Women's Studies
at the UCD School of Social Justice
Ionad Taighde agus Acmhainní Léann na mBan, UCD
Lesbian Lives XVII:
'Lesbian Lives, Studies and Activisms: In-laws,
Outlaws and Other Relations'.
Conference Date: Feb. 19th-20th 2010 –
University College Dublin (UCD), Ireland
Keynote Speaker: Sara Ahmed, Professor of Race
and Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths College, London.
Call for Paper
More information here
The Women’s Studies Centre at UCD is nearly twenty years in existence, it is the largest and best known Women's Studies Centre on the island with more Ph.D. and Masters graduates than all the other progammes and centres combined and has established itself as one of the leading centres for Women’s Studies in Europe. UCD Women’s Studies Centre is the hub for UCD’s Feminist and Gender Studies Network, which comprises over 50 faculty, and includes established academics with international reputations as well as the most dynamic emerging scholars. One of feminism’s success stories over the past four decades has been the establishment of Women’s Studies programmes throughout every continent, and this expansion is continuing. Women's Studies is not simply the study of women and women's issues. It is the study of women that places women's own experiences at the centre of enquiry and looks at how gender is a fundamental structure in all societies. Gender is the term used to describe the relationship between ideas about masculinity and femininity; gender describes the system of rules by which males and females are encouraged to relate to each other. What other disciplines use as assumptions about women and men, Women's Studies poses as questions. •Why Study Women’s Studies? Our classes are taught according to feminist teaching principles and so there is active student participation with a focus on empowering students to realise their competency. The classes are politically and socially relevant and students learn to think critically and develop a more open mind. Because issues relating to women's roles and needs are surfacing within government, service professions, science fields, industry and academic institutions, the Women's Studies degree is increasing in social, political and vocational relevance. Our programmes have practical applications for a variety of professional fields and after completion of their studies our graduates find themselves at the heart, or the vanguard, of a wide diversity of institutions and movements. |