzheimer’s disease’ systems: now and in the future’ Host: Professor Fran Platt 15 Jan: ‘Making neurons stronger: heavy Head of Department seminar series Professor Judith Bliss, Institute of Cancer handling of neurological disease’ Research The following seminars will take place 29 Jan: ‘Incorporating biomarkers into Professor Christopher George, Swansea. at 1pm on Fridays. Convener: Professor breast cancer trials – where are we at?’ Host: Professor Paolo Tammaro Kristine Krug 22 Jan: ‘Unravelling cellular Ca2+ Professor Peter Burney, Imperial Professor Antonio Vidal-Puig, Cambridge. signalling in heart disease: adventures in 5 Feb: ‘Controversial topics in the Host: Professor Ana Domingos space, time and noise’ epidemiology of chronic lung disease’ 18 Jan: ‘Adipose tissue expandability, lipotoxicity and the metabolic syndrome’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 193

Professor Mika Kivimaki Dr Anna Huber Social Sciences 12 Feb: ‘Prevention of dementia by 26 Feb: ‘Mind your cues! Dissecting the targeting risk factors’ connection between dopamine, cue School of Anthropology and Museum salience and reinforcement learning’ Professor Kate Hunt, Stirling Ethnography 19 Feb: ‘Social determinants of Dr Alexandra Pitman, London health, health behaviours and health 5 Mar: ‘The impact of suicide Departmental seminar series inequalities’ bereavement: what clinicians should The following seminars will take place at know and what researchers should Professor David Dodwell 3.15pm on Fridays in the Lecture Room, investigate next’ 26 Feb: ‘Progress in the management of 64 Banbury Road. Conveners: Dr E Ewart, breast cancer: trials and tribulations’ Professor Brian D’Onofrio Dr J Lezaun 12 Mar: ‘The benefits and risks of ADHD Professor Richard Cookson, York Nicholas Márquez-Grant, Cranfield medication: a pharmacoepidemiologic 5 Mar: ‘Life course economic evaluation Forensic Institute perspective’ of early years’ policy and its impacts on 18 Jan: ‘Forensic anthropology and health inequality’ its role in identifying the missing in humanitarian and criminal contexts’ Professor Daniel Barnett, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Olga Ulturgasheva, Manchester Thurs, 14 Mar: ‘Examining public health 25 Jan: ‘Adding cosmo to geo: climate workers' perceptions toward response change as a new matrix’ expectations in disasters’ Didier Bilgo, KCL National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit 1 Feb: tbc Seminars in Maternal and Infant Health Gemma Angel and Care 8 Feb: ‘The body in the archive. Professor Soo Downey, Central Lancaster, Embodied encounters with human will lecture at 2.30pm on 26 February in the remains in the museum’ Lecture Theatre, Richard Doll Building. All Ana Gutierrez Garza welcome. Convener: Dr Goher Ayman 15 Feb: ‘Mobilising vulnerability in times Subject: ‘Using qualitative research to of austerity’ shape, inform and implement global guidelines in maternity care’ Thomas Puschel Rouliez 22 Feb: ‘Adaptive radiation and evolution Department of Psychiatry of Neotropical primates’ Carlo Caduff, KCL Departmental meetings 1 Mar: ‘Knowing cancer in India’ The following lectures will take place at Jon Schubert, Brunel 9.30am on Tuesdays in the Seminar Room, 8 Mar: ‘Disaggregating the commodity Department of Psychiatry, Warneford crisis: towards an ethnography of Hospital. Security badges to be worn to all maritime commerce at the port of Lobito lectures. (Angola)’ Professor Irene Tracey Anthropology Research Group at Oxford 15 Jan: ‘Imaging perception: lessons from on Eastern Medicines and Religions pain, analgesia and anaesthesia-induced altered states of consciousness’ THE PERSONIFICATION OF PAIN IN DIFFERENT RELIGIONS: ENGAGING WITH Miss Freya Robb, London RELIGIOUS TEXTS THROUGH MEDICAL 22 Jan: ‘The Science Media Centre and ANTHROPOLOGY engaging with the news media’ The following seminars will take place at Professor George Patton and Professor 5pm on Wednesdays in the Pauling Centre, Susan Sawyer, Australia 58a Banbury Road. Conveners: Professor 29 Jan: ‘Towards adolescent health’s K Southwood, Professor E Hsu triple dividend’ Parsa Daneshmand Dr Pamina Mitter 16 Jan: ‘Expression of physical pain in 5 Feb: ‘My struggle to maintain hope ancient Mesopotamian texts’ for recovery in a patient with chronic anxiety’ Katherine Southwood 23 Jan: ‘Expressing pain in the internal Professor Joanna Neill, Manchester organs: examples from the Psalms and 12 Feb: ‘Animal models for drug discovery Job’ in schizophrenia: promises and pitfalls’ 194 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Ingrid Lilly, Pacific School of Religion, Hal Drakesmith Brenda Yeoh, Singapore California 6 Feb: ‘Iron, infection and anaemia: 11 Mar: ‘Global householding, care 30 Jan: ‘Fear of affliction: etiologies for evolutionary viewpoints on a huge migration and the question of gender penetrating pain in the Hebrew Bible and global health problem’ inequality’ cognate literature’ Barry Bogin, Loughborough InSIS seminar series Vincent Gossaert, Ecole Pratique des Haute 13 Feb: ‘Stunting ≠ malnutrition: MODEL TRUTHS: MODELLING, EVIDENCE Etudes evolutionary perspective on human AND TRUTH IN SCIENCE AND POLICY 13 Feb: ‘Suffering and spiritual exercises height variation applied to public health’ in modern Chinese piety books’ The following seminars will take place at Ed Morrison, Portsmouth 3pm on Tuesdays in the Lecture Room, Benedetta Lomi, Bristol 20 Feb: ‘Testing life history theory in 64 Banbury Road, unless otherwise noted. 27 Feb: ‘Representing pain in medieval humans experimentally’ Convener: Sara de Wit, Käre Stockholm Japan: the scrolls of afflictions’ Diana Fleishman, Portsmouth Poulsgaard, Jerome Ravetz Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity 27 Feb: ‘The evolution of disgust’ Myles Allen seminar series Frédéric Thomas, CNRS, Montpellier 15 Jan: ‘Lessons from the IPCC Special The following seminars will take place at 6 Mar: ‘Ecological and evolutionary Report on 1.5 degrees: the science 1pm on Thursdays in the Lecture Room, perspectives on cancer’ communication and policy challenges of 61 Banbury Road. Conveners: Dr C Potter, hyper-ambitious mitigation’ Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group/ Professor S Ulijaszek COMPAS Philip Inglesant Giles Yeo, MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit, 22 Jan: ‘Quantum computing and REPRODUCTION MIGRATIONS IN THE Cambridge simulation: a responsible perspective’ ASIA PACIFIC 17 Jan: ‘Are your genes to blame when Monika Krause, LSE your jeans don’t fit?’ The following seminars will take place at 29 Jan: ‘Model cases: canonical research 11am on Mondays in the Lecture Room, Sarah Bourke objects in the social sciences’ 64 Banbury Road. Conveners: Professor 24 Jan: ‘Following the Mayi Kuwayu B Xiang, Professor M Toyota, Dr P Kreager Oliver Geden, Stiftung Wissenschaft und National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Politik Strait Islander Wellbeing’ Peidong Yang, National Institute of 5 Feb: ‘Why is time always (never) Education, Singapore Cristiana Duarte, Leeds running out in climate policy? The role of 14 Jan: ‘China in the global reproduction 31 Jan: ‘Energy balance behaviours: the modelling in masking policy inaction’ migration order: through the lens of role of emotions and emotion regulation’ international student mobility’ Wendy Parker, Durham Alexandra Sexton 12 Feb: ‘Model evaluation: an adequacy- Elena Barabantseva, Manchester 7 Feb: ‘Bug burgers, lab meat and plant for-purpose view’ 21 Jan: ‘Intimate geopolitics: migration, blood: what implications for food and marriage and citizenship across Chinese Myanna Lahsen, Wageningen farming?’ borders’ 19 Feb: ‘Science for future Earth’ Claire Kneller, WRAP Global Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho, Singapore Taylor Spears, Edinburgh 21 Feb: ‘How do we fix the food waste 28 Jan: ‘Grandparenting migration: 26 Feb: ‘The LIBOR Market and its problem?’ reproduction, care circulations and care models: the emergence of the interest Marijana Todorčević ethics across borders’ rate derivatives “Quant” profession and 28 Feb: ‘Function of fat. What are the its modelling practices’ Gracia Liu-Farrer, Waseda determinants and does it matter?’ 4 Feb: ‘Investment migration and social Dan Sarewitz, Arizona State Zofia Boni, Poznań reproduction: the case of recent patterns Mon, 4 Mar: ‘The science of modelling 7 Mar: ‘The social life of childhood of migration from China’ through’ obesity in Poland’ Sean Wang, Max Planck Institute Jeroen van der Sluijs, Utrecht Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health 11 Feb: ‘Birth tourism from China Mon, 18 Mar: ‘Critical appraisal of seminar series and Taiwan to the United States: assumptions in model-based scientific cosmopolitan strategies and aspirations’ assessment’ The following seminars will take place at 11.30am on Wednesdays in the Seminar Andrea Whittaker, Monash Room, 43 Banbury Road. Convener: 18 Feb: ‘Assisted reproductive Dr A Alvergne technologies and medical travel’ Daniel Nettle, Newcastle Pei-Chia Lan, National Taiwan 16 Jan: ‘Food insecurity and fatness: from 25 Feb: ‘Childrearing as global security evolutionary ecology to social science’ strategies: parenting, class and im/mobility in Taiwan and the US’ Jonathan Wells, UCL 23 Jan: The dual burden of malnutrition Francis Collins, Waikato and the obstetric dilemma: new insight 4 Mar: ‘Educational migration: youth, into global increases in cesarean delivery’ time and transformation’ 30 Jan: tbc University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 195

Department of Education Helen King, Alan Rusbridger, Maggie Dr Philip Kirby Snowling, Simon Smith, Mark Wormald 7 Feb: 'Oral histories: the gender history The following events will take place at the and Lucas Bertholdi-Saad, OUSU, will of the dyslexia “myth” ' Department of Education, unless otherwise speak on 4 March in the Tsuzuki Theatre, Ashmita Randhawa and Dr James Robson noted. St Anne’s. Chair: Sir Ivor Crewe 14 Feb: 'Studio schools and Subject: ‘Student access to colleges at the Public seminar programme marketisation: developing employability University of Oxford’ skills in a competitive educational The following seminars will take place Quantitative Methods Hub market' at 5pm on Mondays. Conveners: Simon Marginson and Jo-Anne Baird, unless SEMINAR SERIES Dr Susan James Relly otherwise noted. More information: 21 Feb: 'Conducting phone interviews: The following seminars will take place at www.education.ox.ac.uk/news-events/ the pros and cons' 12.45pm on Mondays in Seminar room D. events/?event_type=public-seminar. Convener: Dr L-E Malmberg Dr Roland Bernhard, Salzburg Jo-Anne Baird, Samina Khan, Alison 28 Feb: 'Qualitative methods within Chris Heemskerk Matthews and Karen O’Brien will speak mixed-methods design in educational 14 Jan: ‘Physical education and on-task on 14 January in the Auditorium, St John’s. research' behaviour’ Chair: Rebecca Surender Dr Lyudmila Nurse Subject: ‘Admissions testing preparation Rebecca Collie, NSW 7 Mar: 'ISOTIS qualitative biographical effects’ 21 Jan: ‘Employing person-centred study: concept, method, analysis' analyses to identify profiles among Sibel Erduran, Alison Cullinane, Judith students and teachers and links with Hillier and Ann Childs will speak on School of Geography and the Environment important outcomes’ 21 January in Seminar Room A. Convener: Diane Mayer Professor Daniel Muijs, Ofsted Transport Studies Unit seminar series Subject: ‘Teachers’ professional 28 Jan: ‘What can(’t) we learn from lesson The following seminars will take place at development on summative assessment observation?’ 4pm on Thursdays in the Beckit Room, of practical science: perspectives from Theodora Kokosi, UCL School of Geography and the Environment. Project Calibrate’ 4 Feb: ‘Neighbourhood-level air pollution Professor David Banister Matthew Jukes, RTI International, will and greenspace and inflammation in 24 Jan: ‘Inequality in transport’ speak on 28 January in Seminar Room A. adults’ Convener: Maia Chankseliani Dr Matteo Rizzo, SOAS Kou Murayama, Reading Subject: ‘A rational approach to evidence- 7 Feb: ‘Taken for a ride: grounding 11 Feb: ‘How is interest different from based decision making in education neoliberalism, precarious labour and money?’ policy’ public transport in an African metropolis’ Helen Dawes, Oxford Brookes, and Patrick Chris Millward, Fair Access and Professor Monika Buscher, Lancaster Esser, Oxford Brookes Participation, Office for Students, will 21 Feb: ‘How to make IT good? 18 Feb: ‘Analysis of quantity and quality speak on 4 February in Seminar Room A. Developing digital ethics as an engine of movement in adolescents’ Response: Simon Marginson. Chair: Martin for innovation through collaborative Williams Henriette Arndt research with disaster risk management Subject: ‘Access and participation in 25 Feb: ‘Modelling motivation and practitioners’ English HE: a fair and equal opportunity engagement in informal language Dr Lesley Murray, Brighton for all?’ learning’ 7 Mar: ‘Looking for gender in mobility Paul Wakeling, York, Paul Martin and Mike Anna-Maria Ramezanzadeh justice: implications for transport and Bonsall will speak on 11 February in the 4 Mar: ‘The macro and the micro: mobility futures’ Tanner Room, Linacre. Chair: Nick Brown modelling language learning profiles’ Subject: ‘Access and participation at School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies Qualitative Research Methods Hub postgraduate level: research findings and their implications for policy and practice’ The following seminars will take place at Israel Studies/Middle East Centre 12.45pm on Thursdays in Seminar Room B, seminars Marilyn Cochran-Smith, Boston College, unless otherwise noted. All welcome to will speak on 18 February in Seminar The following lectures will take place at bring a packed lunch and join the discussion. Room A. Convener: Alis Oancea 2.15pm on Tuesdays in the Board Room, Subject: ‘Rethinking teacher education: Puja Balachandra Middle East Centre, St Antony’s. the trouble with accountability’ 17 Jan: 'Design as a qualitative method: Ms Neta Cohen illustrations from foster care' Vikki Boliver, Durham, Peter Thonemann 15 Jan: ‘When climate takes command: and Neil Harrison will speak on 25 Dr Nigel Fancourt Jewish–Zionist scientific approaches to February at a location to be announced. 24 Jan: 'Qualitative meta-synthesis of climate in Palestine’ Chair: Andrew Bell case studies' Dr Khaled Furani, Tel-Aviv Subject: ‘Promoting fairer access to Kamal Armanious, UNESCO-UNEVOC 22 Jan: ‘Putting Israel on the couch: a higher education: the necessity of 31 Jan, Seminar Room A: 'Navigating Palestinian contestation of the modern contextualised admissions’ internships at international sovereignty paradigm’ organisations' 196 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Dr Chana Morgenstern, Cambridge Dr Anita Fabos, Clark Faculty of Law 29 Jan: ‘Fire in the camp: committed 27 Feb: ‘Sudanese constellations of home: Arabic literature and Mizrahi aesthetics refugee NGOs, social networks and urban Joint Inaugural Lectures in Israel/Palestine’ homemaking in Cairo’ Wolfgang Ernst, Regius Professor of Professor Menachem Klein, Bar-Ilan Dr Lewis Turner, Arnold Bergstraesser Civil Law, and Birke Häcker, Professor of 5 Feb: ‘Abbas leadership in a state Institute Comparative Law, will give their Inaugural postponed’ 6 Mar: ‘Exploring gendered Lectures at 4pm on 15 February in the “vulnerability”: Syrian refugee men and Divinity School. More information: www. Professor Guy Burton, Vesalius College humanitarianism in urban Jordan’ law.ox.ac.uk/events/joint-inaugural- 12 Feb: ‘Rising powers and the Arab– lectures-wolfgang-ernst-regius-professor- Israeli conflict since 1947’ Oxford Poverty and Human Development civil-law-birke-hacker-professor. Initiative (OPHI) lunchtime seminar series Professor Eyal Chowers, Tel-Aviv Subject: ‘Statutory interpretation in 19 Feb: ‘The emerging notion of The following seminars will take place Roman law’ (WE); ‘English law in the 21st sovereignty in contemporary Israel’ at 1pm on Mondays in Seminar Room 3, century: a tale of two traditions’ (BH) Department of International Development, Dr Ibrahim Khatib Special lecture Queen Elizabeth House. Convener: 26 Feb: ‘Identity, conflict perception and Dr N Quinn The Hon Justice James Edelman, High reconciliation in the shadow of the Arab– Court of Australia, will lecture at 5.30pm Israeli conflict’ Dr Natalie Quinn on 14 January in the Gulbenkian Theatre, 14 Jan: ‘Women's empowerment in Professor Avner Offer Law Faculty. Open to the public. More Tunisia: a discrete choice experiment 5 Mar: ‘Quality of life and well-being in information: www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/ to elicit weights for a multidimensional Israel today’ common-law-and-finance-use-and-abuse- index’ deed-arrangement. Department of International Development Dr Gaston Yalonetzky, Leeds Subject: ‘The use and abuse of the deed of (Queen Elizabeth House) 21 Jan: ‘Assessing deprivation with arrangement’ ordinal variables: depth sensitivity and OIPRC Invited Speaker series poverty aversion’ The following lectures will take place at PUBLIC SEMINAR SERIES Dr Sabina Alkire 5.15pm on Thursdays in the Dorfman Room, 4 Feb: ‘Child poverty in South Asia’ The following seminars will take place at St Peter’s, unless otherwise noted. Open to 5pm on Wednesdays in Seminar Room 1, Dr Tania Burchardt, LSE all; registration not required. Please report to Department of International Development. 11 Feb: ‘Material deprivation and intra- the Porter’s Lodge on arrival for directions. Convener: Dr Naohiko Omata household allocation across Europe’ Refreshments provided. More information: [email protected]. Conveners: Professor Alice Bloch, Manchester Dr Suman Seth, Leeds Dev Gangjee, Robert Pitkethly 16 Jan: ‘Transnationalism, return visits, 18 Feb: ‘How effective are CCT home and belonging: second generation programmes in reducing multiple William Van Caenegem, Bond from refugee backgrounds’ deprivations? Some insights from the 17 Jan: ‘GI policy and strategy: a change of Philippines’ 4Ps’ attitude to sui generis GI registration’ Dr Carlos Vargas-Silva and Dr Isabel Ruiz 23 Jan: ‘Refugees and the UK labour Dr Christian Oldiges and Dr Ricardo Henning Grosse Ruse-Khan, Cambridge market’ Nogales 24 Jan: ‘Automated content protection by 25 Feb: ‘In quest of a better life: platforms – how far off current copyright Jacqueline Broadhead international labour migration and norms?’ 30 Jan: ‘Building inclusive cities: poverty in rural Bangladesh’ emerging learning from a knowledge Charles Spence and Dev Gangjee exchange with UK cities’ Ms Alexia Pretari, Oxfam 31 Jan: ‘Multisensory branding – 4 Mar: ‘Taking into account gender and experimental insights and lessons for IP Dr Annabel Mwanga, UNHCR Ethiopia intra-household dynamics: Oxfam’s law’ 6 Feb: ‘From pledges to implementation: experience of assessing resilience exploring local government responses Irene Calboli, Texas A&M/Nanyang TU capacities at the household and for urban refugees in Ethiopia’ Mon, 11 Feb: ‘The (negative) impact of individual levels’ non-traditional trademarks on market Professor Alison Brown and Dr Peter competition and product innovation’ Mackie, Cardiff 13 Feb: ‘Urban refugee economies in Marc Mimler and Luke Donagh, Ethiopia’ Bournemouth/London 21 Feb: ‘The doctrine of equivalents in UK Dr Bram J Jansen, Wageningen patent law’ 20 Feb: ‘The accidental city of Kakuma, Kenya: humanitarian urbanism and Elena Cooper, Glasgow the development of the refugee camp 28 Feb: ‘The historical emergence of environment’ artistic copyright’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 197

Professor Ansgar Ohly Dr Sophia Seung-yoon Lee, Ewha Womans Professor Anat Rosenberg, IDC Herzliya 7 Mar: ‘ “Get a licence or do not University 28 Feb: ‘A cultural legal history of sample?” – digital sampling and creative 28 Feb: ‘Activating the youth in post- advertising in Britain, 1848–1914’ transformative use in EU law’ industrial Japan and Korea’ Laura Knöpfel, KCL Professor Armando Barrientos, 7 Mar: ‘Transnational legal ordering Department of Social Policy and Manchester, Dr Alexandra Kaasch, Bremen, at the societal boundaries of Intervention and Dr Rebecca Surender multinational mining enterprises: a legal The following events will take place 7 Mar: ‘Where next for research on social anthropological approach’ on Thursdays in the Violet Butler policy in the Global South?’ Room, Department of Social Policy and Department of Sociology Intervention. Centre for Socio-legal Studies The following seminars will take place Colloquia The following events will take place in the at 12.45pm on Mondays in the Lecture Manor Road Building. Theatre, Manor Road Building. All welcome. The following colloquia will take place at Convener: Michael Biggs 9.30am. Convener: Professor J Barlow EURO-Expert seminar Graeme Hayes, Aston Dr Jonas Radl, Carlos III Dr John R Campbell, SOAS, will lecture at 14 Jan: ‘Direct action and disobedience: 17 Jan: ‘Effects of the perceived 11am on 14 January in Room 341, Centre for conceptual and performative sustainability of public pension systems Socio-legal Studies. clarifications’ on social policy preferences: evidence Subject: ‘Accessing information v from a survey experiment in Germany, analysing policy: using the FOI Act in the Jorg Stolz, Lausanne Spain and the United States’ United Kingdom’ 21 Jan: ‘Sociological explanation and mixed methods: the example of the Dr Erzsébet Bukodi CSLS seminars Titanic’ 31 Jan: ‘Social inequality and social The following seminars will take place at mobility: is there an inverse relation?’ Avner Offer 4.30pm on Mondays in Seminar Room G. 28 Jan: ‘Four types of corruption’ Dr Tim Vlandas Professor Linda Mulcahy 14 Feb: ‘Insecurity, the welfare state and Mario Diani, Trento 4 Feb: ‘Vanishing litigants? Vanishing far right party support in Europe’ 4 Feb: ‘Organising collective action: trials? Vanishing precedent? Revisiting modes of coordination in UK civic fields’ Dr Benedikt Bender, Mannheim, and socio-legal debates about litigation Professor Bernhard Ebbinghaus trends in the UK and their implications’ Tak Wing Chan, UCL 28 Feb: ‘Revisiting social concertation in 11 Feb: ‘Understanding the social and Dr Emily Grabham, Kent Europe: a fsQCA-comparison of social cultural bases of Brexit’ 25 Feb: ‘Time and technique’ (tbc) partner involvement since the 2008 Neil Ketchley, KCL crisis’ Socio-legal discussion group 18 Feb: ‘Mosques and Islamist activism: Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention The following seminars will take place at spatial evidence from interwar Cairo’ seminars 12.30pm on Thursdays in Seminar Room E. Alice Sullivan, UCL Conveners: Philip Williams, Luke Svasti The following seminars will take place at 25 Feb: ‘The intergenerational 4.15pm. Convener: Dr M Naczyk Charlotte Kelly transmission of language skill’ 17 Jan: ‘ “We find a girl of fifteen Dr Carina Schmitt, Bremen Neli Demireva, Essex nowadays is still between a small girl 17 Jan: ‘Colonialism and social policy in 4 Mar: ‘The ethnic niche and economic and a big girl”: using Hansard to explore the Global South’ integration: the employment prospects legislative change to the minimum age of of the white British, migrants and Dr Rana Jawad, Bath marriage in Singapore (1960–2015)’ minority members residing in ethnic 24 Jan: ‘Critical policy analysis and social Dr Bernard Keenan, Birkbeck niches’ protection in the Global South: a view 24 Jan: ‘Legal techniques and secrecy’ from the MENA region’ Joshua Krook, Adelaide Professor Dorothee Bohle, EUI 31 Jan: ‘A history of law schools: a battle 31 Jan: ‘Mortgaging Europe’s periphery’ between law as a science and law as a Dr Louise Tillin, KCL product of society’ 7 Feb: ‘The origins of social security in Professor Wenming Zheng, Capital India’ University of Economics and Business Dr David Doyle 7 Feb: ‘Global internet governance after 14 Feb: ‘Opting out of the social contract: WCIT-12 and China’s choice’ tax morale and evasion in Latin America’ Dr Simón Escoffier Dr Martin Williams 21 Feb: ‘Surviving dictatorship: 21 Feb: ‘Management and bureaucratic citizenship and sustainable collective effectiveness: evidence from the action in underprivileged urban Chile’ Ghanaian civil service’ 198 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Institutes, Centres and History of the Book seminars Dr Noam Mizrahi, Tel Aviv 19 Feb: ‘The art of recompense: rendering The following seminars will take place at Museums linguistic ambiguity in 11QPsa and LXX 2.15pm on Fridays in the Visiting Scholars’ Psalms’ (Septuagint Forum) Ashmolean Museum Centre, unless otherwise noted. Convener: Cristina Dondi Dr Arjen Bakker Eastern Art Department: Chinese 26 Feb: ‘Labour of the soul: Isaiah in Earle Havens Paintings programme translation, interpretation and practice’ 18 Jan: ‘Bumble-bee witches and the (Septuagint Forum) The following events will take place at 2pm reading of dreams: spectacular and in the Lecture Theatre. speculative marginalia in a Renaissance Professor Mladen Popović, Groningen reader’s Montaigne’ 5 Mar: ‘A digital approach to Hebrew TALK AND VIEWING palaeography in the Dead Sea Scrolls’ Jane Stevenson Dr Paul Bevan will lecture on 5 March, 1 Feb: ‘Scottish and British authors followed by a viewing of the discussed art History of Science Museum published abroad 1470–1700’ works from the Sullivan Collection in the Eastern Art Study Room. Free; registration 8 Feb: ‘15cBOOKTRADE tools for the Evening lectures not required. History of Art’ The following lectures will take place at Subject: ‘Khoan Sullivan's role in 15 Feb: ‘15cBOOKTRADE tools for Modern 6pm on Thursdays in the Basement Gallery, collecting modern Chinese painting’ Languages, History and Classics’ History of Science Museum. Registration ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION required: www.hsm.ox.ac.uk/whats-on. 1 Mar: ‘15cHEBRAICA: capturing the A roundtable discussion will take place former owners of Hebrew incunabula Professor Ursula Martin on 7 March to celebrate International and their annotations in the Material 24 Jan: ‘Ada Lovelace: the making of a Women’s Day. Speakers: Dr Paul Evidence in Incunabula (MEI) database’ computer scientist’ Bevan, Dr Ros Holmes, Dr Kwan Kiu Book launch Dr María del Pilar Blanco Leung, artist and researcher, and Dr Enrico Tallone, Carlo Ossola and Stefano 14 Feb: ‘The art of old age’ Wenny Teo, Courtauld Institute of Art. Salis Free, but registration recommended: 8 Mar, Lecture Theatre: ‘Manuale International Gender Studies Centre Chinesepaintingsprogramme@ashmus. Tipografico IV. A triumph of hand- ox.ac.uk. printing aesthetics, paper and Seminar series Subject: ‘Chinese women and watermarks’ contemporary art’ The following seminars will take place at 2pm on Thursdays at Lady Margaret Hall. Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Bodleian Libraries Conveners: Dr Khin Mar Mar Kyi, Dr Paul Studies Woods The following events will take place in the Weston Library. Free; all welcome but places Seminars on Jewish History and Literature Dr Judith Okely, Hull, and Dr Lidia Sciama are limited and registration recommended: in the Graeco-Roman Period 24 Jan, Talbot Hall: ‘Reflections on auto- ethnography’ and ‘Midnight thoughts on www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/whatson. The following seminars will take place autobiography’ at 2.15pm on Tuesdays at the Centre for Oxford Seminars in Cartography Hebrew and Jewish Studies. Convener: Professor Narmala Halstead, Sussex Charlotta Forss, Stockholm, will lead a Professor Martin Goodman 31 Jan, Talbot Hall: ‘ “Others” and the seminar at 4.30pm on 24 January in the field: ethics, compassion and violence’ Professor Sacha Stern, UCL Lecture Theatre. 15 Jan: 'Calendar cycles at Qumran and in Hannah J Dawson Subject: ‘Rivers and ice: early modern later Jewish sources’ 7 Feb, Old Library: ‘Fatherhood, maps of the far north’ unemployment and the demise of Professor Charlotte Hempel, Birmingham Lectures patriarchal authority in South Africa’ 22 Jan: 'Priestly authority in Ezra- David Patterson Lecture Nehemiah and the Dead Sea Scrolls’ Dr Elizabeth Maber, Cambridge Professor Joshua Teplitsky, Stony Brook, 14 Feb, Paul Ostler Room: ‘Gendering Professor Philip Alexander, Manchester will lecture at 5pm on 21 January in the violence and shame in Myanmar's 29 Jan: 'The Qumran community in its Weston Lecture Theatre. education spaces’ Graeco-Roman setting: Weinfeld’s The Subject: ‘Jewish life in early modern Organizational Pattern and the Penal Rachel Dlugatch Europe: the origins of the Oppenheim Code of the Qumran Sect 1986 revisited' 21 Feb, Old Library: ‘Safe space as Collection’ subaltern counterpublic: politicising Professor Armin Lange, Vienna Dr Laura Moretti and Daryl Green will safety and spatialising freedom at a 5 Feb: ‘The Dead Sea Scrolls and canon lecture at 1pm on 21 March in the Weston feminist bookstore and safe space in New in the Graeco-Roman world and ancient Lecture Theatre. York City’ Judaism’ Subject: ‘Thinking 3D’ Usha Reifsnider Dr Daniel Schumann 28 Feb, Old Library: ‘Transcultural 12 Feb: 'Enochic literature and the Yahad insights into the religious practices of in the Dead Sea Scrolls’ British Gujarati women’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 199

International Women’s Day event Reuters Institute for the Study of Lord Nicholas Stern, LSE Journalism Tues, 29 Jan: ‘How lives change: Palanpur, A documentary screening to celebrate the India and development economics’ life of the late Professor Barbara Harrell- The business and practice of journalism Bond as an academic, activist and founder Professor Mariana Mazzucato, UCL seminars of the Refugee Studies Centre will be held 31 Jan, Blavatnik School of Government: at 2pm on 7 March in Talbot Hall, Lady The following seminars will take place at ‘The value of everything: rediscovering Margaret Hall. 2pm on Wednesdays in the EP Abraham purpose in the economy’ (joint event Title: A Life Not Ordinary Lecture Theatre, Green Templeton. with Blavatnik School of Government Convener: Meera Selva and INET Oxford) Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies Rachael Jolley, Index on Censorship Professor Simon Dietz, LSE The following events will take place at 5pm 16 Jan: ‘Do we need a new kind of 14 Feb: ‘The economics of 1.5°C climate at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies. All journalism in 2019? The new challenges change’ of trust and misinformation’ welcome. More information: www.oxcis. Dr Carl Benedikt Frey ac.uk. Caithlin Mercer, Yahoo UK 28 Feb: ‘Saving labour: automation and 23 Jan: ‘The coldest story ever told: its enemies’ Seminars Kayne and the Up Next algorithm’ Public lectures The following seminars will take place on Lane Greene, Economist Espresso and Wednesdays. OXFORD MARTIN PROGRAMME ON THE language columnist ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE LECTURE Professor Timothy Insoll, Exeter 30 Jan: ‘Short and strong: making the 16 Jan: ‘ ”Becoming Muslim”: the Economist Espresso’ Professor Tien Ming Lee, Sun Yat-sen, archaeology of Islamisation and trade in will lecture at 12.30pm on 24 January. Dr Vidya Narayanan Eastern Ethiopia’ Registration required: www.oxfordmartin. 6 Feb: ‘India’s social media elections’ ox.ac.uk/event/2662. Dr May Darwich, Durham Meera Selva Subject: ‘Tackling the illegal wildlife trade 23 Jan: ‘The ontological (in)security of 13 Feb: ‘European tabloids, populism and from China's epicentre’ similarity: Islamism in Saudi foreign Eurosceptism’ policy’ OXFORD ENERGY COLLOQUIA LECTURE Shrenik Rao, Madras Courier Professor Hugh Kennedy, SOAS Dr Joeri Rogelj, Imperial, will lecture at 20 Feb: ‘Digital rebranding of legacy 30 Jan: tbc 5pm on 5 February, followed by drinks media – reviving the Madras Courier’ reception. Registration required: www. Dr İlker Evrim Binbaş, Bonn Polly Curtis, formerly HuffPost UK and oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/event/2660. 6 Feb: ‘History in tables: Muʿīn al-Dīn advisor to the Cairncross inquiry into the Subject: ‘Cumulative emissions of carbon Nat.anzī's “synoptic account” of the sustainability of high-quality journalism – a path to halting ?’ Timurid history and its complete 27 Feb: ‘Should the state pay for manuscript’ PUBLIC LECTURE journalism?’ Professor Andrew Peacock, St Andrews Professor Chris Dye will lecture at 5pm on Dr Shakira Hussein, Asia Institute, 13 Feb: ‘The Mongol empire and 11 February, followed by drinks reception. Melbourne Islamisation’ Registration required: www.oxfordmartin. 6 Mar: ‘From victims to suspects – ox.ac.uk/event/2657. Dr Aminul Hoque, Goldsmiths representation of Muslim women’ Subject: ‘Why do we spend so little on 20 Feb: ‘British-Islamic identity: third- preventing ill-health and so much on generation Bangladeshis from East Oxford Martin School treating it?’ London’ The following events will take place at the BOOK TALK Dr Christopher Markiewicz, Birmingham Oxford Martin School, unless otherwise 27 Feb: ‘The making of Ottoman kingship noted. All welcome. Professor Richard Baldwin, Geneva, at the dawn of empire’ will deliver a talk at 5pm on 27 February, Lecture series: Evolving economic followed by drinks reception and book Professor Bruce Lawrence and Professor thought signing. Registration required: www. Miriam Cooke, Duke oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/event/2628. 6 Mar: ‘The Qur’an in English: challenges The following lectures will take place at 5pm Subject: ‘The globotics upheaval: and choices for Surat an-Nisa’ on Thursdays, unless otherwise noted. Free. globalisation, robotics and the future of More information and to register: www. Book seminar work’ oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/event/2652, events@ Dr Nassef Adiong, Dr Deina Abdelkader, oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk or 01865 287437. Massachusetts at Lowell, and Dr Raffaele Convener: Professor Charles Godfray Mauriello, Allameh Tabata’i, will give a book seminar on 17 January. Professor Subject: ‘Islam in international relations: 17 Jan: ‘Losing it: the economics and politics and paradigms’ politics of migration’ Professor Ben Ansell 24 Jan: ‘Wealth inequality in political perspective’ 200 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Voltaire Foundation – Besterman Centre Colleges, Halls and Corpus Christi for the Enlightenment Societies FW Bateson Memorial Lecture Enlightenment workshop Professor Dinah Birch, Liverpool, will All Souls The following seminars will take place at deliver the 2019 FW Bateson Memorial 5pm on Mondays at the Voltaire Foundation. Lecture at 5pm on 13 February in the MBI Al Neill Law Lecture Conveners: N Cronk, A Lifschitz Jaber Auditorium. Professor Catherine Barnard, Cambridge, Subject: ‘Utopian topics: Ruskin and Professor Ros Ballaster will deliver the Neill Law Lecture at 5pm on Oxford’ 14 Jan: ‘Keeping characters: Charlotte 22 February in the Examination Schools. Lennox and Oliver Goldsmith between Subject: ‘A red, white and blue Brexit’ Green Templeton 18th-century British theatre and the novel’ Seminars: The relation of literature and The following events will take place in the learning to social hierarchy in Early Professor Daniel Fulda, Halle-Wittenberg EP Abraham Lecture Theatre. Modern Europe 21 Jan: ‘Images of Enlightenment: how Lectures on Leadership visual representations contributed to the The following seminars will take place at Enlightenment agenda’ 2pm on Wednesdays in All Souls, unless The following lectures will take place at otherwise noted. There will be two papers 6pm on Thursdays. Convener: Professor Sue Professor Richard Whatmore, St Andrews per session. All welcome. Convener: Neil Dopson 28 Jan: ‘Philosophical kingship in 18th- Kenny century Europe: Frederick II, Catherine II Professor Keith Grint, Warwick and the philosophes’ 23 Jan: 17 Jan: ‘A historical view on leadership Rebecca Bullard, Reading and change’ Dr Emma Spary, Cambridge ‘ “Deaths of eminent persons”: obituaries 4 Feb: ‘The flight from humanism? Dr Andrew White and Jon Stokes and social hierarchies in early 18th- Botanists, book learning and the 31 Jan: ‘Educating leaders’ century England’ Enlightenment of ginseng’ Dr Andromachi Athanasopoulou, QMUL John Gallagher, Leeds Dr Julia Bührle 7 Feb: ‘Women and leadership’ ‘A conversable knowledge: language- 11 Feb: ‘The birth of the story-ballet: learning in early modern educational Professor Sally Maitlis dancing literature in the long 18th travel’ 14 Feb: ‘Hidden from view: senior leaders’ century’ experiences of depression and anxiety’ Mon, 4 Feb: Dr Kate Tunstall Neil Kenny Management in Medicine (MiM) 18 Feb: ‘Writing the attentat on Louis XV, ‘Ore, lore, status: the curious case of the Programme 5 January 1757’ Baron and Baronne de Beausoleil’ Professor Tim Hoff, Northeastern, Professor Peter Sabor, McGill Richard Scholar: will lecture at 6.45pm on 14 January. 25 Feb: ‘Editing Charles Burney’s letters ‘French à la mode in Restoration England’ Registration required: donna.mcmenemy@ from Paris to Montreal, 1814–2019’ gtc.ox.ac.uk. 20 Feb: Dr Dominik Hünniger, Göttingen Subject: ‘An update from the United Jennifer Bishop, Cambridge 4 Mar: ‘Locusts of love: imagi(ni)ng States: Obamacare ten years later’ ‘Urban literacies: learning to write in the insect reproduction in the 18th century’ London livery companies, c1540–1640’ Oxford Global Health and Care Systems Brian Brewer, Dublin Professor Carl May, LSHTM, will lecture at ‘The figure of the merchant in the works 5.30pm on 9 January. of Miguel de Cervantes’ Subject: ‘Healthcare innovations’

6 Mar: Archie Cochrane Lecture Eva Griffith, independent scholar Professor Zhengming Chen will deliver ‘Christopher Beeston: his plays and place the Archie Cochrane Lecture at 6pm on in the social hierarchy of early Stuart 14 March. London’ Subject: ‘Chinese–UK collaboration in Katherine Ibbett epidemiology’ ‘Une petite Venise: the 17th-century Astronomy lectures beaver’ The following lectures will take place at 6pm on Wednesdays. Charles Barclay, Royal Astronomical Society 23 Jan: ‘Reaching young stars: British astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad’ University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 201

Professor Mike Cruise, Royal Astronomical Mike McGee Dr Sneha Krishnan Society 15 Feb: ‘Technology, Hollywood and the 5 Mar: ‘Affect, geopolitics and religious 20 Feb: ‘The gravitational sky’ art of storytelling’ conversion: on love jihad after Hadiya’

Dr Becky Smethurst Hilary Cottom Russian and Eurasian Studies Centre 27 Feb: ‘Galaxy Zoo: galaxies in the living 1 Mar: ‘Radical help – designing a fifth ELITES AND OTHERS: THE POLITICAL AND room’ social revolution’ MORAL ECONOMIES OF CONTEMPORARY Matthew d’Ancona RUSSIA AND EASTERN EUROPE Kellogg 8 Mar: ‘Post-truth: the new war on truth The following seminars will take place at and how to fight back’ The following events will take place at 5pm on Mondays in the Nissan Lecture 5.30pm (refreshments 5pm), unless Theatre, unless otherwise noted. St Antony’s otherwise noted. All welcome. Conveners: Professor Christopher Gerry, Dr Nicolette Makovicky Kellogg College Centre for Creative Asian Studies Centre Writing Dr Elisabeth Schimpfossl, Aston CHUN-TU HSUEH DISTINGUISHED 14 Jan: ‘Rich Russians: from oligarchs to CREATIVE WRITING SEMINAR SERIES LECTURE bourgeoisie’ The following seminars will take place on Professor Shaun Breslin, Warwick, will Professor Koen Schoors, Gent Wednesdays in the Mawby Room. deliver the Chun-tu Hsueh Distinguished 21 Jan: ‘Elite persistence during Lecture at 5pm on 5 February in the Nissan Anjali Joseph transition from plan to market: evidence Lecture Theatre. Convener: Rosemary Foot 30 Jan: ‘Conversations with the dead’ from Russia’ Subject: 'The power to change minds? Jenny Lewis and Michael Schmidt China’s rise and ideational alternatives’ Professor Jeremy Morris, Aarhus 27 Feb: ‘Re-calibrating the classics: a 28 Jan: ‘What ordinary Russians want SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR SERIES discussion and reading’ from Putin’s fourth term, and the The following seminars will take place at prospects of them getting it’ Archaeology seminar 2pm on Tuesdays in the Fellows’ Dining Sergei Guriev, Paris An archaeology seminar will take place on Room, Hilda Besse Building. Organised with Tues, 29 Jan: ‘Work in transition: 15 February in the Mawby Room. the Contemporary South Asian Studies automation, demographics, migration Programme, School of Interdisciplinary Area Urban Knowledge seminar and skills’ Studies; the Department for International A seminar will take place at 5pm on 13 March Development; the Faculty of History; and Professor Tomasz Mickiewicz, Aston in the College Hub. Refreshments from the Faculty of Oriental Studies. Convener: 4 Feb: ‘The end of the transition or the 4.30pm. Rosalind O’Hanlon beginning of the new one?’ Subject: ‘City planning: do the rules of the Professor Laura Bear, LSE Dr Dace Dzenovska game need changing?’ 15 Jan: ‘Speculations on infrastructure: 11 Feb: ‘Political liberalism after the Cold Lecture from colonial public works to a global War: critical perspectives from Eastern asset class on the Indian Railway 1840– Europe’ Robert Hannigan will lecture on 7 March in 2017’ the College Hub. Professor Dave Leon, London Subject: ‘Managing creativity: does Dr Partha Pratim Shil, Cambridge 18 Feb: ‘Rising to the challenge of Bletchley Park have lessons for today’s 22 Jan: ‘The cast(e) of the colonial police: cardiovascular mortality in Russia: tech companies?’ constables and chaukidars in colonial preliminary results from a 360-degree Bengal’ assessment’ Mansfield Dr Sriya Iyer, Cambridge Dr Richard Connolly, Birmingham 29 Jan: ‘Economics of religion in India’ 25 Feb: ‘Sanctions and the Russian Lecture series economy’ Dr Nikita Sud The following lectures will take place at 5 Feb: ‘Unfixed land and the making of Dr Charlie Walker, Southampton 5pm on Fridays in the Sir Joseph Hotung contemporary India’ 4 Mar: ‘Masculinity, precarity and the Auditorium, Hands Building. Convener: moral economies of post-socialism: Helen Mountfield, QC Professor Finbarr Barry Flood, KCL working-class men in contemporary 12 Feb: ‘Connected histories? Arabia, Dr Anne-Marie Imafidon Russia’ India and the architecture of medieval 25 Jan: ‘Women in STEM and how to stop Ethiopia’ killer robots’ Udit Bhatia Robin Gorna 19 Feb: ‘What’s the party like? The 1 Feb: ‘She decides: women and bodily normative status of the political party in autonomy’ South Asia’ Judge Theodor Meron Dr Thomas Chambers, Oxford Brookes 8 Feb: ‘The Universal Declaration at 26 Feb: ‘Continuity in mind: imagination 70: the impact of human rights on and migration in India and the Gulf’ international criminal tribunals’ 202 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

Latin American Centre Professor Leda Pérez, del Pacífico Panel discussion, reception and concert 22 Feb: ‘Women, precarious work and The following seminars will take place Samantha Dieckmann, Caroline Beatty development questions: lessons from at 5pm in the Main Seminar Room, Latin and The Revd Jo Moffett-Levy will lead a research on "care" work in Peru’ American Centre, 1 Church Walk. panel discussion at 5.30pm on 18 January 1 Mar: tbc in Flora Anderson Hall, followed by a HISTORY SEMINARS reception at 6.30pm at Open House, Little 8 Mar: tbc The following seminars will take place on Clarendon Street, hosted by Orchestra of St Thursdays. Conveners: Dr Carlos Pérez John’s (OSJ), Open House and Oxford Poetry St John’s Ricart, Professor Eduardo Posada-Carbó Library. A concert with OSJ and Oxford Spires Academy will take place at 7.30pm Professor David Rock, California at Santa St John’s College Research Centre in the college chapel. Tickets: www.osj. Bárbara. Discussant: Dr Juan Pablo Scarfi, INTERDISCIPLINARY SEMINARS IN org.uk. To register for panel and reception: Nacional de San Martín, Argentina PSYCHOANALYSIS [email protected]. 17 Jan: ‘The British in Argentina, 1800– Subject: ‘Displaced voices’ 2000’ The following seminars will take place at 8.15pm on Mondays in the Lecture Room, Dr Marcelo Casals, Adolfo Ibáñez, Santiago Wolfson 45 St Giles’. Free to members of the 24 Jan: ‘La clase media chilena durante la University and mental health professionals dictadura militar (1973–90)’ (annual joint Wolfson Haldane Lecture but space is limited. To attend it is helpful seminar with Adolfo Ibáñez University) to email [email protected]. Conveners: Sir Venki Ramakrishnan will deliver the Dr Helen Melling, London Louise Braddock, Paul Tod Wolfson Haldane Lecture at 6.15pm on 31 Jan: ‘Hidden in plain sight: the black 7 February in the Leonard Wolfson David Taylor, British Psychoanalytical image in 19th-century Peru’ Auditorium. Society and UCL Subject: ‘The quest for the structure of 7 Feb: tbc 21 Jan: ‘Sentience and sensitivity: the ribosome: a personal voyage’ innate and human environment factors Dr Martin Monsalve, del Pacífico, Peru generating mindlessness and anxiety’ Lecture series: Diplomacy for the 21st 14 Feb: ‘Globalisation and technology in century Latin America: the development of Peru’s Michael Rustin, East London first patent system, 1890–1930’ 4 Feb: ‘What is psychoanalytic HE Yamina Karitanyi, High Commissioner sociology?’ for the Republic of Rwanda, will lecture Professor Maria Pallares-Burke and at 6.15pm on 17 January in the Leonard Professor Peter Burke, Cambridge Sandor Ivady, Vienna Psychoanalytic Wolfson Auditorium. All welcome. No 21 Feb: ‘Beyond the great house – Gilberto Association tickets required. Freyre after 1933’ 18 Feb: ‘From fading to fading: on Subject: ‘An African perspective’ following the subject in analysis’ Dr Timo Schaefer, Indiana 28 Feb: ‘The origins of legal rule in 19th- Ellie Roberts, psychotherapist Worcester century Mexico’ 4 Mar: ‘The mine/d field of the internal world: the importance of the setting in Israel and Ione Massada Fellowships Professor Nicola Miller, UCL work with borderline patients’ Programme lectures 7 Mar: ‘Education, citizenship and democracy in Latin America, 1800–60’ The following lectures will take place at Somerville 5.15pm in the Sultan Nazrin Shah Centre. LATIN AMERICAN SEMINAR Free. All welcome. Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Lecture The following seminars will take place on Professor Oren Gazal Ayal, Haifa Fridays. Convener: Dr David Doyle Professor Katherine Blundell will deliver 7 Feb: 'Jews and Arabs in the Israeli the 2019 Dorothy Hodgkin Memorial Ingrid Betancourt courts: exploring just treatment of ethnic Lecture at 5pm on 6 March at the Natural 18 Jan: ‘Personal reflections on the FARC’ minorities' History Museum, followed by a reception. Dr Matthew Amengual To register: [email protected]. Dr Irad Kimhi, philosopher 25 Jan: ‘Direct contestation: the uk. 20 Feb: 'The linguistic turn away distributive outcomes of unmediated Subject: ‘Black holes and spinoffs’ from absolute idealism: exploring the conflict between communities and fundamental commitments of this mining firms in Latin America’ philosophical approach' Dr Graham Denyer Willis, Cambridge 1 Feb: ‘Politics gone missing’ Dr Nina Wiesehomeier, IE University 8 Feb: ‘The will of the people? Populism and support for direct democracy’ Raquel Dodge, Brazil General Prosecutor 15 Feb: Brazilian Studies Programme Conference: keynote address University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019 203

Blackfriars Hall COLLOQUIUM: AQUINAS ON THE Campion Hall DEVELOPMENT OF LAW The following events will take place in the D’Arcy Lectures Aula, Blackfriars Hall. The Annual Aquinas Colloquium will take place 9.30–5pm on 2 March. Confirmed Professor Gustavo Morello, SJ, Boston Aquinas Institute speakers: Professor Jay Budziszewski, College, will deliver the D’Arcy Lectures at Texas; Professor Ryan Meade, Loyola; 5.30pm on Thursdays in the Harold Lee The following events are open to all Dr Jonathan Price and Richard Conrad, Room, Pembroke. More information: sarah. and registration is not required, unless OP. Free but lunch contribution of £10 [email protected]. otherwise noted. More information: (£5 concessions) payable on the door. 17 Jan: ‘Why do we study religion?’ [email protected]. To register: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ 31 Jan: ‘What is going on in the Latin SEMINAR SERIES: THE GOOD OF HUMAN aquinas-on-the-development-of-law- American religious landscape?’ INTERDEPENDENCE tickets-54259980061. 7 Feb: ‘How did we get here?’ The following seminars will take place at Aquinas Institute/Ian Ramsey Centre for 4.30pm on Wednesdays, unless otherwise Science and Religion 14 Feb: ‘What do Latin Americans believe noted. in?’ Professor William Carroll will lecture at Professor Edward Feser 5pm on 28 February. 21 Feb: ‘What do Latin Americans do Thurs, 17 Jan:‘Cooperation with sins Subject: ‘The condemnations of 1277 and when they do religion?’ against prudence and chastity’ the origins of modern science’ 28 Feb: ‘How do Latin Americans do Professor Jennifer Frey Aquinas Institute/Thomistic Institute religion in the public sphere?’ 30 Jan:‘Temperance and the common The following events will take place at 7 Mar: ‘What can we learn from Latin good’ 7.30pm, followed by a wine reception. American religiosity?’ Professor Patricio Dominguez Free, but registration required: https:// Thurs, 7 Feb: ‘The theory of passions as thomisticinstitute.org/england-events. constituent of a theory of providence’ Professor Edward Feser, Pasadena City Professor John Finley 16 Jan: ‘Classical theism and the nature Thurs, 14 Feb: ‘Matter as principle of both of God’ individuation and communion’ Dr Rik van Nieuwenhove, Durham The Revd Dr Nicholas Austin, SJ 5 Mar: ’Why did God die? Salvation 20 Feb: ‘Divine and human gift: according to Thomas Aquinas’ magnanimity in Thomas Aquinas and Las Casas Ignatius Loyola’ LECTURE Professor Peter Hampson 27 Feb: ‘Appreciating the fine and Kenneth Parker will lecture at 5.30pm on discerning the good: toward a theology of 7 March. Open to all but registration affordance’ required: [email protected]. Subject: ‘Finding Christ in prison: a The Revd Dr Joost Baneke theologian's reflections on higher 6 Mar: ‘ “I have called you friends”: Aelred education as a social justice imperative of Rievaulx’s medieval psychological for American Catholic universities’ theology of charity, friendship and interdependence’ ECONOMICS AS A MORAL SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM ANNUAL AQUINAS LECTURE An international symposium will take place Professor William Desmond will deliver 4–6 April. Attendance by prior invitation the Annual Aquinas Lecture at 5pm on only; to request invitation: lascasas@bfriars. 23 January, followed by a wine reception. ox.ac.uk. Chairs: Professor Peter Rona, Subject: ‘Communities of the Metaxu: Professor Laszlo Zsolnai interdependence beyond dependence Subject: 'Emergence and complexity' and independence’ 204 University of Oxford Gazette • Supplement (1) to No 5225 • 9 January 2019

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Friends of the Bodleian

Lunchtime lectures The following lectures will take place in the Lecture Theatre, Weston Library. Convener: Virginia M Llado-Buisan Virginia M Llado-Buisan 1pm, 15 Jan: ‘The conservation of Japanese collections at Bodleian Libraries’ Dr Barbara Eichner, Oxford Brookes 1.30pm, 14 Feb: ‘Spoils of the secularisation: monastic music sources in the Bodleian Library’ Andrew N Wilson 1pm, 25 Mar: ‘In pursuit of a prince: archival research into the life of Albert’