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Queens' Graduate Symposium - Day 2Add to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact . This talk has been canceled/deleted Whether imperceptibly or overtly, power dynamics govern our lived experience of society. They guide everything from our earliest education to geopolitics, informing our lives through the patterns of language, music, and engineering. Power is active in our wider world and in academics, shaping interactions between communities, between pathogen and host, between teacher and class. We invite participants to engage with the varied manifestations of power dynamics in their personal areas of research, be it social science or natural science. Theoreticians and experimentalists from the college graduate community will join with external speakers at the Queens’ Graduate Symposium to discuss the role of these power relations in the formation of our world today and their influence on future societies. The first ever Queens’ Graduate Symposium will be taking place this June. This event will showcase a range of the exciting work being done by Queens’ graduate students in what will be a truly multidisciplinary symposium. There will also be talks from a variety of external speakers and three panel discussions on the Arts, International Development, and Technology. Follow the link to see the most up-to-date programme: http://goo.gl/forms/Ohcy95gYWC This talk is part of the Queens' Graduate Talks series. This talk is included in these lists:This talk is not included in any other list Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
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