Women and Ukraine's Economies of War and Peace (Fulbright Seminar Series 2024)

UPCOMING EVENT | 30 April 2024 17:00 - 30 April 2024 18:30

Register Here
30 April 2024 17:0030 April 2024 18:30 Women and Ukraine's Economies of War and Peace (Fulbright Seminar Series 2024)
Mary Hyde Eccles Room

The Fulbright Seminar Series for 2024 will be on the topic of 'Feminist Political Economy of War and Peace'.

We are delighted to welcome Fulbright Visiting Fellow Dr Aida A. Hozić, who will be joined by a selection of guest speakers over six seminars to explore feminist political economy of conflict and post-conflict recovery. The series will highlight two aspects of war that often go unrecognised by scholars, addressing a range of contemporary and historical conflicts and the significance of violence to the global political economy and its effects on gendered hierarchies.

Full details of the series can be found here.

1: Women and Ukraine's Economies of War and Peace

Speaker: Dr. Jenny Mathers, Aberystwyth University

Discussant: Dr. Marnie Howlett, DPIR & OSGA, Nuffield & St. Anthony’s College

The seminar will be held on Tuesday 30th April at 5pm in the Mary Hyde Eccles Room (Pembroke College) and followed by a drinks reception. The seminars are open to all.

Since 1999, Pembroke College has been hosting a visiting scholar each year as part of the Fulbright programme. This Trinity Term we are delighted to welcome Fulbright Visiting Fellow Dr Aida A. Hozić, Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Florida.

This series of talks is situated within feminist political economy of conflict and post-conflict recovery, highlighting two aspects of war that are not always sufficiently recognized by scholars of international relations and international security. First, feminist political economists emphasize continuums and circuits of violence, thus questioning the usual dichotomies of war and peace, economy and security, domestic and international, public and private. Second, feminist scholars stress enduring and transformative aspects of wars, analyzing ways in which wars make and remake men, women, sexualities, and gender relations more broadly. Addressing a range of contemporary and historical conflicts and daily struggles, the talks will demonstrate how violence remains integral to the global political economy, with lasting effects on gendered hierarchies which often extend far beyond immediate war zones.

Women and Ukraine's Economies of War and Peace (Fulbright Seminar Series 2024)

UPCOMING EVENT | 30 April 2024 17:00 - 30 April 2024 18:30

Register Here

The Fulbright Seminar Series for 2024 will be on the topic of 'Feminist Political Economy of War and Peace'.

We are delighted to welcome Fulbright Visiting Fellow Dr Aida A. Hozić, who will be joined by a selection of guest speakers over six seminars to explore feminist political economy of conflict and post-conflict recovery. The series will highlight two aspects of war that often go unrecognised by scholars, addressing a range of contemporary and historical conflicts and the significance of violence to the global political economy and its effects on gendered hierarchies.

Full details of the series can be found here.

1: Women and Ukraine's Economies of War and Peace

Speaker: Dr. Jenny Mathers, Aberystwyth University

Discussant: Dr. Marnie Howlett, DPIR & OSGA, Nuffield & St. Anthony’s College

The seminar will be held on Tuesday 30th April at 5pm in the Mary Hyde Eccles Room (Pembroke College) and followed by a drinks reception. The seminars are open to all.

Since 1999, Pembroke College has been hosting a visiting scholar each year as part of the Fulbright programme. This Trinity Term we are delighted to welcome Fulbright Visiting Fellow Dr Aida A. Hozić, Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Florida.

This series of talks is situated within feminist political economy of conflict and post-conflict recovery, highlighting two aspects of war that are not always sufficiently recognized by scholars of international relations and international security. First, feminist political economists emphasize continuums and circuits of violence, thus questioning the usual dichotomies of war and peace, economy and security, domestic and international, public and private. Second, feminist scholars stress enduring and transformative aspects of wars, analyzing ways in which wars make and remake men, women, sexualities, and gender relations more broadly. Addressing a range of contemporary and historical conflicts and daily struggles, the talks will demonstrate how violence remains integral to the global political economy, with lasting effects on gendered hierarchies which often extend far beyond immediate war zones.