COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Centre of Governance and Human Rights Events > CGHR Practitioner Series: Working in Human Rights, Peacebuilding, Humanitarian Aid and Development
CGHR Practitioner Series: Working in Human Rights, Peacebuilding, Humanitarian Aid and DevelopmentAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Gabriela Martinez. The Centre of Governance and Human Rights (CGHR) has launched a practitioner seminar series, partnering with speakers from key organisations to delve into the gritty realities of what working in fields like human rights and international development really involves. Speaker: David Whitty, Producer at BBC World Service Radio About the Lent 2014 series: The sphere of work known variously as the ‘Third Sector’, ‘Development and Humanitarian Aid’ or simply – doing good in tough places – is notoriously impenetrable, and frustratingly difficult to navigate for the uninitiated. For somebody hoping to pursue a career within this field, the range of agencies and institutions, initiatives and centres is at the very least bewildering. Most areas intersect, and organisations work with an array of crosscutting issues and contexts. Yet what at first glance can appear to be a morass of very similar organisations doing generally related things, is in fact often sharply delineated, with different sectors requiring surprisingly different competencies and operating under quite specific mandates. Working as an international human rights advocate would demand a different skill set and working environment from a project officer of a first phase emergency response – and both would have different routes to entry. Furthermore, a Master’s degree isn’t always the best option. Cambridge University educates and trains many of the best young minds in the country and provides a critical insight into the issues surrounding international politics, security, development and humanitarianism. But with little clarity around what is involved in working in this sector, attempting to translate this theoretical knowledge into a meaningful start to a career can be a minefield. With this in mind, the CGHR series will allow students to listen and speak to a selection of high-level experts working in these fields, and address key issues and questions. There will be four one-and-a-half hour seminars throughout Lent 2014, designed to equip students with an in-depth and critical look at what each area involves; the type of work carried out, contingent challenges and essential competencies. The first hour will introduce the speaker, chaired by a discussant from CGHR , and will open up to the audience in the second portion of the evening to provide the opportunity for students to engage with the topics discussed. The event will be followed by a drinks reception. This talk is part of the Centre of Governance and Human Rights Events series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsInterfacial Studies on a Charged Surface in Oil by Contact Angle Measurements Faculty of Education Research Students' Association (FERSA) Lunchtime Seminars 2014-2015 CU Palestine Society Special Lecture The Eddington Lectures The Cambridge GlobalistOther talksRetinal mechanisms of non-image-forming vision A cabinet of natural history: the long-lost Paston collection Giant response of weakly driven systems The Age of the Applied Economist: The Transformation of Economics Since the 1970s POSTPONED - Acoustics in the 'real world' - POSTPONED Localization estimates for hypoelliptic equations Discovering regulators of insulin output with flies and human islets: implications for diabetes and pancreas cancer TBC The role of the oculomotor system in visual attention and visual short-term memory The role of myosin VI in connexin 43 gap junction accretion Mathematical applications of little string theory Research frontiers and new therapeutic strategies in pancreatic cancer |