Macedonian, a native language in Northern Greece was banned, and persecuted by the Greek state, yet kept it’s memory in songs “without words.” In order to be able to celebrate and play music in fairs, local musicians stopped singing, and instead focused on solely...
CCT Annual Lecture 2024_poster_updateDownload The Centre for Critical Thought at the University of Kent is pleased to announce its Annual Lecture, to be held on Tuesday 26 November at 6pm. This event is open to all and no registration is required. Professor Costas...
‘The State of Tuvalu (…) shall remain in perpetuity in the future, notwithstanding the impacts of climate change (…) resulting in loss to the physical territory of Tuvalu.’ (2023 constitution of Tuvalu) Tuvalu’s constitutional commitment to Sovereignty in the face of...
Guest edited by Carys Hughes (University of East London, U.K.) and Ben Manski (George Mason University, U.S.). This Special Collection will advance an emergent field of scholarly research, which is coalescing around the concept of “revolutionary constitutionalism”,...
SAI: Social Theory Symposium: UCC, Cork, April 25-26th 2025 Pluralism, fragmentation and relativism are well established features of modernity. Arguably, the rise of social media, culture wars and a segmented public sphere in recent years have exacerbated these...
The Birkbeck Centre for Law and the Humanities invites you to a book launch and discussion with Serene Richards, Biopolitics as a System of Thought (Bloomsbury, 2024), and Ian Alan Paul, The Reticular Society (PM Press, 2025). How is social life organised under...