About Me

Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom
Co-directors: Prof Gareth Williams, Dr Bob Smith, Prof Kevin Morgan, Dr Gabrielle Ivinson and Dr Gill Bristow - Research centre managers: Dr Dean Stroud (stroudda1@cf.ac.uk) and Dr Rebecca Edwards (edwardsrs1@cf.ac.uk) - 029 2087 6412 - Glamorgan Building, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff, Wales, CF10 3WA

Friday 11 January 2008

The Antipode Graduate Student Scholarship 2008-2009

The Antipode Graduate Student Scholarship 2008-2009

Supporting a new generation of radical geographers...

Graduate students in radical geography are invited to apply for this year-long
award of US$2,000 and a complimentary three year subscription to Antipode.
These funds are intended to provide resources to attend an international
conference and cover additional research expenses.

The successful applicant will be a current doctoral student working in any field
of radical geographical scholarship. Applications are especially encouraged
from the developing world and/or from those traditionally marginalised in the
academy.

The competition runs every year and is announced in issues five and one of
Antipode. The closing date for the 2008-2009 scholarship applications is 31
March 2008.

Application forms are available from
http://www.antipode-online.net/scholarship-info.asp or by mail from Andrew
Kent, School of Environment and Development, Arthur Lewis Building, University
of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. A decision will be made by
the Antipode editorial board in April and all applicants will be notified of
the result in May.

Many thanks,

Andrew

Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography
http://www.antipode-online.net/

New Lunchtime Seminar Series for 2008: Social Political Identities and Tackling Workplace Discrimination

*New Lunchtime Seminar Series for 2008: Social Political Identities and Tackling Workplace Discrimination*

A very happy new year to you and best wishes for the year ahead.

I’d like to invite you to our new lunchtime seminar series (see list below). This new series will bring together a range of activists and academics, to explore experiences of work-related discrimination and corresponding categories of mobilisation. Keeping in step with our close ties with the labour movement, each session will also raise issues for trade unionists in Britain, as they attempt to organise marginalised workers and tackle inequalities.

We warmly welcome you all to come and listen to the views and theories of our prominent and diverse range of speakers. Please join us in debating contemporary issues of social justice on the first Wednesday of every month from 12.45 to 2pm over a sandwich lunch. These public seminars are open to all. However, since we will be providing a sandwich lunch, we would be grateful if you could inform us of your intention to attend by emailing Max Watson at in advance of each session.

The lunchtime series kicks off at 12.45pm on Wednesday 6th February 2008 with Rahila Gupta talking about her new book Enslaved and articulating an argument for the abolition of all immigration controls.

The details for this first seminar in our series is as follows (others are listed below):

Date: Wednesday 6th February 2008
Time: Starting 12.45pm ending 2pm

Venue: London Metropolitan University, The Boardroom (JS1-41), 31 Jewry Street, London EC3N 2EY

The Talk: Modern Day Slavery
Campaigner and journalist, Rahila Gupta will talk about her new book 'Enslaved', an important insight into modern day slavery. Britain is once again home to hundreds of slaves – they reach our shores via unimaginably perilous crossings, are locked into hideous, back-breaking working lives, and remain hidden to the rest of us. Very few escape to talk about their appalling incarceration. Meet five who did here in this compelling, revealing book. In her book, Rahila tells the horrifying stories of people who have been trafficked, smuggled or duped into the UK, to find themselves stripped of their passports and money, locked in cramped rooms, shackled involuntarily to work as domestic servants, brothel workers, or construction workers, beaten, raped and psychologically abused, and who, if they seek their freedom, are threatened with unending violence. Rahila places these testimonies within a well-argued call to abolish all immigration controls.

Some reviews of Enslaved:
Tony Benn:
Rahila Gupta's book Enslaved which deals with modern slavery is very timely since it is coming out in the year when we are celebrating the bi-centenary of Wilberforce's Bill to abolish the slave trade. The example she gives should remind us all that the struggle for human rights has to be fought in every generation

Helena Kennedy:
This is one of the most shocking books you will read about contemporary Britain; that human beings should be treated with such degradation and cruelty is a disgrace we should find unbearable. I hope the author's passion ignites a new anti-slavery campaign. Sign me up

About the speaker:
Rahila Gupta is a campaigner and journalist. She has written radio drama and is the editor of From Homebreakers to Jailbreakers: Southall Black Sisters and co-author of Circle of Light, now released as a film called Provoked which she co-scripted. She is also a long-standing member of the Black feminist organisation, Southall Black Sisters.

The list of subsequent sessions is as follows. Please note that the timing and venue for all the seminars is as above.

Wednesday 5th March 2008: New Challenges in the Fight Against Racism
Speaker: Arun Kundnani is deputy editor of the journal Race & Class

Wednesday 2nd April 2008: Locating Migrant Workers in Debates about Racism
Speakers: Don Flynn is Director of the Migrant Rights Network, Wilf Sullivan is the Race Equality Officer at the TUC

Wednesday 7th May 2008: Belonging and the Politics of Belonging
Speaker: Professor Nira Yuval Davis is the Graduate Course Director in Gender, Sexualities and Ethnic Studies at the University of East London

Wednesday 4th June 2008: Leadership and Trade Union Militancy
Speaker: Dr. Ralph Darlington is a senior lecturer in Industrial Relations at Salford University

Wednesday 2nd July & Wednesday 6th August 2008: Summer recess

Wednesday 3rd September 2008: Multiple Discrimination - theory and method
Speakers: Dr Sian Moore is a Principle Research Fellow at Working Lives Research Institute
Sukhwant Dhaliwal is currently studying for a Phd in Sociology at Goldsmiths College, University of London

Wednesday 1st October 2008: Sexuality in the workplace: the experience of lesbian, gay and bisexual workers and employer and trade union responses
Speaker: Tessa Wright works part-time at Working Lives Research Institute and is undertaking a PhD on the intersection of gender and sexuality in non-traditionally female work.

Wednesday 5th November 2008: Trafficking, Forced Labour and Domestic Servitude
Speakers: Poonam Joshi is the Gender Policy Advisor at Amnesty International UK and will talk about their campaign on trafficking
Bridget Anderson is author of 'Labour Exchange: Patterns of Migration in Asia' and 'Doing the dirty work? The global politics of domestic labour' and has worked with undocumented women migrants for numerous years

Wednesday 3rd December 2008: The Politics of Organising Sex Workers
Speaker: Branch secretary of the GMB Sex Workers Union

I look forward to seeing you at any or indeed ALL of these seminars.

Best wishes,


Professor Steve Jefferys

--
Steve Jefferys
Director
Working Lives Research Institute
31, Jewry St., London EC3N 2EY, UK
s.jefferys@londonmet.ac.uk
00 44 (O) 20 7320 3042
00 44 (0) 20 8883 6822 (home)
www.workinglives.org
www.workingagainstracism.org
--
Dr Jane Holgate

Working Lives Research Institute
London Metropolitan University
31 Jewry Street, London EC3N 2EY
Tel (w) + 44 (0) 20 7320 3029
Tel (h) 020 8802 0373.
Tel (m) 07960 798399
email: j.holgate@londonmet.ac.uk

www.workinglives.org/staff_jh.html


--
Dr Jane Holgate

Working Lives Research Institute
London Metropolitan University
31 Jewry Street, London EC3N 2EY
Tel (w) + 44 (0) 20 7320 3029
Tel (h) 020 8802 0373.
Tel (m) 07960 798399
email: j.holgate@londonmet.ac.uk

www.workinglives.org/staff_jh.html



Companies Act 2006 : www.londonmet.ac.uk/companyinfo

Thursday 10 January 2008

‘FOOD, SOCIETY AND PUBLIC HEALTH’: A BSA FOOD STUDY GROUP CONFERENCE

‘FOOD, SOCIETY AND PUBLIC HEALTH’

A BSA FOOD STUDY GROUP CONFERENCE
Monday 14th and Tuesday 15th July, 2008
The British Library Conference Centre, London

Keynote speakers: Claude Fischler, EHSS and CNRS, Paris and Allison James,
University of Sheffield

The aim of this conference is to explore the interface between food,
society and public health through a sociological lens. Practices and
decisions involving food are not solely matters of individual behaviour or
action and food and health therefore need to be considered within the
context of families, communities, other social groups, and society at
large.

Does exploring food allow scholars to look beyond what is eaten to
highlight fundamental differences between segments of society?
Understanding differences in food consumption patterns could offer wider
insights into, for example, social class, ethnicity, self-identity or the
life course and the implications of these patterns for social and health
inequalities. This conference will bring together researchers,
practitioners and policy makers interested in addressing such questions.
Contemporary social, health and food-related policies often link the
consumption of food with dietary health and emphasis is placed on the
importance of personal ‘choice’. From a sociological perspective, this
raises a number of questions that could be explored: do individuals
generally connect what they eat with their health (or weight)? Has the
pleasure of eating or sharing a ‘good meal’ been forgotten in policy? What
are children taking from public health messages about food and health?

It is also important to consider what role government (and the food
industry) should play in assuring food safety and editing the
food ‘choices’ that are available. What other factors influence
our ‘choices’ and where we shop for food? Are there alternative policy
options for improving diet and public health?

The format of the conference will allow for in-depth presentation and
discussion of key topics along with shorter sessions for the presentation
of emerging findings, work in progress and new research from postgraduate
students. Abstracts for oral papers, posters and panels or symposia will
be considered by the conference programme committee.

Further details and abstract submission form available from:
www.britsoc.co.uk/events/food

The abstract submission deadline is Friday 29th February 2008.
Abstracts received after this date will not be considered.

Please direct any administrative enquiries to liz.jackson@britsoc.org.uk
and any academic enquiries to w.j.wills@herts.ac.uk.

*“Fit Cities: Practices of Sport and Fitness in the Contemporary City”*

RGS ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2nd CALL FOR PAPERS

*“Fit Cities: Practices of Sport and Fitness in the Contemporary City”*

*Dr Alan Latham, Department of Geography, University College London

*Clare Herrick, Department of Geography, King’s College London *

This group of sessions aims to start new conversations on a topic at once highly prescient and, at
the same time, grossly neglected by geographers: the place of fitness and sport in the
contemporary city.

While the wider sphere touched upon by sport and fitness is courting attention by human sciences,
sociologists, public health, policy makers and urban planners, opportunities remain for
geographical perspectives. In particular, as government attention in the UK and beyond turns to
ways of encouraging and building activity back into the contemporary city, there is scope for
exploration of the ways in which this might unfold and the wider conceptual territory upon which
such activities might tread. This paper session will therefore start to try and map out what a urban
geography focusing on issues around sport and fitness might entail, the theoretical and
conceptual frameworks upon which it might fruitfully draw and the empirical domains waiting to
be explored.

This group of sessions aims to think about and draw the links between sport and fitness and the
(often problematic) nature of the contemporary city. In particular, it wishes to move away from
discussions of the issues surrounding professional sport and its infrastructure towards the far
more mundane, everyday participatory practices of staying fit.

The organisers invite short abstracts of 200 words relating to (but not limited to) the following
broad thematic areas:

• Geographies of mass sporting participation.
• Urban geography and the ‘fit’ city
• Fitness, sport, and social exclusion
• Urban policy, sport and fitness.
• Obesogenic environments
• Public space and everyday practices of sport and fitness
• Urban sociality, community, and sport fitness
• Cultural geographies of fitness
• Sport and geographies of urban justice
• Historical approaches to sport and fitness
• Embodiment and sport
• Urban political ecology and sport/ fitness
• The political economy of urban sporting consumption
• Sport, fitness and the commodification of urban space

Please email abstracts to alan.latham@ucl.ac.uk by *January 17, 2008*

Spaces of architecture/architects of space

Apologies for cross-posting





Call for papers - RGS-IBG Annual Conference 2008





Spaces of architecture/architects of space



Session organisers: James Faulconbridge (Lancaster University) and Rom Imrie (Kings College London)





The contemporary work of architects and allied design and property development industries and their impacts on cities and urban landscapes has increasingly interested Geographers. Economic geographers have become fascinated by the firms involved in the production of architecture whilst urban, social and cultural geographers continue to be intrigued by the material affects of architectural forms and the spaces they create. Yet studies often tend to focus upon the outcomes of the design process – the buildings and spaces that result from the work of ‘space designers’. This session seeks to take one step back and examine the agents of production – the architects, designers, and allied professionals - and the influences upon their work. So as to better unpick the ways architectural spaces emerge, the session will explore the influences on space designers that affect how they conceptualise and understand the process of producing buildings and other spaces. In doing this the session aims to bring the work of architects but also other types of space designer (e.g. interior designers, planners, structural engineers, etc) into focus so as to help reveal the way individual and community experiences of buildings, the city and other spaces are influenced by the work of these professional groups. Possible topics for papers might include (but are not limited to):

· The work of architects within small or large firms and the social, cultural, economic and political regulation of designs;

· City planners and the influences on their decision-making process;

· Interior designers and their understandings of space;

· Examination of the way the designer’s conceptualisation of space and the public appropriation of space coincide and differ;

· Explorations of how the discourses associated with symbolic and iconic architecture, urban regeneration and entrepreneurialism influence space designers;

· The role of education in socialising and conditioning the work of space designers.



Expressions of interest should be sent to James Faulconbridge (j.faulconbridge@lancaster.ac.uk) by February 11th 2008. Please include an abstract on the pro-forma available from the RGS website (http://www.rgs.org/WhatsOn/ConferencesAndSeminars/Annual+International+Conference/Submit+an+abstract.htm)









Dr James R Faulconbridge

Lecturer in Human Geography

Department of Geography

Lancaster University

Farrer Avenue

Lancaster

LA1 4YQ

UK



Telephone: +44(0)1524 510265

Email: j.faulconbridge@lancaster.ac.uk

www.geog.lancs.ac.uk

Banking the Unbanked: Where Are We Now?

LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY / SCOTTISH POVERTY INFORMATION UNIT / GRAND CENTRAL
SAVING BANK CONFERENCE

Banking the Unbanked: Where Are We Now?
Tues 22 Jan 08, Glasgow

A major conference on banking and strategies to tackle financial exclusion

“Disadvantaged people have as much need as anybody else in today's society
to get access to decent financial services. This conference is an
important opportunity for all those involved to sit down together and try
to work out what the barriers are and how they can be addressed.”
Keith Aitken, Conference Chair

How do we achieve the delivery of financial services that meet the needs
of the most vulnerable groups?

To what extent can financial inclusion measures contribute to combating
poverty and social exclusion?

Who should be responsible for tackling financial exclusion?

How can government, industry and the voluntary sector work together to
improve access to and the development of effective products for vulnerable
groups?

This conference will examine ethical banking for disadvantaged groups. It
will bring together speakers and delegates from financial services, the
voluntary sector, communities and government to debate and discuss
government strategies for tackling financial exclusion. It will provide a
unique opportunity to discuss the most pressing issues relating to both
policy and practice.

Keynote speaker, Professor Asif Dowla (author, The Poor Always Pay Back)
will discuss the work of the Grameen Bank, which is internationally famous
as a pioneer of micro-credit and will draw out transferable lessons for
the UK.

To register, please contact Susan Clark on +44 (0) 141 354 1274 or
seminars@lsa.org.uk.

For more information:
http://www.lsa.org.uk/bankingtheunbankedwherearewenow.aspx

Organised by Glasgow Caledonian University, Legal Services Agency Ltd.,
PKF (UK) LLP, Grand Central Savings, and the Scottish Poverty Information
Unit

Wednesday 9 January 2008

"LANDSCAPES, IDENTITIES AND DEVELOPMENT" conference

"LANDSCAPES, IDENTITIES AND DEVELOPMENT" conference - Lisbon / Óbidos,
Portugal, 1-5 September 2008

see http://tercud.ulusofona.pt/PECSRL/SessionsKeynotes.htm


We are inviting contributions to the following special session:


A10 Special Session: EMERGING ENERGIES, EMERGING LANDSCAPES.


Energy and landscape are intricately inter-connected. Landscapes embody
and are significantly shaped by the energy decisions of previous
generations and our own. Before the onset of the industrial revolution,
renewable energy was virtually the only type of energy available to
humankind (e.g. fire, crops to feed draught and riding animals, sailing
ships, watermills, windmills). Their relative importance in our ‘energy
mix’ became almost negligible during the industrial age, but renewable
energies are currently undergoing a renaissance. Concerns about climate
change and energy security have driven energy issues ever-higher up socio-
political agendas, and the decisions which we make about our ‘energy
futures’ will have far-reaching implications for landscapes, both directly
(through infrastructure) and indirectly (by modulating climate change).
The proposed transformation of our energy mix towards a much greater
reliance on renewables thus greatly enhances the importance and topicality
of the landscape-energy relationship. The ways in which sections of
society interpret the diverse, diffuse and spatially heterogeneous impacts
of (decentralized) renewable energies or contribute to these changes can
be regarded as a re-composition of socio-technical links between energy
generation and (territorial) identity.

The idea underlying this session is that (changes in) the notion, practice
and meaning of landscape can be studied through the ‘lens’ of energy
developments, and vice versa. The planning and/or sitting processes for
renewable energy developments create an opportunity to analyse the social
(re)construction of landscape. The session aims to explore landscape-
energy issues based on empirical, theoretical or synthetic contributions
coming from various countries and disciplinary fields. They might deal
with the development of renewable energies (e.g. wind power, biomass) or
of more conventional types of energy generation and transmission (e.g.
hydro, fossil fuel, nuclear, electricity grid networks), include landscape
as a salient dimension and/or consider the ability of theoretical
frameworks to capture the multi-dimensionality (i.e. relational, social,
environmental, material, spatial, aesthetic) of the process of landscape
construction.

DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS: 10th of January 2008.

For discussion or further information, please contact one of the
coordinators of the special session:
Alain Nadai nadai@centre-cired.fr
Charles Warren crw2@st-andrews.ac.uk
Dan van der Horst d.vanderhorst@bham.ac.uk

apologies for any cross posting

Policy & Politics 3rd International Conference: cfp

CALL FOR PAPERS

Policy & Politics 3rd International Conference
"Policy Transfer in a Globalising World"

3-4 July 2008, Bristol UK

Plenary speakers:
David P. Dolowitz - University of Liverpool, UK
Sue Duncan - HM Treasury, UK
Huck-ju Kwon - Sung Kyun Kwan University, Korea
Loïc Wacquant - University of California at Berkeley, USA

Abstract due on 28 March 2008

For further information, please visit www.bristol.ac.uk/sps/p&pconf

Poverty matters: critical reflections on the geographies of poverty and welfare - CFP

Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Annual Conference
27-29 August 2008, London

Call for papers

Poverty matters: critical reflections on the geographies of poverty and welfare

Convenor: Paul Milbourne (Cardiff University)

For a conference concerned with geographies that matter, the themes of poverty and welfare would
appear to be worthy of inclusion. These are themes that matter to those geographers seeking to
address social injustices within their work; they are also important themes for others - government,
welfare agencies and the many millions of households coping with material hardships on a daily
basis. In addition, there have been calls from within human geography for matters of poverty to be
taken more seriously by social geographers. This proposed session intends to take a critical look at
the state of geographical research on poverty and welfare by reviewing recent developments,
identifying knowledge gaps and setting out new research agendas.

It is clear from recent reviews of research in social geography that there has been renewed
interest in the geographies of poverty and welfare. Analyses of new local datasets point to the
spatial unevenness of poverty, including the persistence of regional disparities in levels of
poverty and the increased concentration of multiple forms of disadvantage in particular urban
places. Research has also moved beyond the highly visible forms of poverty in the city to explore
poverty that exists in less obviously poor places, such as smaller towns and villages. In addition,
local studies have pointed to the ways in which the particular economic, social, cultural, political
and environmental configurations of individual places act to shape the nature and experiences of
poverty, and, at the micro scale, the significance of local social space to the everyday lives of
poor households has been highlighted.

Alongside this work on the relations between poverty, space and place, there has been critical
geographical scrutiny of shifting systems of welfare provision. Recent research has pointed to the
differential spatial impacts of national workfare programmes implemented in both the UK and the US.
New systems of welfare and workfare have also been associated with increased levels of policy
devolution as more flexible and local modes of provision have been proposed to deal with the
problems of particular regions and places. In the UK context, welfare provision has been further
complicated by the development of distinctive programmes of welfare by the devolved administrations.
Finally, the proliferation of welfare partnerships, operating at different spatial scales, to deal
with poverty has produced an extremely complex system of welfare provision; one that is very much
dependent on the presence of different mixes of agencies in particular places.

Offers of papers are invited that provide geographical perspectives on these and other themes
relating to poverty and welfare in the UK, US and other advanced capitalist countries. Papers are
welcomed that critically review the state of geographical research on poverty and welfare, and / or
discuss evidence from personal research on these themes. Abstracts of about 200 words in length
should be sent to Paul Milbourne (milbournep@cardiff.ac.uk) by 8th February 2008.

Paul Milbourne
School of City and Regional Planning
Cardiff University
King Edward VII Avenue
Cardiff,UK, CF10 3WA
tel +44(0)29 20 875791

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL: Guidance on Reviewing CCTV footage

Ridiculous timescale, but someone here might be interested...


REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL



Home Office Scientific Development Branch



Guidance on Reviewing CCTV footage



Introduction



For some years now CCTV footage has been of great benefit to police
investigations often acting as critical evidence in solving crimes and
leading to successful prosecution. This has been particularly apparent
in recent acts of terrorism and high profile murder cases, although this
should not overlook the importance of CCTV on solving lower level crime
such as robbery, assault and public order offences.



Even though the importance of CCTV as an investigative tool has never
been in doubt, no comprehensive research has yet been carried out to
establish best practice and so optimise the reviewing process. It should
be noted at this stage that while research has been published for CCTV
operators, recent experience has exposed that the dynamics of reviewing
footage within a police investigation are not directly comparable.





Request Details



After two months working with police forces to maximise our knowledge of
present working practices we are now positioned to ask ourselves "What
research and knowledge already exits that can assist us in providing
comprehensive guidance and enhance the review process?" It is in this
regard that we are seeking external expertise to produce a report that
summarizes existing knowledge focusing on a number of related areas.



We have defined these as:



Human factors such as ergonomics, comfort, attention span, diet,
exercise, character and working in a high-pressure environment.



Visual perception testing such as understanding about how humans view
displays, how they interpret what they visualise, how quickly they
locate an object of interest and ultimately whether such can be combined
into a competency test.



Neuroscience takes us into another realm, but we are looking at whether
more can be understood about how the human brain determines exactly what
draws our attention to certain objects and ultimately controls what we
'see'.



We appreciate that there is a degree of overlap within these three
areas. Additionally bear in mind that subject to the results of this
request for proposals the Home Office may split the commission of the
work to ensure we obtain the greatest expertise for the three main
areas.





Intended Outcome



As a result of this proposal we aim to determine what research exists at
present that can be applied to this work and what further work needs to
be commissioned in order for us to publish guidance. This will benefit
many aspects of police work both in the UK and abroad. Furthermore in
order to raise the standard and profile of this role we aim to develop a
competency test.

Such competencies will be determined by combining the results of this
work with the creation of test scenarios based on CCTV footage from high
profile investigations and typical 'created' footage recorded on actual
systems.





Timescales



High importance has been attached to this project and recent experience
has highlighted the need to expedite the initial work for this project.
With this in mind we are looking for responses to this Request for
Proposal by the 14th January 2008 beyond which we expect to make a
decision on which proposals we feel are the most suitable within ten
days. Completion and receipt of the reports for any contracts placed as
a result of this request for proposals will be expected by the middle of
March 2008.





Technology



Another aspect of the project is to look into technology such as
displays, which will be handled in-house by the Video Evidence Analysis
team at the Home Office Scientific Development Branch. However please
feel free to submit proposals in this area as well as the main three
above.





Form of Submittal



While we accept some latitude on how proposals are submitted, the
following are required:



* Associated experience of your organisation/institute with
similar projects
* CV of principal overseeing work
* Scope of work proposed for one or more of the three primary
areas of work
* Hourly rates of staff working on the project
* Estimate on time required to complete work and full costs
including any expenses with options.
* Overview of potential future work with approximate timescale and
costs





Uniqueness of project



It must again be stressed that experience dictates that the reviewing of
CCTV within a police investigation is distinctly different from real
time operators of such systems. With this in mind we are looking for a
degree of innovation when approaching this request for proposal.

Furthermore as this is the first comprehensive foray into the realm of
CCTV reviewing there will be a certain kudos associated to this project
and its increased importance to the UK police forces and our
international partners who are only now coming to grips with the issues
involving CCTV.



Contact, Terms & Submission



To understand more about the work of HOSDB visit
www.hosdb.homeoffice.gov.uk



This enquiry is strictly subject to contract, and any contract(s) placed
as a result will be subject to Government conditions for Services as
identified at
http://commercial.homeoffice.gov.uk/doing-business/terms-and-conditions/



Please submit your proposal by email to Toby Nortcliffe at
toby.nortcliffe@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
who can be contacted for
further information on 01727 816211 or 07776 454 661 by the closing date
of 14th January 2008.

1 Vision. Our students voted us top new University for student
satisfaction

This transmission is confidential and may be legally privileged. If you
receive it in error, please notify us immediately by e-mail and remove
it from your system. If the content of this e-mail does not relate to
the business of the University of Huddersfield, then we do not endorse
it and will accept no liability.

****************************************************
This is a message from the SURVEILLANCE listserv
for research and teaching in surveillance studies.

To unsubscribe, please send the following message to
:

UNSUBSCRIBE SURVEILLANCE

For further help, please visit:

http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/help
****************************************************

CALL FOR PAPERS. 2008 Oral History Society Conference

CALL FOR PAPERS. 2008 Oral History Society Conference

2008 Oral History Society Annual Conference
University of Birmingham
4th - 5th July 2008

WHO CARED? ORAL HISTORY, CARING, HEALTH AND ILLNESS: Marking 60 years
of the National Health Service

Oral History Society Annual Conference, in association with the
Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Birmingham, to be
held at the University of Birmingham.

We are keen to encourage presentations from those using oral history
in understanding health care relationships in the histories of
medicine; illness; well-being; disability; and planned environments.

We particularly welcome papers that further our understanding of the
experience of formal and informal caring in community and
institutional settings and amongst professionals, the cared for,
carers and kin. Our themes will include:
* Witnessing the impact of, and challenges to, medical knowledges;
* hidden histories of organisational change and development
* the NHS and its global workforce
* power, humour, emotion, loss, resistance and changes in care
relationships;
* the making of 'expert patients'
* emerging counter-knowledges and complementary and alternative
therapies
* the health/social care interface

We are also keen to encourage papers using oral history within the
following topic areas:

1. Migration and ethnicity

2. History of disability

3. Mental health (including old age psychiatry

4. Institutions, hierarchy and boundaries, including planned
environment and therapeutic communities

5. International use of oral history in palliative care

6. Medical professionalization – professional boundaries/groups

7. Experience of institutional closure

8. Public history and the presentation of oral history

Abstracts (200 words) should be submitted by 18 January 2008
To: Belinda Waterman, Department of History, University of Essex,
Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ.
Email: belinda@essex.ac.uk



Joanna Bornat
Professor of Oral History
Faculty of Health and Social Care
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
UK
tel: 01908654270

New title from the Policy Press

Please see details of all new Policy Press titles below.

New titles for January
**********************

In 'The education debate', part of our Policy and Politics in the
Twenty-First Century series, Stephen Ball provides a substantive account of
current education policy trends and offers a way to make sense of what is
happening to our experience of education, as learners, as teachers, as
parents and as citizens. Read an extract in our reading room
(https://www.policypress.org.uk/general/reading_room.php) or, for more
information, go to
https://www.policypress.org.uk/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=1239

'Uprooted' is Roy Parker's fascinating exploration into the economic,
religious, political and personal forces that led to some 80,000 British
children being sent to Canada between 1867 and 1915. We are currently
offering a 30% discount on this title - please go to
https://www.policypress.org.uk/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=&products_id=1377
for more information.

'A deafening silence', by Patrizia Romito, analyses male violence against
women and children, and the mechanisms society develops to push it out of
sight. Read an extract in our reading room
(https://www.policypress.org.uk/general/reading_room.php) or go to
https://www.policypress.org.uk/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=1320

In 'Well-being', Beverley Searle considers what makes us happy, using a new
approach that directly addresses the circumstances under which high
subjective well-being is experienced, often with surprising results. For
more information, please see
https://www.policypress.org.uk/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=&products_id=1231

'Partnerships', by Niels Åkerstrøm Andersen, improves our understanding of
the shifting ground on which partnerships and agreements must be reached in
today's hyper-complex society. Please see
https://www.policypress.org.uk/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=&products_id=1385


For more information on all of our titles, along with news and special
offers, please visit: https://www.policypress.org.uk

Policy Press titles can also be ordered from:

Marston Book Services
PO Box 269
Abingdon
Oxon
OX14 4YN
Te: +44 (0)1235 465500
Email: direct.orders@marston.co.uk

P&P charges: Delivery within the UK £2.75 for the first copy and 50p
thereafter.


--------------------
Jessica Hughes, Marketing Executive
The Policy Press, Fourth Floor, Beacon House
Queen's Road, Bristol BS8 1QU
t: +44 (0)117 331 4054
f: +44 (0)117 331 4093
w: www.policypress.org.uk

Email disclaimer https://www.policypress.org.uk/page.php?name=disclaimer

BUSINESS ENGAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES

BUSINESS ENGAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Central Government initiatives have been developed to position the UK as an economy able to deliver unique value in global business markets. In line with these initiatives the ESRC has developed its Business Engagement Strategy.
This call focuses on business engagement and provides opportunities for social science researchers to engage with specific sectors of business, listed below, to encourage knowledge transfer and exchange to assist business sustainability. The ESRC encourages engagement with business through a tailored package of new and additional activity. Funding of up to £100k per application is available for a combination of activities, ideally with co-funding partners.

The call aims to:
• promote the transfer and exchange of knowledge between social science researchers and business sectors and staff within them
• respond to the knowledge needs of business through a range of knowledge exchange mechanisms
• expand networks for business sectors into academia and vice-versa
• provide business sectors with research-informed evidence to develop and review operational and management practices
• enable all parties, including the ESRC, to develop their understanding of the interaction between research and the development of operational and management practices within business sectors
• contribute to the delivery of the Government's Science and Innovation Investment Framework.

Eligibility
The call is open to social scientists based in UK Higher Education Institutions or similar organisations. The ESRC welcomes applications from more than one department in addition to the principal applicant.

Requirements
A package of activity should be developed, comprising the following elements:
• Impact Grants: projects which demonstrate the impact of research by engaging with at least one business sector audience.
• Placements: funding to permit academics working on projects in a business setting and business individuals to do likewise in an academic unit for a short period – of at least one month, not necessarily in one block of time.
• Seminars: funding for at least two seminars aimed at encouraging interaction between researchers and potential users of research within the chosen sector or group.

Placements must be co-funded to demonstrate user engagement. It is expected that each of the other activities in the package will also attract co-funding where possible. Favourable consideration will be given to such applications.
It is expected that successful awards start on 14 April 2008.

Sectors
Applicants should focus on any of the following sectors: Energy; Financial Services; Health Technologies; Retail; and Sport, Leisure and Tourism.
It is recognised that there are areas of common interest between the ESRC and the Technology Strategy Board (TSB), http://www.dti.gov.uk/innovation/technologystrategy/tsb/index.html
Applicants should show how the award would be used to enhance a strengthening partnership between the ESRC and the TSB.

Outputs
The package is expected to yield at least: one impact project; four placements; two seminars/workshops. However, applicants may suggest how they intend to vary this combination in response to identified business needs.
• Final reports for placements will be submitted within one month of the end of the Fellowship with a short report detailing any longer-term impact 12 months later.
• Final reports for Impact Grants will be submitted by 30 June 2009.

Closing Date
Applications should be sent to The Registry, ESRC in hard copy with an electronic copy to lesley.lilley@esrc.ac.uk by 4 February 2008.

For an application form and guidelines contact knowledgetransfer@esrc.ac.uk

Capacity Building Clusters
As part of a broad effort to encourage engagement with business ESRC is establishing a series of capacity building clusters focused on business research and engagement. The aim of the clusters will be to create a new generation of high quality researchers with a commitment to direct engagement with the business sector and as such will complement the Business Engagement Opportunities Scheme. More information on the funding package for the clusters will be available on the ESRC website from mid-December.

Uni of Glam- Regeneration Hub Seminar -Jan 23rd -6-8 Cardiff City Hall

Hi - I'd like to bring the following free seminar to your attention as I think it may be of
interest to you , your colleagues and indeed students - could you please forward this information on
to many of your colleagues who may be interested
Many thanks
The Regeneration Hub at the University of Glamorgan
Presents the second in a series of
'Regenerate'
Forums
With
Marie Thérèse McGivern, Director of Development for
Belfast City Council
Leading a discussion on the
'State of the City Initiative'
The State of the City Initiative was developed to bring together the key brains and energies from
the cities public, voluntary, community and private sectors to find a collective way to create a new
future for the city of Belfast
Wednesday 23rd January 2008
City Hall, Cardiff
6 p.m. until 8 p.m.
The Regenerate Forums are aimed at an audience comprised of Policy makers, practionners, academics
and members of the public
If you are interested in attending please let me know or email the Regneration Hub
Email: pbyrne@glam.ac.uk,
Tel: 01443 483680.
email regenhub@glam.ac.uk

Penny Byrne
Programme for Community Regeneration
HLASS
University of Glamorgan
CF37 IDL
01443 483680

Mental Well-being and Happiness: Call for papers

ROYAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY / INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS

ANNUAL CONFERENCE

27-29 AUGUST 2008, EDINBURGH

(www.rgs.org/ac2008)





CALL FOR PAPERS





Mental Well-being and Happiness





A lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on
earth.

George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman (1903), Act I



For the last 50 years Maslow's hierarchy of needs has underpinned
psychological understandings of achieving the ultimate in mental
well-being; to achieve self-actualisation. But new understandings of
well-being and happiness across the developed and developing worlds are
dismantling the hierarchy and challenging the way we conceive of mental
health.



Concerns with mental health have been dominated by a focus on deviations
from a 'norm' - particularly where this relates to stress and
psychological disorder. In contrast to traditional methods, more
recent understandings of mental health are extending beyond these
negative boundaries embracing emotions at the positive end of the
scale. Happiness, satisfaction with life or quality of life are merging
to provide more holistic measures of subjective well-being embracing the
complex relationships between the individual and their environment.



The spaces, and their potential to become places, that people inhabit
are important concepts for these new conceptualisations. They not only
facilitate our understanding of how the physical, cultural, and
political environment impact on health, but, importantly, provide the
framework for understanding how these external spaces are internalised
and give rise to the emotions that manifest as negative and positive
mental health states. In this session we wish to draw out this
discussion by considering how these complex relationships and processes
play out at the local and global level affecting mental illness, mental
health, psychological well-being and happiness.



To facilitate this debate on the changing and broadening concepts of
mental well-being, and consider the implications for geographic - the
importance of 'space' and 'place' -understandings of these phenomena, we
welcome papers along the broad questions of:



* What do we mean by mental health?
* Is mental health the same or different to happiness and
well-being?
* How do we measure these abstract concepts?
* Do space and place matter for mental well-being and happiness?
* What are the implications for public health and health policy in
developed and developing nations if the aim is to reduce suffering and
enhance well-being and happiness?



The deadline for abstracts (of around 200 words) is 8 February 2008.
If you have any questions please do not hesitate to get in touch.







Beverley Searle Chris Dunn

Research Fellow Senior Lecturer









Dr Beverley A Searle

Research Fellow

Department of Geography

University of Durham

South Road

Durham DH1 3LE



Telephone: 0191 334 1901

Fax: 0191 334 1801



Department of Goegraphy

http://www.dur.ac.uk/geography/





Pathways of Housing Wealth and Well-being

http://www.geography.dur.ac.uk/Clusters/Default.aspx?alias=www.geography
.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj





Social Well-being and Spatial Justice Cluster

http://www.geography.dur.ac.uk/Clusters/Default.aspx?alias=www.geography
.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj
y.dur.ac.uk/clusters/swsj>

Women, Identity and Employability - one-day conference

Teesside Gender Research Forum



Women, Identity and Employability

One-day conference



Centre for Enterprise, University of Teesside

7th February 2008, 09.30-16.00







The day includes:



* Key note speaker, Professor Sue Yeandle (University of Leeds)

* Presentations by researchers

* A panel discussion

* Lunch and refreshments





Focus of the day:



Although there is a wealth of literature on women within employment,
less focuses on women who are on the margins of the UK labour market and
issues of employability. For many women, achieving satisfying and well
rewarded employment is more complicated than simply eradicating
structural barriers, and for some, particular life experiences and
resulting conceptions of self, can impact heavily on their
employability. This conference starts from recognition of the need for
critical attention to both the concept of employability and what it
means for diverse and also socially excluded groups of women within the
UK. For example, how do different women perceive their own
employability? In what ways does identity impact upon employability?
What personal development strategies are required to enter into and
sustain employment? Are expectations about people's employability
gendered? And how might employability issues vary for different socially
excluded groups? We look forward to a day of critical and engaging
debate on diverse themes related to women, identity and employability.





For more information and to register (registration form is attached in
the email) contact Barbara Cox by email at B.Cox@tees.ac.uk
, by phone 01642 342346 or by post to SSSL,
Clarendon Building, University of Teesside, Middlesbrough, UK, TS1 3BA.



http://www.tees.ac.uk/depts/socialfutures/Events.cfm




Conference organisers: Professor Eileen Green, Dr Joan Heggie, Ms Carrie
Singleton, Centre for Social and Policy Research,

School of Social Sciences and Law,

Clarendon Building,

University of Teesside,

Middlesbrough, UK

TS1 3BA

01642 342346

http://www.tees.ac.uk/depts/socialfutures/CSPRprofile.cfm