Postgraduate Open Event- 24 November

We are holding a Postgraduate Open Event on Saturday 24 November at Darwin College from 10am – 1pm.

The event will cover all Kent’s programmes offered at our locations in Canterbury, Medway, Athens, Brussels, Paris and Rome and you will be able to:

  • find out about Kent’s £11m postgraduate scholarship fund and Research Council funding
  • discuss, on a one-to-one basis, your specific study needs and raise any questions you may have with academic staff
  • hear from the Dean of the Graduate School

To book your place go visit our postgraduate events page.

As well as this, we will be holding a workshop on designing a good research proposal or Master’s application. This will take place after the Postgraduate Open Event in Darwin Lecture Theatre 1 at 1.15pm where you will be able to consider what makes a successful proposal.

Find out how to maximise the impact of your work

The next meetings of The Kent Enterprise and Impact Network (KEIN) will take place on:

Wednesday, 21st November, 12:00 – 14:00, Keynes, KS14 – Canterbury Campus

AND

Wednesday 28th November, 12:30pm – 14:00pm, G2-03 – Medway Campus

To book please email please email entadmin@kent.ac.uk and specify any dietary or access requirements

KEIN, a network jointly created by Kent Innovation & Enterprise and Learning and Organisational Development, brings together staff interested in collaboration. Academics, researchers, technicians and other members of staff can explore innovation and enterprise activities, maximising the impact of their work, and alternative sources of funding, in an informal setting.

In these sessions we will we will hear from Dr Fernando Otero, School of Computing, sharing how a passion for data mining and knowledge discovery has led to a Knowledge Transfer Partnership with a social networking start-up company. In Canterbury, we will hear from a KBS colleague, Dr Antonis Alexandridis, and his experience of delivering consultancy to banks across southern Europe. The talks will be followed with a Q+A on enterprise. The event will start with a networking lunch and all University staff are welcome to attend.

To reserve your place at the session, including a free light lunch, please email entadmin@kent.ac.uk and specify any dietary or access requirements. You are welcome to turn up on the day without booking and feel free to bring your lunch with you.

Nostalgia podcast with Peter Moore

The latest episode of the podcast series on ‘Nostalgia’, hosted by Dr Chris Deacy, Reader in Theology and Religious Studies in the Department of Religious Studies, has just been released.

In this week’s interview, Chris interviews Dr Peter Moore, Honorary Lecturer in the Department of Religious Studies. Peter came to the University of Kent in 1971 and taught here for 40 years; he and Chris discuss everything from Ninian Smart and mindfulness, to Peggy Sue Got Married and where he was on campus when he heard that John Lennon had been shot.

Athena SWAN progressing together with Professional Services

Athena SWAN has expanded its reach and now included Professional Services staff in creating a better work environment for everyone. We want to invite all members of staff to join us: we need your input to make sure we focus on the right things that will make a difference.

Therefore we would like to invite you to ‘Athena SWAN Progressing together with Professional Services’ event at the Medway Campus.

Date: 28 November
Time: 12:00 to 14:00
Location: M2-28

Agenda:
12:00 – 12:30 Lunch
12:30 – 12:45 Welcome from Anne-Marie Baker (Athena SWAN Project Manager)
12:45 – 13:30 Panel Discussion – Featuring a selection of our own PS staff
13:30 – 13:45 Wrap Up and Close

Find out more about the event and register here. Please circulate this invitation to your colleagues! If you have any questions please email: athenaswan@kent.ac.uk

STOP PRESS: THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED AND WILL BE REARRANGED FOR THE NEW YEAR.

Prospective students welcomed to Humanities at Kent Day

On Saturday 10th November, the School of European Culture & Languages welcomed over 70 prospective students and their families to Kent for an inspiring day of taster lectures and seminars. Held in conjunction with other schools in the Faculty of Humanities, prospective students were able to experience seminars in their chosen subjects, including a wide range of joint honours options within the School and across the Faculty.

Student Ambassadors from all subject areas within the School were on hand to welcome guests and speak with students and their parents. Staff from each subject area led discussions on a range of subjects including: “Should fiction be censored?”, “Visualising the Roman city”, “An Introduction to Mandarin”, “Language in the media”, and “Why French is (a bit) like Cockney”, amongst many others, giving visitors an insight into the expertise of academic staff and the areas of study that they might encounter on their chosen degree programme.

Parents were able to attend a question and answer session hosted by Director of Admissions Dr Heide Kunzelmann, covering important topics such as student support, accommodation and employability.

Attendees were welcomed by Head of School Professor Shane Weller, who said: ‘we were delighted to welcome so many visitors to the School of European Culture and Languages today. Our Humanities at Kent Days are an important way in which we help applicants gather as much information as possible as they make important decisions about their future, and I was pleased to see so many prospective students taking advantage of the opportunity to visit us. We look forward to staying in touch and welcoming many of them to Kent in September next year.’

Axel Stähler

Axel Stähler publishes book on Zionism, the German Empire, and Africa

Dr Axel Stähler, Reader in Comparative Literature for the Department of Comparative Literature, has recently published a book titled Zionism, the German Empire, and Africa (De Gruyter, November 2018).

Zionism, the German Empire, and Africa explores the impact on the self-perception and culture of early Zionism of contemporary constructions of racial difference and of the experience of colonialism in imperial Germany. More specifically, interrogating in a comparative analysis material that draws from a range of cultural sources, the book situates the short-lived but influential Zionist satirical magazine Schlemiel (1903–07) in an extensive network of nodal clusters of varying and shifting significance and with differently developed strains of cohesion or juncture that roughly encompasses the three decades from 1890 to 1920.

To find out more, please see click here

Sophia Labadi

Sophia Labadi announced as new AHRC Leadership Fellow

Dr Sophia Labadi, Senior Lecturer in Heritage and Archaeology for the Department of Classical and Archaeological Studies, has recently been awarded an AHRC Leadership Fellows grant of £247,947 for a project entitled ‘Rethinking Heritage for Development: International Framework, Local Impacts’.

Heritage is marginalised from the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and such marginalisation is problematic. Heritage can provide new models of development that cannot be realised with such exclusion. This marginalisation will continue, unless issues preventing the recognition of heritage are understood and addressed.

Dr Labadi’s research aims to understand why heritage has been marginalised from the SDGs and innovative models addressing the identified shortcomings will then be proposed. To address this aim, this project assesses international narratives on heritage for development, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses. It then analyses the successes and failures of all projects on heritage for development funded through the Millennium Development Goals (that preceded the SDGs) in Africa.

Congratulations to Dr Labadi on her achievement.

For more information on the AHRC Leadership Fellow grant, please see here.

Canterbury Food Bank

We need food – make a Christmas donation now

The Development Office would like to invite you to help those in need this Christmas by donating to Canterbury Food Bank. Please donate by Friday 14 December. Thank you!

Items required are:

  • Breakfast cereal
  • *Whole milk (long life and semi skimmed)
  • Pasta (tinned)
  • Ham (tinned)
  • *Carrots/Peas (tinned)
  • Corned beef (tinned)
  • Tuna/Fish (tinned)
  • Fruit (tinned)
  • Sponge pudding (tinned)
  • Custard (tinned or carton)
  • *Smash instant potato or tinned
  • Tea bags
  • *Coffee (small jar)
  • Fruit juice (long life)
  • Fruit squash
  • Soup (tinned)
  • Cup-A-Soups
  • Dried rice (500g)
  • Dried pasta (500g)
  • *Pasta sauce
  • Baked beans (tinned)
  • Rice pudding (tinned)
  • Pies (tinned)
  • *Jam
  • *Biscuits, plus individually wrapped biscuits
  • High factor sun screen
  • Tomatoes (tinned)
  • Disposable nappies/wipes
  • Baby food
  • Cat/Dog food
  • Gents deodorant
  • *Washing powder and household cleaning items
  • *Washing up liquid
  • Shaving foam
  • Multi-purpose cleaning spray
  • Loo cleaner
  • Cleaning cloths
  • Kitchen roll
  • Toilet roll
  • Sanitary items
  • Toiletries

*Items that are urgently needed.

If you would like to be involved, please come along and donate to our Food Bank bin in Rutherford Annexe or if you have any questions please contact L.A.Saada@kent.ac.uk.

FLAG

Session to explore impact of changes to legal gender recognition process

A session reflecting on the tensions emerging from a debate about proposed changes to the legal gender recognition process will be co-hosted by Kent Law School’s Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality (CLGS) on Saturday 24 November.

Beyond the Gender Agenda will be co-hosted jointly with the Future of Legal Gender (FLaG) project from 14.00 to 16.00 in the CLGS Common Room in Eliot College on Kent’s Canterbury campus. The session takes place within the context of conflict over the meaning and value of gender and in the wake of the Government’s consultation process on how best to reform the Gender Recognition Act (GRA) 2004.

FLaG’s Principal Investigator, Professor Davina Cooper (King’s College London) and Kent Law School Lecturer Dr Flora Renz, a Co-Investigator for FLaG, will begin the session with a short introduction to the GRA consultation and the FLaG project. They will also address key legal issues and wider gender politics. This will be followed by a moderated discussion with all attendees.

The session is free to attend, but anyone interested in coming is asked to register via Eventbrite.

FLaG is a three-year project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, that aims to critically explore different ways of reforming legal gender. In addition to Dr Renz, Co-Investigators include Kent Law School Professor Emily Grabham and Professor Elizabeth Peel (Loughborough University).

As well as exploring whether people should have a female/male legal status assigned at birth, FLaG also seeks to determine how the way that female/male and other gender categories used in UK law could be changed. People interested in expressing their views are invited to contribute to a FLaG project survey on ‘Attitudes to Gender’.

New programme: BSc (Hons) Human Geography

It may be 20 years since the University of Kent ran a Geography undergraduate programme but there is a wealth of Geography expertise on the Canterbury campus.  The BSc (Hons) in Human Geography draws together this expertise, enabling us to run a new programme which draws on the traditional foundations of Geography and energises it to tackle contemporary issues.

Having been discussed around the University for many years we are very excited to now have the programme ready to bring in students from September 2019!

Our aim is to train the next generation of geographers to creatively address the challenges facing the modern world.  Our programme is a fusion of major geographic themes such as social and cultural geography, economics and development studies, and environmental and landscape planning, with modules from Law, Sociology, Anthropology and Biodiversity Conservation.

The programme has been supported by the Royal Geographical Society (RGS-IBG).  We are in the process of applying for full accreditation of the programme with the RGS-IBG.  In excited anticipation of the launch of our programme we have been engaging with local schools and in July 2018 we welcomed 26 pupils to our ‘Thinking Geographically’ conference.

The Kent Interdisciplinary Centre for Spatial Studies (KISS) will provide an innovative and interdisciplinary research community to which our students can contribute and through which they can expand their interaction with world-leading experts.

£2000 scholarships

To celebrate the launch of this new programme, we are offering up to ten £2,000 scholarships for applicants starting in September 2019.  The scholarship recognises academic excellence and the contribution students can make to our geography research community. Full terms and conditions are available via the Scholarships Finder.

Find out more

Full details of the programme can be found via the online prospectus.  You are also welcome to contact us via sacadmissions@kent.ac.uk