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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
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DTSTART:20220327T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20220328T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20220328T133000
DTSTAMP:20260514T141903
CREATED:20220322T094409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220324T142743Z
UID:11199-1648468800-1648474200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:‘The Israeli Occupation of Palestine: Is International Law Closer to Power than to Justice?’
DESCRIPTION:The Irish Centre for Human Rights is pleased to invite you to the following talk: \n‘The Israeli Occupation of Palestine: Is International Law Closer to Power than to Justice?’ \nby \nProfessor Michael Lynk \nProfessor Michael Lynk is the current United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinians territories occupied since 1967\, a position he has held since 2016. He is Associate Professor of Law at Western University in London\, Ontario\, where he teaches labour law\, constitutional law and human rights law. Professor Lynk has written widely on labour law and human rights issues in Canada\, and he has also published articles on the application of international law to the Middle East conflict. He will shortly publish his final report as Special Rapporteur. \nThis is an in person event and attendees are asked to wear masks.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-israeli-occupation-of-palestine-is-international-law-closer-to-power-than-to-justice/
LOCATION:online & livestream in Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Prof.%20Shane%20Darcy":MAILTO:shane.darcy@nuigalway.ie
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20220328T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20220328T171500
DTSTAMP:20260514T141903
CREATED:20220315T144602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220406T150330Z
UID:11113-1648477800-1648487700@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Sources and Voices: Archives\, Writing\, and the Irish Diaspora
DESCRIPTION:NUI Galway Library and The Moore Institute: \nSources and Voices: Archives\, Writing\, and the Irish Diaspora \nA free online webinar – 28 March 2022 \n2.30pm – 5.15pm (NOTE: All times are GMT) \n\n \n\nThis webinar draws together academics\, archivists\, and researchers across a number of disciplines\, including History\, English\, Irish Language\, and related disciplines\, with a focus on recovering and exploring the connections\, voices\, and sources of the Irish-American diaspora. Through a number of recent publications and ongoing digital humanities projects\, a range of new histories\, as explored by the contributors\, have drawn on previously neglected or underknown archival sources\, providing new insights into the experience and representation of the Irish-American diaspora. This webinar will showcase recent research into these publications\, projects\, as well as of the sources and voices of the diaspora recovered in the process. \nSchedule\n2.30pm – Welcome and Introduction \nPanel One – 2.40pm \nBeth O’Leary Anish : Irish American Fiction in the Post-World War II Years: Representations of a Community in Transition. \nPatrick O’Mahoney: The Writings of Eoin Ua Cathail\, Gaelic Revivalist and American Frontiersman. \nMáire Nic an Bhaird: Douglas Hyde\, Ireland\, and the U.S.A. \nSophie Cooper (Queen’s University\, Belfast) Emerging from the Sidelines: Reconsidering “the” nineteenth-century Irish-American archive. \nChair – Barry Houlihan \nPanel Two: 4pm \nLetter Writing and the Diaspora – The Kerby Miller Archive at NUI Galway \nDaniel Carey (Moore Institute\, NUI Galway) \nKieran Hoare (NUI Galway Library) \nBreandán Mac Suibhne (Acadamh na hOllscolaiochta Gaeilge / NUI Galway) \nChair – Róisín Healy \n5.15pm Closing Remarks \nSpeaker Biographies\nPanel 1: \nDr Patrick Mahoney\, or Pádraig Fhia Ó Mathúna\, is a researcher on the Fionn Folklore Project at Harvard University and a visiting fellow in Irish Studies at Queen’s University Belfast. He is the editor and translator of Recovering an Irish Voice from the American Frontier: The Prose Writings of Eoin Ua Cathail (UNT Press)\, which is based on research carried out while a Fulbright scholar at NUI Galway Library Archives. \nDr Sophie Cooper is a lecturer in Liberal Arts at Queen’s University Belfast where she also researches histories of migration\, gender and religion\, focusing on Ireland and its diaspora. Sophie’s first monograph\, Forging Identites in the Irish World: Melbourne and Chicago\, c.1830-1922\, was recently published by Edinburgh University Press. Her publications also include articles in Social History and Women’s History Review where Sophie uses urban history and material culture approaches to explore the experiences of Irish women at home and abroad. \nDr Máire Nic an Bhaird is a lecturer in Irish Language and Literature and History of Education in the Froebel Department\, Maynooth University. Her areas of teaching and research include; the life and work of Douglas Hyde\, Censorship of Irish Language Literature (1920-1960)\, Children’s Literature in the Irish Language\, Education for the Science-Society nexus\, History of Education. Her teaching is grounded in a pedagogy of community engaged learning and she has won teaching bursaries and awards for the creation of teaching materials and programmes connected with MU modules that she coordinates. Máire is leading the university’s central role in the UCD-led €2 million Horizon Europe EdBioEc project. This multi-actor project comprises a pan-European consortium of 15 partners from across education\, science and technology and the wider society. \nDr Beth O’Leary Anish\, Ph.D. is Professor of English at the Community College of Rhode Island. Her book Irish American Fiction from World War II to JFK: Anxiety\, Assimilation\, and Activism was published by Palgrave MacMillan in 2021. She successfully defended her dissertation Writing Irish America: Communal Memory and the Narrative of Nation in Diaspora at the University of Rhode Island in 2017. She has also been published in the New Hibernia Review. Beth is active in the American Conference for Irish Studies\, for which she is currently president of the New England region. \nPanel 2 \nProfessor Daniel Carey\, MRIA\, is Director of the Moore Institute for the Humanities and Social Studies at NUI Galway and Professor of English in the School of English and Creative Arts. He is a Vice-President of the Royal Irish Academy and is current acting Director of the Irish Research Council. He was also Chair of the Irish Humanities Alliance 2014-16. \nKieran Hoare is an archivist at NUI Galway Library. \nAn tOllamh Breandán Mac Suibhne is a historian of society and culture in modern Ireland (PhD\, Carnegie Mellon\, 1999). His award-winning book The End of Outrage: Post-Famine Adjustment in Rural Ireland (Oxford University Press) was awarded Irish Times Irish Non-Fiction Book of the Year in 2017. His other publications include two major annotated editions\, viz. John Gamble’s Society and Manners in Early Nineteenth-Century Ireland (Field Day\, 2011) and\, with David Dickson\, Hugh Dorian’s The Outer Edge of Ulster: A Memoir of Social Life in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Donegal (2000\, 20001). Mac Suibhne is currently at work on two book projects\, including a study of Brian Friel’s mother’s people in south-west Donegal and the other concerns what the Irish poor did to and for each other “in the time of the Famine”. Mac Suibhne is also working to develop an online database that will facilitate access to Kerby A. Miller’s vast collection of transcripts of Irish emigrant letters. \nRegistration\n\nTo attend this event\, please register via Eventbrite at: Sources and Voices: Archives\, Writing\, and the Irish Diaspora Tickets\, Mon 28 Mar 2022 at 14:30 | Eventbrite \n\n\nEvent Recording
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/sources-and-voices-archives-writing-and-the-irish-diaspora/
LOCATION:Seomra an Droichid\, Institiúid de Móra agus ar Zoom
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