Yearly Archives: 2015

Stirling Lecture 2015

The Social Anthropology Research Group cordially invites you to the Annual Stirling Lecture in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the University of Kent.

Sarah Green, University of Helsinki ,will be speaking on ‘The summer of ‘no’ in Izmir: ethnographic reflections on the shifting relative location of Turkey’.

Tuesday 10th November 2015
Lecture: 6.30pm, Grimond Lecture Theatre 1
Followed by a buffet in the Grimond Foyer

For more information please follow:
http://www.kent.ac.uk/sac/events/lectures-seminars/stirling-lecture/index.html

Please register: http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stirling-lecture-2015-tickets-18225242190

Christmas at Cargo

Looking for a venue for a festive gathering? Cargo will be offering a Christmas menu from the 30th November until 18th December priced at £12.95 for a 2 course menu (Main & Dessert) please email cargobar@kent.ac.uk for more information and a booking form.

Elections in the post-Soviet space – a Belarusian case study

As part of the School of Politics and International Relations Beacon Project, Diplomacy @ Kent is pleased to welcome Ambassador Bucknell, Ambassador to Belarus.

Ambassador Bucknell has had a varied career in the Foreign Office, which he joined in 1985. He served as 3rd Secretary in Amman (1988-91), as Consul in Milan (1995-9) and as the 1st Secretary responsible for EU affairs in Madrid (2003-7). Ambassador Bucknell is currently completing his posting to Belarus, where he has been Ambassador since 2012.

Ambassador Bucknell will be presenting ‘Elections in the post-Soviet space – a Belarusian case study’. The talk will take place on Wednesday 11th November 2015 at 11am in Grimond Lecture Theatre 3.

All are welcome to attend and we look forward to seeing you there.

Are you considering starting your own business?

Register for the University of Kent’s Business Start-Up Day on Wednesday 25 November 2015 and be inspired by other young entrepreneurs who have succeeded in starting a business. We have an excellent line-up of award-winning young entrepreneur speakers and a range of business start-up activities set up.

The Business Start-Up Day is open to all students and graduates from the University of Kent who have an interest in business and enterprise. This half-day event is designed to give you an insight into the challenges and opportunities of setting up your own business.

Location: Kent Business School, Lecture Theatre, Canterbury Campus
Start Time: 13.00      End Time: 17.00
A free buffet lunch will be served from 12.00

The Business Start-Up Day will also witness the launch of the Business Start-Up Journey, an exciting and new extra-curricular programme designed to support the development of student business start-ups at the University of Kent.

 Registration is required. Please enter your NAME and KENT IT LOGIN details to the Doodle Poll.

Attendance carries 20 Employability Points.

For more information about the programme for the day, please find attached the programme flyer or visit the Kent Business School enterprise webpage:

Any questions?  Contact a member of the Kent Business School’s business development team KBSbusiness@kent.ac.uk

We look to forward to seeing you on the 25th November!

Travel Plan Survey 2015

The Travel Plan Survey has now launched. Please follow the link below to complete the survey by Friday 13 November 2015:

https://www.kent.ac.uk/estates/services/transport/survey/

The Travel Plan Survey aims to find out information relating to how you travel and how you think transport could be improved. It is very important that this survey is completed as the data forms the basis of the University Travel Plans for Canterbury and Medway.

The University Travel Plans are a detailed set of actions with the aim to reduce single car occupancy, where possible, and to provide alternative means of transport to create a greener, healthier environment for staff, students and the local community.

The survey takes approximately 10 minutes to complete depending on how much information you are willing to share with us. As a thank you for taking the time to complete the survey, you can enter your University of Kent email address to be in with the chance of winning £100 food voucher to be used at catering outlets across the campuses or one of 200 hot drinks vouchers.

Please complete the survey online using the link above. If you or your colleagues are unable to complete the form online, please do not give up as your opinions are important to us. Contact the Transport Team, Estates Department and we will assist you.

Day Trip to Bruges in Belgium via Channel Tunnel: 14 Nov

There are some seats available on a day-trip (by coach and Channel Tunnel) to the beautiful city of Bruges in Belgium, famed for its canals and architecture as well as shopping, museums and restaurants. You are free to spend the time in Bruges as you wish, and walking maps are provided. Coach leaves Canterbury Campus early in the morning on 14 Nov and tickets are £30. This trip has been run successfully every year since 2001, and is an annual highlight for many students. For further details of this and other Chaplaincy events and trips see www.kent.ac.uk/chaplaincy/events.html

Invitation to Vice-Chancellor’s Esteem Lectures

We are excited to announce the return of the Vice-Chancellor’s Esteem Lectures series. On behalf of Professor Dame Julia Goodfellow, the Corporate Events office would like to invite you to attend the first two lectures of the series.

The first lecture will be delivered by Professor David Herd, entitled “Countering the Silence of Indefinite Detention: Walking with Refugee Tales”. The lecture will take place on Tuesday 10 November 2015 at 18.00 in Darwin Conference Suite.

The second lecture is by Professor Roberto Gonzalez, entitled “The Development of Higher Education in Chile: The Challenge of Improving its Quality”. The lecture will take place on Thursday 12 November 2015 at 18.00 in Darwin Conference Suite.

If you would like any further information, please do not hesitate to contact the Events Team on 01227 824347 or email events@kent.ac.uk.

We look forward to welcoming you to the lectures.

Corporate Events team, Development Office

ThinkNation – tackle the big issues impacting your life and future

Discuss how technology is impacting everyday life and shaping our future at ThinkNation on Saturday 5 December, 10.00 – 16.30, at the Gulbenkian Theatre.

ThinkNation brings students, young people, world thinkers, performers and tech futurists together to tackle big questions around the impact of technology and digital on everyday life and beyond.

Hosted by broadcaster and writer Rick Edwards (Channel 4, ITV2 and face of BBC3’s debate programme Free Speech) topics include artificial intelligence, immortality, space exploration and how tech is changing society.

Participants include:

  • Dr John Troyer from Centre for Death and Society at Bath University who’ll explore the social and moral impact of tech-assisted ‘immortality’
  • Spoken word poet, Dean Atta will perform a specially commissioned piece on ‘living in the moment’
  • And 17 year old Twitter #milifandom phenomenon, Abby Tomlinson, will argue the case on whether social media has created a selfish generation. Plus many more!

Get involved

If you’re aged 14-18 and want to share your ideas on stage with rockstar speakers and thought leaders, tweet @thinknat.

Get tickets

Grab your ticket now for what promises to be an amazing day of mind-blowing ideas, talks and debates! Tickets are £15 and include lunch and a t-shirt.

Xercise Factor is back…

Kent Sport’s fitness competition is back by popular demand, offering members the chance to be selected for one-to-one fitness training and battle it out in a bid to be crowned Xercise Factor Champion 2016.

Applications are now open, and we are looking for students, staff and members of the public who think they have the Xercise Factor and want to commit to getting fit and changing their lifestyle for the better. It is a complete overhaul of exercise and lifestyle habits and the promotion requires full commitment from the contestants to complete the challenge.

If you are successful in your application you will join other contestants for the Xercise Factor boot camp in January where a member of the fitness team will mentor you for two weeks. Only the committed will make it to the second phase and compete for the honour of becoming the Xercise Factor Champion.

Reigning Xercise Factor Champion, student Wura Oyenekan, said ‘I have learnt throughout this competition that being fit and healthy isn’t about vanity. It isn’t about starving myself or bulking up for a quick fix or indulging in fad diets that are detrimental to my health. It is a personal journey. Not just a physical one, but a mental and emotional one too, in which I grow and learn about the wonders of human capacity. This has been such a wakeup call for me and one of the best experiences of my life. [I’m] grateful to Kent Sport for this incredible opportunity.’

Pick up your application form from the Sports Centre reception or download it from kent.ac.uk/sports/xercisefactor. Post your form in the Fitness Suite ‘X’box or email it to o.prior@kent.ac.uk before 3 December 2015 and get ready for the challenge in January 2016. Not yet a member of Kent Sport? See our membership webpage.

Kent student promotes racial equality

A University of Kent student’s passion to educate her peers in the UK and Hong Kong on cultural diversity has earnt her recognition at the Kent Student Awards.

April-Louise Pennant (22) a final year Sociology student spent her time at the University of Kent and a year studying at the Chinese University of Hong Kong encouraging and educating others about the diversity within the Black community.

While in Hong Kong, April-Louise envisioned and co-founded a new cultural student organisation called the Black International Community (B.I.C), which aimed to celebrate, educate and provide a forum for students from an African/Caribbean/Black heritage inclusive of the local students.

In order to fulfil its purpose to promote and share the cultures from within the Black community, the society ran regular events, including presentations about what it means to be Black and cultural trips to taste and understand African and Caribbean food. The society is still running in Hong Kong today.

As a result of setting up the B.I.C, April-Louise was also given a lead role in organising a week-long, University-wide event in Hong Kong to celebrate African culture. The ‘It’s Time for Africa’ event, which engaged the entire student community at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, celebrated the cultural identities in Africa and helped to raise awareness of the issues Black people living in Hong Kong face. The event included an opening ceremony with a fashion show showcasing traditional African clothes, African food tasting as well as sharing sessions throughout the week. It was also attended by generals from the African consulate and local African community groups in Hong Kong.

April-Louise’s passion for educating her peers on cultural diversity can be evidenced throughout her studies at the University of Kent. In her second year, as the secretary of the African and Caribbean Society (ACS), she led and organised the introduction of a Caribbean food stall on campus, negotiating special student prices, which traded weekly.

In her final year, after returning from her study year abroad in Hong Kong, she led the planning and participated in a silent protest, ‘Kent Can’t Breathe’, which was a demonstration of solidarity as part of an international show of anger at police brutality against black people both in the UK and US. The protest, sparked by the death of Eric Garner in the United States was attended by over 40 people. While doing this, in her final year, she was able to balance a part-time job within the Representation and Democracy section of the Kent Union offices, complete over 200 hours of volunteering and maintain good grades.

April-Louise’s commitment towards educating other students on cultural diversity meant she was nominated in two categories at the Student Awards in recognition of her work at her university in Hong Kong and for ‘Kent Can’t Breathe’. She was honoured by the University in the Outstanding International/Multicultural Initiative of the Year category, came in second place in the Outstanding Contribution to Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity category and was named ‘Student of the Year’ at the Kent Student Awards 2015. The annual awards recognise the achievements of Kent students outside of their academic studies.

April-Louise graduated from the University of Kent in July 2015 with first class honours.

Since graduating, April-Louise has been awarded a prestigious postgraduate Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) scholarship at the University of Birmingham. April-Louise’s research looks at the educational experience of specific groups and she hopes to become a lecturer.

If you know an amazing Kent student like April-Louise, nominate them for a Kent Student Award. Nominations will open in January 2016.