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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
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TZID:Europe/Dublin
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DTSTART:20190331T010000
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DTSTART:20191027T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190603
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190524T121947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190524T121947Z
UID:7619-1559347200-1559519999@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:2019 Sophia Network Meeting
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n  \nThe Sophia Network Meeting will take place in Galway at the National University of Ireland\, Galway (NUIG) on the 1st and 2nd of June\, and as a bonus\, the NUIG invites delegates to a P4C Symposium on the 31st of May. The SOPHIA Network Meeting this year is being co-hosted by Philosophy\, NUI Galway Philosophical Dialogue Project – NUI Galway\, Little Rainbow Academy Ireland and Curo. \nIf you would like to join us\, please register here  \nVenue and Location \nThe 2019 Network meeting will take place in conference rooms at the National University of Ireland\, Galway (NUIG)\, University Road\, Galway\, Ireland. \n \nPreliminary Programme \nFriday 31st May: P4C Symposium at NUIG – Academic papers over two sessions. Followed by and Evening Open Public Panel: ‘What is Education for? The Role of Philosophy in Contemporary Ireland’. \nSaturday 1st June: Day 1 of Sophia network meeting\, workshops and papers (Lunch and refreshments provided). Followed by an optional joint dinner for delegates in the evening (booked by hosts\, delegates pay their own meals & drinks) at Massimo Gastro Pub\, 10 William Street. \nSunday 2nd June: Day 2 of Sophia Network meeting\, workshops and papers (lunch and refreshments provided). \nTo see the timetable below more clearly\, or to download and store it\, please click on the picture.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/2019-sophia-network-meeting/
LOCATION:Seminar Rooms G010 and G011 Hardiman Reserach Building\, Ireland
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T163000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190531T130758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190531T130758Z
UID:7661-1559813400-1559838600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Whitaker PhD Forum 2019
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n \n  \nThe Whitaker Institute for Innovation and Societal Change on Thursday\, 6th June will host its fourth annual PhD Forum in the Hardiman Research Building at NUI Galway. \nThe Forum is a one-day event for PhD students\, which aims to provide students with a day to interact and network with each other\, to gain helpful advice about the PhD process\, and to celebrate their research.\nThe event is suited to students at all stages of their PhD studies. Participants will have an opportunity to meet and interact with other PhD students\, to gain advice from PhD supervisors and other University colleagues\, to share their PhD experiences\, and to get suggestions and ideas to support their research. \nThis is a full day event. In the morning\, PhD students will receive coaching in managing their personal PhD experience. An additional session will feature advice on research careers and preparing a development plan. In the afternoon\, there will be a session on PhD regulations and the PhD Viva. There will also be a special session on the introduction to research data management. \nThe day will also include a poster display of PhD research in the Hardiman Foyer. \nThe draft agenda for the day is available here. \nThis is a free event and open to all PhD students. Coffee and lunch will be provided. Students attending will also receive a pack with an updated and extremely helpful Viva guide\, as well as other resources. \nRegistration is essential\, as places are limited. Please register here by Thursday 30th May to ensure your place on the day. \n 
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/whitaker-phd-forum-2019/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Angela%20Sice":MAILTO:angela.sice@nuigalway.ie
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T130000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190531T150631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190531T150631Z
UID:7664-1559826000-1559826000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Spotlight on Research Lecture Series-'Why Consent? Why Multidiscliplinary? Why Now?:  Making the Case for the Active Consent Programme’s  Multi-Sectoral Plan for 2019-2023'
DESCRIPTION:  \nDr Charlotte McIvor (Drama and Theatre Studies)\, Dr. Pádraig Mac Neela\,  \nDr Siobhán O’Higgins &  Kate Dawson (School of Psychology) \n  \nAbstract \nThis talk theorises the signature approach of the Active Consent programme team comprised of researchers from Psychology\, Health Promotion\, and Drama and Theatre Studies in relationship to the current policy and educational landscape around sexual health education and assault prevention in Ireland and internationally. Working together since 2014\, this team designs evidence-informed tools (based on survey and qualitative data)\, including workshops and creative arts interventions\, which in turn facilitate dialogue regarding consent and sexual health. The team’s embrace of consent as an active\, positive educational paradigm – inclusive of all genders\, all relationships and all sexualities – is intended to empower young people as active agents in the negotiation of their sexual relationships. Now funded between 2019-2023 by the Lifes2good Foundation with support from the National University of Ireland\, Galway\, the Active Consent programme has set the objective of unifying third-level\, secondary school and sporting organisations’ provision of consent-focused sexual health education.  This talk will reflect on the team’s learning since 2014 in partnership with young people\, trends in third-level Irish sexual health data that they have observed over this period\, and why they believe that a multi-disciplinary approach\, which considers interdependent educational and community sectors\, is essential for sustainable change in social and personal attitudes towards consent within sexual relationships in a post-#MeToo era. The team will describe the importance of sexual consent as a window on young people’s openness in talking about sensitive topics\, and the scope to expand this conversation into mental health and the use of alcohol and drugs. \nDr Pádraig MacNeela leads the SMART Consent project and Active Consent programme. He is a senior lecturer at the School of Psychology\, NUI Galway\, where he has worked since 2004. He works mainly on youth research\, especially in relation to sexual health\, mental health\, and alcohol use\, and on community research projects. He began working on sexual health initiatives following a project with RCNI in 2013 and served on the board of management of Galway Rape Crisis Centre 2014-18. He is co-investigator on the multidisciplinary YOULead doctoral training scheme on youth mental health 2018-2022 and the NUI Galway Resilience Project / Student Information Project – both of which demonstrate the importance of expanding the conversation about sexual health into other areas of well-being in young people’s lives. \nDr Charlotte McIvor is a Lecturer in Drama and Theatre Studies at NUI Galway in the O’Donoghue Centre for Drama\, Theatre and Performance. She is the author of the book Migration and Performance in Contemporary Ireland: Towards A New Interculturalism\, and multiple articles and edited collections focused on contemporary performance\, identity\, and interculturalism. Other creative projects on sexual consent include an original devised play 100 Shades of Grey co-created with NUI Galway students and co-direction of Lucy’s House Party (with Mick Ruane) for the Manuela Riedo Foundation’s Manuela Programme secondary school education project on sexual consent. \nDr Siobhán O’Higgins is research fellow on the Active and SMART Consent programme\,  School of Psychology. A sexologist and sexual health promoter\, Siobhán has worked\, since 1990\, developing and evaluating programmes on sexuality and relationships – for third level students\, primary and secondary pupils\, parents\, prisoners and those with intellectual disabilities. Her PhD in 2011\, explored secondary school children’s perceptions on what young people need to know and how they would like to be taught about sexuality and relationships and teachers’ ideas on how to meet those needs. The insights and knowledge gained during her PhD were translated into practice in the WISER programme\, presently delivered in over 50 schools in the West of Ireland. She developed the SMART Consent workshop and train the trainer programme with Dr MacNeela to raise awareness and challenge existing worrying social norms about how to be a sexually active young person. \nKate Dawson is currently finishing her PhD research in the School of Psychology on Pornography. Since completing her Masters in Health Promotion she has been delivering workshops in schools as a sexuality and relationship educator on the WISER programme and co-created the website for that intervention. \n 
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/spotlight-on-research-lecture-series-why-consent-why-multidiscliplinary-why-now-making-the-case-for-the-active-consent-programmes-multi-sectoral-plan-for-2019-2023/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building\, Ireland
ORGANIZER;CN="Dr%20Se%C3%A1n%20Crosson":MAILTO:sean.crosson@universityofgalway.ie
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190606T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190530T112558Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190530T112558Z
UID:7646-1559836800-1559836800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:‘The Party’s Splendor Fell to the Floor’: Suicide and Failure in Bowen and Woolf
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \nTalk by Moore Visiting Fellow Bridget English \nBio:  \nDr. Bridget English is a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She received her PhD in English from Maynooth University in Ireland\, where she also lectured. She is a specialist in modern and contemporary Irish literature and culture\, with particular research interests in theories of the novel\, modernism\, and the medical humanities. She is the author of Laying Out the Bones: Death and Dying in the Modern Irish Novel (Syracuse U.P. 2017). Additional publications include book chapters on John McGahern\, Anne Enright\, and a forthcoming chapter on Irish crime fiction. She is currently working on a book project titled\, “Self-Destructive Modernisms: Suicide\, Medicine\, and Failure in the Modernist Novel.”
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-partys-splendor-fell-to-the-floor-suicide-and-failure-in-bowen-and-woolf/
LOCATION:Room 1001\, the Bridge\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Dr.%20John%20Kenny":MAILTO:john.kenny@nuigalway.ie
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190607
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190609
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190524T140331Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190524T140331Z
UID:7625-1559865600-1560038399@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Third Galway Conference of Irish Studies 2019  “What is it to dwell?”: Home(s) in Irish Studies
DESCRIPTION:  \nWe are delighted to host the Third Galway Conference of Irish Studies on the theme of home(s) in Irish Studies and extend a warm welcome to the Moore Institute community! \nDr. Sindy Joyce will give our first plenary lecture\, ‘Mincéirí Cena: Travellers and Mobile Spaces\, Home as a Place\, Space and Mobility’\, on Friday 7 June at 17.15 in Room G010. \nJoin us in Charlie Byrne’s on Saturday at 8 June at 18.30 for our second plenary with Melatu Uche Okorie\, Oein de Bhairduin & Skein Press. \nFor our full schedule see: https://gcis2019.wordpress.com.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/third-galway-conference-of-irish-studies-2019-what-is-it-to-dwell-homes-in-irish-studies/
LOCATION:G010 and Room 1001\,The Bridge Room \, The Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Siobhra%20Aiken":MAILTO:siobhraa@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190610T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190614T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190404T113910Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190404T132254Z
UID:7289-1560157200-1560531600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Summer School In Visual Analytics\, 2019
DESCRIPTION:Organised by the Knowledge Discovery Unit (KDU) at the Insight Centre for Data Analytics\, the Moore Institute and the Lero Software Research Centre\, NUI Galway. \nRunning from the 10th – 14th of June at the Insight Centre for Data Analytics\, NUI Galway\, Ireland\, the KDU Visual Analytics Summer School will provide students\, researchers\, academics and industry professionals with an opportunity to come together to learn\, share experiences and to develop new cross-disciplinary partnerships. Over the course of this 5 day-long summer school participants will: \n\nlearn from key researchers in the field\,\ntake part in hands-on sessions to deepen these learnings\, and\nwork together on case-study oriented mini-projects.\n\nThe target audiences include postgraduate students and early career researchers in the fields of data analysis\, visualisation\, digital humanities\, Human Computer Interaction (HCI)\, business and IT. This diverse group of disciplines is important\, as it will enable interdisciplinary approaches to both the mini-projects within the workshop\, and to future collaborative research projects. We are also keen to include participants drawn from local industry and the civil service\, especially those whose role includes data-led decision-making. \nRegistration & further information\nFees: €250 early bird registration (before May 1st) / €350 regular \nOnline registration now open at http://vass.datascienceinstitute.ie/registration/ \nFor further information please contact the organisers at vass@insight-centre.org or visit vass.datascienceinstitute.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/summer-school-in-visual-analytics-2019/
LOCATION:Insight Centre for Data Analytics\, IDA Business Park\, Lower Dangan\, Galway\, Ireland
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://mooreinstitute.ie/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/vass-promo-image.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190612T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190612T163000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190607T101631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190607T101631Z
UID:7671-1560357000-1560357000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:‘Thinking Through the Skin: Touching Northern Irish Short Fiction’
DESCRIPTION:  \nTalk by Moore Visiting Fellow Caroline Magennis \n‘This talk will offer an overview of the depiction of Northern Irish skin in recent short story collections\, particularly Bernie McGill’s Sleepwalkers (2013) and \nRoisin O’Donnell’s Wild Quiet (2016). Drawing on work by Laura Marks\, Abbie Garrington\, Virginia Woolf\, Sara Ahmed and others\, this paper seeks to examine \nhow we might engage with this new representation of the body and the potential of the haptic to be a mode of both self-knowledge and transmission. In these \nshort stories\, moments of connection through touch are lingered on and memories of touch past are pivotal. White Northern Irish skin is not valorised or \ncelebrated\, but often cast as something fragile and permeable that absorbs the toxic quality of the atmosphere. Scars are everywhere\, and language is a fleshy \nmechanism involving lips\, tongues and teeth. This talk will argue that recent short stories continue to move the Northern Irish body away from its \nrepresentational dead end as over-deterministic symbol of the conflict. Rather than just the body in pain\, skin is revealed to be a complex medium that yields
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/thinking-through-the-skin-touching-northern-irish-short-fiction/
LOCATION:Room 1001\, the Bridge\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Caroline%20Magennis":MAILTO:C.Magennis@salford.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190613T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190613T153000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190607T131423Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190607T132936Z
UID:7678-1560421800-1560439800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Developing Enabling Policies for Digital and Open Teaching and Learning
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nA participatory workshop for all engaged in institutional policy development with respect to digital and open teaching and learning. \n\n\n\n\nThis workshop is open to all in Irish higher education\, particularly those engaged in institutional policy development with respect to digital and open teaching and learning. \nWorkshop participants will have the opportunity to review and discuss various digital/open policies and policymaking approaches and consider approaches that are relevant to their own contexts. The workshop will also share policy resources\, including the National Forum’s Guide to Developing Enabling Policies for Digital Teaching and Learning. Overall\, the focus will be on policymaking approaches that are effective\, inclusive and responsive across all aspects: policy elements\, core processes and partners\, consideration of risks and beneﬁts\, policy implementation and review. \nThe workshop will be facilitated by Dr. Catherine Cronin (Strategic Education Developer\, National Forum) and guest speakers will include Dr. Tony Murphy (Head \, Quality Enhancement and Innovation in Teaching and Learning\, Dublin Business School)\, Dr. Fiona Chambers (Head\, School of Education\, University College Cork)\, Dave Sammon (Professor\, Information Systems)\, and John Cox (University Librarian\, National University of Ireland Galway). \nTo Register please click Here \nWorkshop programme: \n10:30 Arrival and Coffee/tea/fruit/pastries \n11:00 Introduction and welcome \n11:15 Presentation and discussion: Developing an Open Access policy – John Cox (NUIG) \n11:50 Exploration of National Forum guide: Developing enabling policies for digital teaching and learning and related resources – Tony Murphy (DBS) and Catherine Cronin (National Forum) \n12:20 Presentation and discussion: Developing a Lecture Recording policy – Tony Murphy (DBS) \n13:00 Lunch \n13:30 Presentation and discussion: Using design thinking to develop and consolidate university-wide policies – Fiona Chambers and Dave Sammon (UCC) \n14:10 Workshop activity: Understanding policy challenges (common and context-specific)\, marshalling resources and support\, charting steps forward\, and sharing progress \n15:20 Wrap-up and close \nThis workshop supports the strategic aims of the National Forum in 2019-21 to inform and support the development of national and institutional policies related to teaching and learning in an open digital world. The workshop will build on resources already created by the National Forum\, in particular the Guide to Developing Enabling Policies for Digital Teaching and Learning.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/developing-enabling-policies-for-digital-and-open-teaching-and-learning/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Ann%20Cullinane":MAILTO:ann.cullinane@nuigalway.ie
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190617T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190617T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190502T081213Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190502T081213Z
UID:7433-1560778200-1560790800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Feminist Economics\, Irish Finance\, and the Commons
DESCRIPTION:This workshop\, led by Conor McCabe\, author of Money (Sireacht): Longings for Another Ireland (2018)\, will look at writers such as Silvia Federici\, Maria Mies\, Mariarosa Dalla Costa\, Nancy Fraser\, and Selma James\, and the application of their ideas and analysis to an Irish context in terms of combating the new enclosures of financialisation in housing\, health\, education\, transport and energy. It will explore the institutional economic class interests that exist in Ireland\, and alternatives to same in the spheres of paid labour and social reproduction. \nCapitalism does not willingly pay for the reproduction of the labour it exploits. Social democracy forced it to somewhat contribute to this reproduction through legislation and general taxation\, but from the 1970s onwards these very supports have been under profound attack by capitalism\, in particular finance capital. The slashing of corporation and capital taxes is the slashing of capital’s contribution to the social reproduction of human labour. Austerity as the new normal is a continuation of this process – one where ‘class struggle includes struggle over social reproduction: for universal health care and free education\, for environmental justice and access to clean energy\, and for housing and public transportation. \nThe need for capitalism to enclose social reproduction for profit-seeking purposes makes the issue one that contains the potential for a genuine counter-attack against it. This workshop will explore this potential in terms of activist strategies and organisation. \nCooperation among movements for societal change is nothing new; but the purpose of that cooperation\, and its power\, appears to have been forgotten. The way capitalism seeks profit and maintains power has an effect on the shape of our resistance to it. The ideas of social movement unionism and feminist economics serve to shine a light on ways of thinking and organisation that will complement the actions by those who wish to transform capitalism. \nDr. Conor McCabe is a research associate with UCD Equality Studies Centre.. He has written extensively on Irish finance and is involved in activist education\, working with political\, trade union\, and community groups.  \n 
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/feminist-economics-irish-finance-and-the-commons/
LOCATION:Room 1001\, the Bridge\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Charlotte%20Amrouche":MAILTO:charlotteamrouche@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190618T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190618T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190531T112408Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190531T112408Z
UID:7652-1560866400-1560877200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:NUIG Classics book launch-Amrae Coluimb Chille: a critical edition by Jacopo Bisagni
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n  \nJacopo Bisagni\, Amrae Coluimb Chille: a critical edition\, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (Early Irish Text Series\, vol. I)\, Dublin 2019. Pp. xvi + 524. €35\nhttps://books.dias.ie/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=9_41&products_id=398 \nAmrae Coluimb Chille is a complex and fascinating Old Irish text. A unique tour de force of linguistic inventiveness\, the Amrae laments the death of Colum Cille and praises equally his monastic perfection and his intellectual achievements\, his asceticism and his pastoral leadership\, his rejection of the secular world and his descent from a noble lineage. \nThis book provides the first ever complete critical edition of Amrae Coluimb Chille. The introduction offers a full study of the text’s manuscript transmission\, language and style\, as well as a discussion of its historical context. The Old Irish text is accompanied by a new English translation and is followed by a detailed commentary\, a glossary and several appendices.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/nuig-classics-book-launch-amrae-coluimb-chille-a-critical-edition-by-jacopo-bisagni/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Jacopo%20Bisagni":MAILTO:jacopo.bisagni@nuigalway.ie
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190622
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190614T090858Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190614T090858Z
UID:7688-1560902400-1561161599@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:IMA 7th World Congress
DESCRIPTION:Event Description\n\n\n\n\nIntroduction \nThe 7th World Congress of the International Microsimulation Association will be hosted by the National University of Ireland\, Galway from Wednesday\, June 19 through Friday\, June 21\, 2019. We encourage submissions in the fields (broadly defined) of microsimulation\, agent based modelling and computational methods. \nPlenary Speakers (Proposed): \n\nHerwig Immervoll\, OECD\nDeborah Schofield\, Director of GenIMPACT: Centre for Economic Impacts of Genomic Medicine) at Macquarie University\, Sydney\nAndreas Peichl\, Director of @ifo_Institut’s Center for Macroeconomics & Surveys\, Professor of Economics @LMU_Muenchen\nEveline Van Leeuwen\, Wageningen University\, Netherlands\n\n\n\nFor registration and more info please click here
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/ima-7th-world-congress/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G010\, G011 and Room 1001 “The Bridge” in the Hardiman Research Institute
ORGANIZER;CN="Cathal%20O%E2%80%99Donoghue":MAILTO:cathal.odonoghue@nuigalway.ie
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190627T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190627T190000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190415T142700Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190620T114931Z
UID:7357-1561642200-1561662000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Methodology Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Sibéal Workshop Series & Feminist/Queer Discussion Space NUIG present: \nUntangling Methodologies: thinking with feminist and queer methods  \n \n  \nKeynote Speaker: Professor Kath Browne\, Maynooth University \n At this workshop we aim to think through concepts that emerge from feminist and queer research methodologies in order to explore ideas of collaging\, layering and mixing practices. Through the imagery of following traces or unraveling the thread (Haraway) that offers the potential to capture the multiple meanings of research sites and provide a more nuanced and careful engagement with method. If methodology is the link between our ontological and epistemological ideas and the method\, the doing (Browne and Nash\, Queer Methodologies\, 2010)\, then it is no surprise that it becomes a stumbling block when we as researchers are faced with the oftentimes sharp intersection between our ideas and practice. It is not the how of conducting methods\, it’s the how of the approach to the methods which we want to explore at this day long workshop. \nWe invite participants to explore questions around methodologies in the field\, the insider/outsider dichotomy\, taking notice of ethics and vulnerabilities\, storytelling as methodological approach\, mixing methods and ideas of power/positions – hoping to gain insights at the intersection between methodology and practice. \nThis half day workshop invites participants to explore these ideas and others in an inclusive\, open setting. We invite paper proposals on methodological approaches which are informed by feminist/queer approaches. We also invite proposals for workshops or practice based presentations. \nPlease send you proposal to methodologies.NUIG@gmail.com by Friday April 26th 2019. \nThis event is free of charge but registration is essential\, please email us to register. Light refreshments will be provided. We do not have funding for the travel costs of attendees.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/methodology-workshop/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building
ORGANIZER;CN="Methodologies":MAILTO:methodologies.NUIG@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20190627T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20191115T000000
DTSTAMP:20260517T011325
CREATED:20190621T135436Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191108T104353Z
UID:7736-1561649400-1573776000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Exhibition- Laval Nugent - Warrior and Art Collector
DESCRIPTION:This exhibition developed by the Archaeological Museum in Zagreb and the Embassy of the Republic of Croatia celebrates the life and legacy of Irishman\, Count Laval Nugent of Westmeath.  Laval Nugent was Irish by birth\, a field marshal in the Austrian Army\, a negotiator during the Napoleonic Wars\, a Croatian national hero and a passionate art collector. \nThis exhibition is part of a programme of events highlighting the links between the cities of Galway\, Ireland and Rijeka\, Croatia – both European Capitals of Culture in 2020. \n 
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/exhibition-laval-nugent-warrior-and-art-collector/
LOCATION:Foyer the Hardiman Research Building\, Ireland
ORGANIZER;CN="Liz%20McConnell":MAILTO:liz.mcconnell@nuigalway.ie
END:VEVENT
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