University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Bert's list

Bert's list

Add to your list(s) Send you e-mail reminders Further detail
Subscribe using ical/vcal (Help)

Description to be confirmed

Tell a friend about this list:

If you have a question about this list, please contact: Bert Vaux. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser.

0 upcoming talks and 27 talks in the archive.

King's Occasional Lectures

The Sequel Nobody Wants? The 2024 U.S. Elections, One Year Out

UserAndrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College/LSE/UCL.

HouseWine Room, King's College.

ClockThursday 16 November 2023, 17:30-18:30

King's Occasional Lectures

Windrush Women's Space: a multimedia presentation of 18 Collingham Gardens, 1945-1970

UserNicholas Boston, The City University of New York (CUNY), Lehman College.

HouseAudit Room, King's College.

ClockMonday 19 June 2023, 17:30-19:00

King's Occasional Lectures

The State of the Union: Checks and Balances Edition

UserAndrew Rudalevige, Thomas Brackett Reed Professor of Government, Bowdoin College.

HouseAudit Room, King's College.

ClockMonday 14 March 2022, 14:00-15:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Language Evolution in Spatial Domains, and Statistical Physics

UserJames Burridge, University of Portsmouth.

HouseAudit Room, King's College.

ClockThursday 01 November 2018, 14:00-15:00

King's Occasional Lectures

The Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust then and now

UserBert Vaux, Cambridge University.

HouseAudit Room, King's College.

ClockWednesday 22 April 2015, 14:00-15:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Computational Dialectology

UserJack Grieve, Centre for Forensic Linguistics, Aston University.

HouseKeynes Seminar Room 1.

ClockWednesday 20 February 2013, 16:00-17:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Modeling domain-narrowing phonological change

UserConstantine Lignos, University of Pennsylvania.

HouseKeynes Seminar Room 2, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockWednesday 07 November 2012, 16:00-17:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Uprising in the Middle East: Interfaith Aspects

UserKenneth Vaux, Professor of Theological Ethics and Director of Project Interfaith, Garrett Seminary and Northwestern University.

HouseF6, Gibbs Building, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockMonday 14 March 2011, 16:00-17:00

King's Occasional Lectures

"Probable", Alternatives, and Rationality

UserDan Lassiter, Dept. of Linguistics, NYU and Institute of Philosophy, University of London.

HouseWine Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockFriday 18 February 2011, 16:00-17:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Automated Measures for Assessment of Prosody in Autism

UserEmily Tucker Prud'hommeaux, Oregon Health and Science University.

HouseBeves Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockMonday 09 November 2009, 19:00-20:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Does D.H. Lawrence have a Sense of Humour?

UserDr Catherine Brown, Lecturer in English Literature, St Hilda's College, Oxford University.

HouseWine Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockWednesday 29 April 2009, 18:00-19:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Fearful Symmetry: Allomorphy, Synchrony, Diachrony

UserEmmon Bach, SOAS and University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

HouseSaltmarsh Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockMonday 27 April 2009, 18:00-19:00

King's Occasional Lectures

Seizing the Moment in History: Five Breakthrough Reforms in Healthcare

UserNeal Hogan, BDC Advisors, and Michael Wagner, The Health Care Advisory Board Company.

HouseBeves Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockFriday 06 March 2009, 13:15-14:15

King's Occasional Lectures

Sovereign Defaults

UserMichael Waibel, British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the Faculty of Law and the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law.

HouseBeves Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockMonday 02 March 2009, 13:00-14:00

King's Occasional Lectures

History in Context: The 2008 US Presidential Election

UserProfessor Andrew Rudalevige, Walter E. Beach '56 Chair in Political Science, Dickinson College.

HouseWine Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockTuesday 14 October 2008, 13:00-14:00

Though this be method, yet there is madness in't: Task demands in experimental linguistics

UserCarson Schütze, Department of Linguistics, UCLA.

HouseWine Room, King's College, Cambridge.

ClockThursday 04 September 2008, 12:15-13:15

Please see above for contact details for this list.

 

© 2006-2024 Talks.cam, University of Cambridge. Contact Us | Help and Documentation | Privacy and Publicity