Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Speaker: Katy Gardner

On Tuesday, 11/15, Dr. Katy Gardner will give a talk titled "The Gift of Corporate Social Responsibility: Chevron engages ‘the community’ in Bangladesh" in Beach Hall, Room 404. RSVP is required by November 4th at 4 p.m. (terese.andrews@uconn.edu) The event is co-Sponsored by the Human Rights Institute and the Department of Anthropology.

Dr. Gardner's research examines the cultural and social changes associated with international migration and globalization in Bangladesh, resulting in her monograph Global Migrants, Local Lives: Travel and Transformation in Rural Bangladesh (OUP 1995). She extended her interest in the Bengali diaspora through fieldwork conducted amongst Bengali elders in East London. Her monograph, Age, Narrative and Migration: The Life Course and Life Histories amongst Bengali Elders in London (Berg, 2002) analyses the elders' narratives of migration, ageing and illness in the UK, and suggests that transnational migration can be usefully understood as a gendered and embodied experience.

As part of her interest in transnational migration, Katy has published an edited collection on Transnational Migration and Household Ritual (Global Networks, 2002). Since 2008 Katy has also been working on a project funded by ESRC/Dfid on Mining, Livelihoods and Social Networks in Bangladesh. This has involved returning to her original fieldwork village in Bangladesh, where a multinational company is currently mining natural gas. The project investigates the relationships between transnational migration, global capitalism and resistance, plus the multinational policies and practices of 'Corporate Social Responsibility'.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Speaker: Michael Goodhart

On Friday, November 18, ESRG is pleased to host a talk by affiliate Michael Goodhart, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh. Professor Goodhart will be giving a talk tentatively titled, "Who is responsible for fulfilling social and economic rights?" which will take place at 12:00pm in Room 162 of the Thomas J. Dodd Center.

He is author of Democracy as Human Rights: Freedom and Equality in the Age of Globalization (Routledge, 2005), contributing editor of Human Rights: Politics and Practice (Oxford University Press, 2009), co-editor of Human Rights in the 21st Century: Continuity and Change since 9/11 (Palgrave, 2011), and author of numerous articles and book chapters.