How Legislatures Discuss Violence: The Case of Nigeria
(Ir)regular states of migration: Contested sovereignties on Europe’s margins
How do state agents who guard the Greek and the European border experience the collapse of the border? Why are people committed to performing bureaucratic procedures they consider irregular and futile? When does the UNHCR “become” the state? What does it mean to “work for Europe?” This paper is concerned with how the lived experiences of people governing irregular migration help us understand broader processes regarding sovereign power and the state.
‘There are many roads to power – How to build a career in journalism’
Breaking the Privacy Barrier: Big Data Style Analytics Using Secure Computing
Today’s digital privacy concerns stem from how computers and networks are built. Security was an afterthought in the development of both, sacrificed to speed up the dissemination of the technology. As a result, copying is easy and sharing data gives no control to their owners. But we have caught up. Today, we can already build data sharing and linking systems that don’t see the data they are processing and give some control back to the data owners. Dan Bogdanov will be sharing stories about building and running such systems for evidence-based policymaking and fraud detection.
The UK in the World: Rise or Decline of an Independent Britain?
Greek to Me: A Memoir of Academic Life
Greek to Me: A Memoir of Academic Life is an engrossing tale of academic and political intrigue. An extensive personal archive enables the author to throw light on the secretive ways of academic institutions against the background of the study of the modern history of Greece.
Lecture Six: The Purposes of Office and Rule
Turning back to Republic I in dialogue with the Statesman, this lecture explores rule as a phenomenon that includes but is broader than political office alone (which is one role through which rule can be exercised). It shows Plato to have wrestled with both the promise and the danger of a perfect identification between a person and the role of ruler.
The Carlyle Lectures - Constitutions before Constitutionalism: Classical Greek Ideas of Office and Rule (Lecture Six)
*Lecture Six: The Purposes of Office and Rule*
Turning back to Republic I in dialogue with the Statesman, this lecture explores rule as a phenomenon that includes but is broader than political office alone (which is one role through which rule can be exercised). It shows Plato to have wrestled with both the promise and the danger of a perfect identification between a person and the role of ruler.
_The Carlyle Lectures are a lecture series co-sponsored by the Department of Politics and International Relations and the Faculty of History._
Turning back to Republic I in dialogue with the Statesman, this lecture explores rule as a phenomenon that includes but is broader than political office alone (which is one role through which rule can be exercised). It shows Plato to have wrestled with both the promise and the danger of a perfect identification between a person and the role of ruler.
_The Carlyle Lectures are a lecture series co-sponsored by the Department of Politics and International Relations and the Faculty of History._
My Enemy's Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet Invasion to the US Withdrawal
- Read more about My Enemy's Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet Invasion to the US Withdrawal
The archetype of ‘my enemy’s enemy is my friend’, India’s political and economic presence in Afghanistan is often viewed as a Machiavellian ploy aimed against Pakistan. The first of its kind, this book interrogates that simplistic yet powerful geopolitical narrative and asks what truly drives India’s Afghanistan policy.