COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
International Relations & History Working Group
Add to your list(s)
Send you e-mail reminders
Further detail
International Relations & History Working Group Recent years have witnessed a resurgence of interest in the historical study of international relations. International Relations scholars from different traditions have reconsidered the importance of thinking historically about the international system. At the same time, IR scholars have engaged in fruitful conversations with historians specializing in international or political thought. The dialogue between IR, History and legal history proved not only possible but often also desirable. The goal of our working group is to create a space for conversation in Cambridge. The working group is open to scholars working on historical international relations, legal history, history of international thought and those interested in the historical development of ideas and practices in the international realm from an interdisciplinary viewpoint. The working group meets 3 times per term. The line-up combines presentations by external speakers and pre-circulated papers by members of the group. A significant part of the meeting is dedicated to open discussion. The conveners Duncan Bell Or Rosenboim Jason Sharman Maja Spanu Ayse Zarakol If you have a question about this list, please contact: Maja Spanu. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 11 talks in the archive. Please see above for contact details for this list. |
Other listsEconomics and Computer Science Talks Centre of International Studies Lectures and Events Collaboration EventsOther talksClimate change, archaeology and tradition in an Alaskan Yup'ik Village Emissions and Chemistry of air pollution in London and Beijing: a tale of two cities. Making Smart Decisions in Systems Design: How to Engineer Decisions in a Connected World? Babraham Distinguished Lecture - Endoplasmic reticulum turnover via selective autophagy Sacred Mountains as Flood Refuge Sites in Northwest North America A continuum theory for the fractures in brittle and ductile solids |