Pre 2025 Seminars
Past seminars, some with links to the video presentations.
2024
- 11 December - . Presented by Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- 21 November - . Presented by Dr Amy Clarke
- 23 October - . Presented by Kristina Bakkær Simonsen (Aarhus University, Denmark).
- 24 April- . Presented by Professor Zsuzsanna Millei (Tampere University, Finland).
- 7 February - Presented by Chenchen Zhang (Durham University, UK).
- 18 January - . Presented by Melissa Aronczyk (Rutgers University, USA).
2023
- 18 October - . Presented by Maya Tudor (Oxford University, UK) and Harris Mylonas (George Washington University, USA).
- 15 May - . Presented by Professor Ghassan Hage from University of Melbourne, Australia.
- 27 April - . Professor Thomas Hylland Eriksen from University of Oslo, Norway.
- 3-5 April - . Presented by Tariq Modood and Sivamohan Valluvan.
- 20 February - . Presented by Dr Chiara Bonacchi from the University of Edinburgh.
2022
- 16 December - . Presented by Ruth Kinna (色狗导航), José A Gutiérrez (Dublin City University), Kenyon Zimmer (University of Texas at Arlington), Matthew S Adams (色狗导航), Tom Goyens (Salisbury University), Constance Bantman (University of Surrey), Pietro Di Paola (University of Lincoln), and Ivanna Margarucci (Universidad de Buenos Aires).
- 23 June - . Presented by Jon Fox (University of Bristol).
- 18 May - . Presented by Angharad Closs Stephens (Swansea University).
- 16 February - . Presented by Zsuzsa Cserg艖 (Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada), Siniša Maleševi膰 (University College, Dublin, Ireland) and Umut Özkirimli (Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, Spain).
2021
- 17 June - . Presented by Daniel Chernilo (Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Santiago, Chile - 色狗导航).
- 28 May - Presented by Marta Bivand Erdal (PRIO, Oslo).
- 27 May - . Presented by Michael Billig (色狗导航).
- 20 May - . Presented by Edoardo Marcello Barsotti (University of Pisa, Italy).
2020
- 6 November - . Presented by Daphne Halikiopoulou (University of Reading).
- 23 October - . Presented by Sivamohan Valluvan (Warwick University)
2019
- Helen F. Wilson (Durham University): Brexit: immigration, race, and shock as denial (6 February). Part of the CRCC ‘MigNation’ seminar series.
- Adrian Favell (University of Leeds): Crossing the Race Line: Brexit, Citizenship and “Immigrants” in the Referendum (13 March). Part of the CRCC ‘MigNation’ seminar series
- Jon Fox (Bristol University): From everyday nationhood to everyday nationalism (8 May). Part of the CRCC ‘MigNation’ seminar series.
- Ali Bilgic (色狗导航): Doomed to extinct like American Indians”: Nationalism, Modernity, and Kurds in Turkey (30 October)
- Dyvia Tolia-Kelly (Sussex University): Decolonising institutional racisms: being and feeling in the spaces of museums and academia (31 October). Part of the CRCC ‘MigNation’ seminar series
2018
- Joost Jansen and Gijs van Campenhout (Erasmus University, Rotterdam): ‘Plastic Brits’ and other immigrant athletes. Who can represent the country? (14 November)
- Gaia Giuliani (Coimbra University, Portugal): Race, Nation and Gender in Modern Italy: Intersectional Representations in Visual Culture (30 May). Part of the CRCC seminar series.
- James D. Sidaway (National University Singapore): Securing urbanization’s multiple frontiers: a view from Yangon, Myanmar (17 May). In collaboration with The Centre for the 色狗导航 of International Governance (CSIG)
- Andrea Ballatore (Birkbeck College, University of London) Digital Hegemonies: Towards A Geography of Web Content (18 April). Part of the CRCC seminar series
- Dmitry Chernobrov (University of Sheffield) Idealised national self-concepts in public perception of international crises(31 January). Part of the CRCC seminar series.
2017
- Sabrina Vitting-Seerup (University of Copenhagen) National narrative and diversity in Danish cultural institutions (25 October). Part of the CRCC seminar series. .
- Taku Tamaki (PHIR, 色狗导航) Japanese national identity representation in nation branding and the Cool Japan initiative (18 October). Part of the CRCC seminar series.
- Eunice Romero Rivera (Open University of Catalonia) and Paolo Cossarini (PHIR, 色狗导航) Catalonia’s independence: When nationalism and democracy clash (17 October). .
- Helen Drake (PHIR, 色狗导航) The 2017 French presidential election: first thoughts (11 May)
- Martin Lundsteen (Open University of Catalonia): An impure nation? Towards an ethnography of ethnic and cultural diversity in the Catalan nation and state-building (29 March)
- Stijn van Kessel (PHIR, 色狗导航): The Dutch election of March 15th: a fragmented field and a prominent role for the populist radical right (16 March)
- Sarah Mills (Geography, 色狗导航): From Big Society to Shared Society? Geographies of social cohesion and citizenship in the UK’s National Citizen Service (1 March)
- Giulia Piccolino (PHIR, 色狗导航): Populist nationalism in Africa: the Laurent Gbagbo regime in Côte d’Ivoire and its aftermath (9 February)
2016
- Richard Bramwell (Social Sciences, 色狗导航): Performing Hip-Hop Englishness: Place, race, masculinity and the role of rap in the performance of Alternative British identities (7 December)
- Andreas Forø Tollefsen (FFI, PRIO, Oslo): Civil wars: looking beyond the nation (13 October)
- Ruth Kinna (PHIR, 色狗导航): Internationalism, anti-militarism and revolutionary violence in anarchism (1 June)
- Marco Antonsich (Geography, 色狗导航): International migration and the neoliberal culturalist nation (25 May)
- Guzel Yusupova (Russian Academy of Sciences and Kazan Federal University): Performing and consuming ethnicity in the Islamic context: the case of the Tatars in contemporary Russia (16 March)
- Line Nyhagen (Social Sciences, 色狗导航): Religion and Citizenship: The Limits of Rights-based Approaches (jointly organized with CulCom and CAMARG) (2 March)
- Sophie Hyde (English and Drama, 色狗导航): Narrating Levels of Nationalism: Layering Voices in Verbatim (17 February)
2015
- Jon Fox (University of Bristol): The edges of the nation: breaching everyday nationhood (4 December). .
- Robert Knight (PHIR, 色狗导航): From Himmler to Herder? Constructed and organic nations (11 November)
- Dan Sage (Business and Economics, 色狗导航): How Outer Space Made America (28 October)
- Mariann Vaczi (College of Dunaujvaros, Hungary; University of Nevada, Reno): Football, the Beast, and the Sovereign: Sport and Politics in Spain (July 1) – co-hosted with the LU Sociology of Sport Research Group
- Sabina Mihelj (Social Sciences, 色狗导航) and Enric Castello (Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona, Spain): Promoting and consuming the nation: Nations in the world of global capitalism (June 3)
- Michael Skey (University of East Anglia): Why do nations matter? The struggle for belonging and security in an uncertain world (April 23)
- Alexandre Christoyannopoulos (PHIR, 色狗导航): Nationalism and the Politics of Religion in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attacks (March 19)
- Catherine Armstrong (PHIR, 色狗导航): Clio’s contribution? Historical perspectives on social science research (March 4)
- Alan Bairner (Sport, 色狗导航): Playing for the nation? Taiwan’s indigenous peoples and baseball (February 25)
2014
- Marco Antonsich (Geography, 色狗导航): New Italians: The Re-Making of the Nation in the Age of Migration (November 19)