Austerity's Histories - Austerity and Altered Life Courses
Dates: | 25 October 2023 |
Times: | 14:00 - 15:30 |
What is it: | Seminar |
Organiser: | School of Environment, Education and Development |
How much: | Free |
Who is it for: | University staff, External researchers, Adults, Alumni, Current University students, General public |
Speaker: | Michael Vine, Nadya Ali, Rosie Hampton, Amy Walker, Sander Van Larnen |
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Our fifth seminar in our Austerity and Altered Life-Courses series focuses on austerity’s histories. Research on austerity across the social sciences and humanities reminds us that contemporary austerity is rooted in longer term, embedded and ongoing legacies of political and economic change, including but not limited to neoliberalism, colonialism, globalization and post-industrialism. These historical moorings can be problematic when approached as nostalgic and gone-by, particularly as the realities of austerity cut so deeply and so unevenly. This session presents new research that accounts for the memories, reminders, landscapes, remains, and intergenerational traumas related to austerity, presently and prospectively. Our international panel will introduce their research on the histories of austerity, and how these space-times are relational and geographically embedded. We will also have time for small groups discussions.
Online event. Zoom access link: https://zoom.us/j/3077067005
To register interest, email soss-research-operations@manchester.ac.uk.
Speakers
Michael Vine
Role: Research Fellow
Organisation: Max Planck Institute, Germany
Nadya Ali
Role: Senior Policy & EDI Officer
Organisation: Citizen's Advice, UK
Rosie Hampton
Role: Researcher
Organisation: University of Glasgow, UK
Amy Walker
Role: Researcher
Organisation: Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany
Sander Van Larnen
Role: Assistant Professor in Urban poverty & inequality
Organisation: Groningen University, The Netherlands
Travel and Contact Information