Studies in National and International Development Podcast Series  Por  arte de portada

Studies in National and International Development Podcast Series

De: CFRC Podcast Network
  • Resumen

  • Studies in National and International Development (SNID) is the longest-running weekly, interdisciplinary seminar series at Queen’s University. Since 1983, SNID has proudly hosted prominent Canadian and international scholars who bring fresh perspectives to issues of local, national and global development. SNID has also organized several major workshops and conferences that have resulted in numerous publications. SNID serves a large, varied constituency of faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and community participants. This podcast series features audio footage of lectures from the SNID seminars. During the academic year, SNID organizes weekly seminars, which are normally held on Thursdays from 1:00 to 2:30 pm in Mackintosh Corry Hall, Room D214. Please consult the SNID Lecture listing on this website for possible changes in dates and venue. SNID also regularly sponsors conferences, film festivals, workshops and other development-related activities, all of which are posted in advance on our Lecture Calendar. All SNID events are free and open to the public.
    © 2024 CFRC Podcast Network
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Episodios
  • Contextualizing Waterloo: Gender-Based Violence and White Supremacy on Campus and Beyond (October 5th, 2023)
    Oct 18 2023
    A Studies in National and International Development presentation by Dr. Barbara Perry and Dr. Shana MacDonald The stabbing of a faculty member and two students in a gender issues class at the University of Waterloo in the summer of 2023 has brought renewed urgency to anti-violence work on campus. This panel brings together experts in white supremacy and feminist media studies to situate the attack within the broader rise of the far right in Canada, emphasizing how central attacks on feminist, queer, and trans people are to this movement. This episode features an interactive session focused on understanding the context in which we find ourselves and the opportunities to mobilize for change.
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    1 h y 21 m
  • Book launch: Marriage Migration and Dispossession of Matrimonial Choice in Neoliberal India (26.01.2023) with Dr Reena Kukreja
    Jan 30 2023

    Drawing from her recent book, “Why Would I Be Married Here? Marriage Migration and Dispossession in Neoliberal India” (Cornell University Press 2022), Dr. Kukreja examines marriage migration undertaken by rural bachelors in North India who seek brides from outside their customary marriage pools such as from development peripheries of India. She connects the macro-political violent process of neoliberalism to the micro-personal level of marriage and intimate gender relations to demonstrate that predatory capitalism dispossesses many poor women from India’s marginalized Dalit and Muslim communities of marriage choices in their local communities and exposes them to new forms of gendered and caste violence in conjugal communities.

    Dr Reena Kukreja is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Development Studies with cross-appointment to Gender Studies Department and affiliation with Cultural Studies Program at Queen’s University. Her research interests and filmmaking practice is focused on migration and development, marriage migration, masculinities, political economy and caste.

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    1 h y 25 m
  • Reduce, Re-Use, Re-Ride: Bicycle waste and the possibilities of the circular economy (January 19th 2023)
    Jan 30 2023

    “Revolutions” is a short documentary that asks sports enthusiasts, brands, and manufacturers to think differently about environmental sustainability by putting sporting goods at the center of the conversation. The film uses the bike as a storytelling device to ask some important questions about sustainability such as: What happens to our “toys” when we’re done with them? What happens to a bike at its end-of-life stage? What would it take to design everything with the end in mind?

    Dr Courtney Szto is an Assistant Professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies. Her research focuses broadly on intersectional justice in the areas of sport and physical activist. Revolutions is her first film and it was recently awarded “Best Canadian Short Doc” at the BC Environmental Film Festival.

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    39 m

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