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Testing out a theory

Sustainability Development Goals Open Lunch Event

SDG Fortnight – Open Lunch Event

Are you involved with or been inspired by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Teach-In? Interested in finding out more about the SDGs or how Kent is planning to meet Sustainability challenges? Join us for our Sustainable Development Goals Lunch to talk to operational and academic staff from across the University and beyond about sustainability over a fantastic bespoke Sustainable lunch.

There will also be opportunities to tell us what you think the University’s Sustainability priorities for the next 5 years should be as we develop our first University-wide Sustainability Strategy.

When: Tuesday 25 February, 12.00 – 14.00

Where: Keynes Teaching Foyer

The University’s finest chefs have planned a fantastic buffet including a delicious Butternut Squash and Sweet potato curry with all the trimmings and places are limited so please email sustainability@kent.ac.uk to let us know you will be coming.

As well as to raise awareness of Sustainability at Kent, this event has been planned to celebrate those who take part in the SDG Teach-In during the preceding week (17 – 21 February).

The Teach-In is an NUS-coordinated campaign where universities across the UK aim to make links to the SDGs within their taught courses during the week of the 17 – 21 February 2020. For more information about the SDG teach-In please visit our Sustainability Education web pages

 

Sustainability Development Goals logo - Canterbury Society event

SDG Fortnight – Tackling Climate Change in Canterbury event

An open event is being hosted by the Canterbury Society on Wednesday 19 February at 19.30 in St Thomas’ Church hall to explore the roles of government, community and individuals in tackling the climate and ecological emergency.

As part of delivering the University’s civic mission, we work closely with communities and organisations across Kent to ensure collaboration in tackling the issues of climate, ecological breakdown and social inequality within our region.

Representatives from the University participate in the local Sustainable Development Goals Forum, a collective of civil society groups aiming to raise awareness and plan activity around the SDGs and to inform local decision making on these issues. More recently, in response to Canterbury City Council’s declaration of Climate Emergency, the Canterbury Climate Action Partnership (CCAP) was formed to address the climate emergency.

CCAP are organising the event with the Canterbury Society for Wednesday 19 February to explore the possible responses to the climate and ecological emergency.  University students and staff will participate in two panels: The first, Strategic choices to reach zero carbon, will explore the relationship between local government and the community in making decisions about the future of the city and district.  The second panel, Taking direct responsibility for zero carbon, will explore how each of us can participate in movement of change within our communities, businesses and institutions.

The event will introduced by Professor Richard Scase, Emeritus Professor in the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research and one of the world’s leading business forecasters and chaired be Dr Carl Wright, Trustee of the United Nations Association UK and of Canterbury Climate Action Partnership.

For more information about the event please visit the Canterbury Society website.

The SDG fortnight is being organised by the Sustainability Team. For more information or to view the full programme please visit our webpages or email sustainability@kent.ac.uk. 

Signature Research Themes

Signature Research Themes – Selection Day

Since the summer of 2019,  those who made Expressions of Interest for Signature Research Themes have been developing their ideas and expanding their scope by talking to researchers across the University and beyond. We now need your help on Wednesday 25 March to help select our first Themes.

The eight shortlisted themes will be presenting their vision to all interested colleagues from across the university at  morning event in the Darwin Conference Suite. Following the presentations and questions from the floor, a decision-making panel of internal and external, national and international, experts chaired by Professor Karen Cox will convene and make a decision on the Themes the University will take forward.

The morning starts at 9.00 with coffee, with presentations starting at 9.40 and finishing at 13.00. Each presentation is 10 minutes with 10 minutes for questions. The shortlisted themes presenting on the day are:

  • On Time: Heritage, technologies and futures
  • Food Systems, Natural Resources and the Environment
  • Migration and Movement
  • Artificial Intelligence in the Public Interest
  • Conflict, Security, Rights and Violence
  • DIVERSITY and (Dis)advantages
  • Digital Culture
  • Future Human

Having been through an energetic and exciting process internally over the past year, we are delighted that we have excellent proposals at this stage, and hope you are able to attend on the 25 March and contribute your thoughts on the proposed themes and be involved in their future research.

Tim Hopthrow, Catherine Richardson, Dan Mulvihill and Sarah Slowe

Commercial Showcase - Campus Online image 170220

Enjoy tasty treats at the Commercial Services Showcase

If you haven’t already booked your place now is the perfect time to register to attend the Commercial Services Showcase on Friday 6 March 2020. 

As well as having our teams from Conferences and Events, Accommodation, Catering, Gulbenkian, Kent Sport and KentOne Card for you to talk to, our generous catering teams will be providing some of their popular dishes from across campus for you to try, as well as some new additions to our delivered catering menu.

You can also find out more about our tailored event management service and group facilities, look around campus using our virtual reality headsets, or enter our prize draw to win one of these fantastic prizes:

• Gulbenkian cinema tickets

• One month Premium Plus Kent Sport membership

• 30 minute massage at the Kent Sport Physiotherapy clinic

• One night B&B stay at the University of Kent

• Afternoon tea for six delivered to you on campus

• KentOne Card credit

• Kent Hospitality Catering vouchers

So drop in between 12.00 and 18.00 to enjoy all this, find out how you can take advantage of our services and facilities and how our teams can help you.

It’s free to attend, all we ask is that you register before Tuesday 3 March 2020 to give us an idea of how much food to cook up and goody bags to pack! Book now on the Kent Hospitality website.

Further information on the Commercial Services Showcase is available on the conference webpage or contact the Conference Office at conferences@kent.ac.uk or ext. 8000 for more information.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Sustainability Development Goals - Get Outdoors

SDG Fortnight – Get outdoors

As part of our fortnight of activity based around the Sustainable Development Goals, William Rowlandson, lecturer in SECL is hosting 2 outdoor events to help staff and students reconnect with nature on campus:

18 February, 12.00 – Nuts about trees (William Rowlandson)

Join us in planting a Kentish cobnut in the nut orchard at the Kent Community Oasis Garden. A cobnut is a cultivated variety of hazelnut, developed in the early 19th Century. Hardy and bountiful, cobnuts are ideal trees to supplement our precarious food security. The nuts contain a range of vitamins and are an excellent source of fibre and protein. Meet outside the School of Arts at 12 to walk to the Garden (10 mins)

21 February, 12.00 – Wild Walk with William (William Rowlandson)

The Kent Tree Ogham is a landscape art project, launched in 2017, mapping 13 autochthonous trees across the University campus in a walking route. Each tree is marked by its associated symbol in the ancient Celtic Ogham script, an alphabet somewhat similar to Nordic runes.

From meeting outside the School of Arts at 12.00 we will walk the Southern half of the route, spending time Rowan, Birch, Willow, Oak, Ash and Holly.

At the heart of the Kent Tree Ogham is the will to honour and protect the trees, mindful that the trees honour and protect us.

Bring a sandwich and thermos and stout boots.

The SDG fortnight is being organised by the Sustainability Team. For more information or to view the full programme please visit our webpages  or email sustainability@kent.ac.uk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

pregnant woman holding her stomach

Research grant to test surrogacy myth

Surrogacy law reform champion Dr Kirsty Horsey has secured a Kent Faculty Research Fund grant of £3,375 to critically test a ‘myth’ that traditional surrogacy (where the surrogate uses her own egg) is materially different to host surrogacy (where the surrogate is implanted with genetic material unrelated to her).

Dr Horsey will undertake empirical research to determine what difference may or may not exist between the way traditional and host surrogates view both their surrogacy journey and their genetic connection to the child.

The research project, ‘Surrogates Views on traditional surrogacy: is it different?’, is timely given that both the Law Commission of England and Wales and the Scottish Law Commission are conducting a UK-wide review of laws on surrogacy. The Law Commissions are aware that some jurisdictions regulate traditional and host surrogacy differently and recognise that there is a gap in research in this area. Dr Horsey’s findings will help fill this gap, informing legal reform as well as public and political debate on surrogacy.

Many of these myths were dispelled in a report published by Dr Horsey back in November 2015. Her report, ‘Surrogacy in the UK: Myth busting and reform’, provided an unprecedented insight into how surrogacy is practised in the UK. It was produced as part of Surrogacy UK’s Working Group on Surrogacy Law Reform. Dr Horsey subsequently organised a London conference looking at surrogacy law reform in May 2016, the proceedings of which were subsequently published in a special edition of the Journal of Medical Ethics and Law.

Dr Horsey is a Reader in Law at Kent Law School. She is also part of the secretariat for the All Party Parliamentary Group on Surrogacy.

International Women's Day logo

Women’s Network: International Women’s Day

The Athena SWAN team will be hosting a special meeting of the Women’s Network on Thursday 5 March in honour of International Women’s Day, on the theme of inspirational women. We will be holding an informal discussion about the amazing women who have inspired us in work and life.

The event will take place from 12.00 – 14.00 in the UELT Seminar Room. Everyone is welcome to come along and join in the conversation, or just listen and get inspired. Lunch will be provided.

Please book your place via Eventbrite:

Sustainability Development Goals logo 2

SDG Fortnight – Teaching Sustainability

In support of the University’s commitment to embedding Sustainability into our teaching, we are encouraging lecturers and teaching staff to pledge to incorporate the Sustainable Development goals into their teaching for one week.

Next week (17 – 21 Feb) we are hosting our first ever SDG Teach-In where academics pledge to incorporate the Sustainable Development Goals into their teaching. At the time of writing, Kent were currently in 8th place nationally in terms of current pledges and the number of students who will potentially be reached.

A number of academics have agreed to open up their lectures to anyone who is interested. In addition, a number of lectures will also be recorded and made available to download after the event.

Open lectures during the SDG Teach-In Week:

18 February, 13.00 – Open lecture DI510 Conservation & Communities (Charlie Gardner)

All are welcome to join us in GLT3 for this week’s lecture ‘Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Alleviation: linked agendas. This lecture explores the importance of biodiversity for poverty alleviation and discusses the role that conservation can play in meeting multiple Sustainable Development Goals’

18 February, 15.00 – Open lecture SE558 The Anthropocene (Miguel Alexiades)

Come find out more in RLT1 about The Anthropocene: Planetary Crises and the Age of Humans. Exploring the Anthropocene this lecture explores the ‘new normal’: crisis, risk and uncertainty.

21 February, 10.00 – Open lecture HI426 Making History (Karen Jones)

Being held in RLT1, this open lecture introduces students to environmental history as a discipline and encourages a look at the past that puts humans in their ‘place’ as well as thinking about how scholarship and activism might fit together.

Lecturers and teaching staff interested in getting involved in the Teach-In can:

  • Identify one or more sessions where they can teach the SDGs during or after the week of the 17 – 21 February 2020.
  • Pledge to take part on the SDG Teach In website
  • Confirm to sustainability@kent.ac.uk that you are taking part – guidance can be provided to help to plan your session

The SDG fortnight is being organised by the Sustainability Team. For more information, resources including 5, 10 and 30-minute session plans or to view the full programme of events please visit our  webpages or email sustainability@kent.ac.uk. 

Menopause cafe logo

Book your place at the Menopause Café

You are warmly invited to a Menopause Café next week! Hosted by the Athena SWAN team the event is open to staff of all ages and genders, and is an opportunity to eat cake, drink tea and discuss menopause in an informal environment.

When: Thursday 20 February at 15.00

Where: Suite 3, Darwin Conference Suite.

Please book your place via the Eventbrite website

Menopause Café was founded by Rachel Weiss in Perth, Scotland. For more information, please visit the Menopause Café website

Sustainable Development Goals – fortnight of activities

As part of international activity on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), members from the University Sustainability team, Kent Union and colleagues from across the University are hosting a fortnight of activities beginning on Friday 14 February.

There is something for everyone from open lectures, outdoor activities, community events and student led actions that focus on climate and ecological sustainability. See the full timetable.

This week, University of Kent students join other university and school students from the city for Youth Strike 4 Climate on Friday 14 February demanding climate action. The following day, University of Kent students will facilitate Mini-Citizens’ Assemblies for all-age participants as part of the Culture Declares Emergency family day at the Gulbenkian.

These events are aimed to help the community discuss the tough choices that are necessary to effectively move away from fossil-fuelled to sustainable society and lifestyles and parallels the national Climate Assembly UK that is currently underway.

Next week’s activity will be focused around the Sustainable Development Goals Teach-In, an NUS-coordinated campaign where universities across the UK aim to make links to the SDGs within their taught courses during the week of the 17- 21 February 2020.

For more information about the SDG teach-In please visit our Sustainability Education web pages.

Anyone who takes part in the SDG Teach-In or is just interested in finding out more about the SDGs is welcome to join us for our Sustainable Development Goals Lunch to talk to operational and academic staff from across the University and beyond about sustainability over a fantastic bespoke Sustainable lunch. The lunch takes place Tuesday 25 February, 12.00 – 14.00 in Keynes Teaching Foyer.

We’re planning a fantastic buffet including a delicious Butternut Squash and Sweet potato curry with all the trimmings and places are limited so please email sustainabilty@kent.ac.uk to let us know you will be coming.