Events from the 09 December 2021 Reset
This online training course provides a simple, contextual overview of international boundaries and the practical measures that can be taken to resolve international boundary disputes. Through a series of short online lectures and a final practical exercise, the course explores the relevance of borders and looks at land and maritime boundary disputes, before covering methods available for dispute resolution.
01 January 2021 - 31 December 2025
12:00 AM - 11:59 PM
Online workshop
IMEMS has a long-standing relationship with Blackfriars Restaurant in Newcastle and we are pleased to announce our 3-day cookery course.
22 March 2021 - 26 March 2022
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Blackfriars, Friars Street, Newcastle, NE1 4XN
Supported Progression, or SP, is a programme ran by Durham’s Access and Engagement team to recruit eligible Year 12 students to the University in an alternative way. Apply now!
01 November 2021 - 14 January 2022
Online
The Mind the Gap visiting IAS Fellows will be presenting on schools and inequality, on networks of social capital and on research-informed teaching, followed by a Q&A. The speakers at this event are online only, though the workshop will be streamed in the IAS Seminar should anybody wish to attend. The Zoom details are as follows: https://durhamuniversity.zoom.us/j/93626356020?pwd=TGlhMUF6ZmlscURoWDhMdFo3blB6Zz09
09 December 2021
10:30 AM - 1:00 PM
Online presentations only. Attendees can watch the live stream from the IAS Seminar Room in Cosin‘s Hall, Palace Green.
You are warmly invited to the second Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Studies Research Seminar, hosted by Durham University’s English Studies Department and the Centre for Nineteenth-Century Studies.
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Online (Zoom)
The second Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Studies Research Seminar, hosted by Durham University’s English Studies Department and the Centre for Nineteenth-Century Studies - Colonizing Care: Trollope’s Fiction of Independence with Jacob Jewusiak
The Centre for Culture and Ecology Reading Group is a student-led group aimed to discuss canonical and contemporary work in the field of Environmental Humanities. It welcomes researchers working on or simply interested in environmental issues from a range of perspectives, including English Studies, Modern Languages and Cultures, Geography, Anthropology, History, Philosophy, Classics, and more.
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
All talks are free and open to the public.
4:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Department of Classics and Ancient History Research Seminar Michaelmas Term 2021
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM