Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance
The Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance (CCIG) is a University designated Centre of Research Excellence
Engin Isin gave a talk at the Annual International Workshop organised by the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (April 17-19, 2013).
Engin Isin gave a talk at Corvinus University of Budapest on the 27th of June, 2013. This podcast is an audio recording of his talk.
This conference contributed to the European Year of Citizens 2013 by stimulating debates about the promises and challenges of EU citizenship, notably in a Central and Eastern European context.
This audio file features Jean Carabine (Open University).
More details on this forum here.
This audio file features Ellie Jupp (Open University): Approaching the emotional geographies of social policy
More details on this forum here.
This audio file features Lynn Froggett (University of Central Lancashire): Civic participation, displacement anxiety and community based art
More details on this forum here.
Stephanie Taylor (Senior Lecturer in Psychology, CCIG Member) presents her new book, co-authored with Karen Littleton (Professor of Psychology in Education): Contemporary Identities of Creativity and Creative Work (Ashgate 2012).
Family Studies is a key area of policy, professional and personal debate. Perhaps precisely because of this, teaching texts have struggled with how to approach this area, which is both 'familiar' and also contentious and value laden.
This podcast features the presentations given by Hannah Jones (Goldsmiths, University of London), Karim Murji (Open University), and Helen Arfvidsson (Open University), as well as the discussions that followed. It also includes the afternoon session, dedicated to a debate moderated by John Clarke.
On 16th of Feb., 2012, CCIG hosted an Event organised by the Psychosocial Research Programme: “What Difference Does the Psychosocial Make?”
On 5 April 2011, CCIG hosted an event with Arlie Hochschild (University of California, Berkeley, USA) chaired by Elizabeth Silva (OU), who gave a keynote on ‘Global Traffic, Female Services and Emotional life: the case of nannies and surrogates’.