Chinese Politics & International Relations Lecture Series
News Archive
- SPIRe Staff on Media
- Lecturer/Assistant Professor in Development Studies
- SALI Professorship
- Teaching Fellow: European Comparative Politics
- Teaching Fellow: Peace and Conflict
- Book Launch
- UCD Postgraduate Virtual Open Day 1st March
- Sinead McGrath
- SPIRe projects receive IRC Funding
- UCD Virtual Summer School 2021
- New Lecturer positions in SPIRe
- New Professional Certificate Programmes: Quantitative Text Analysis and Programming for Social Scientists
- Professor David Farrell wins IRC Impact Award
- Ad Astra fellowships
- Connected_Politics
- SPIRe Athena Swan Application
- Kalypso Nicolaïdis book event
- Jennifer Todd blog post: The Concertina Effect
- James Cross awarded Jean Monnet Chair
- IBIS part of major new project on Irish unification referendums
- Chinese Politics & International Relations Lecture Series
- New NPEE Podcast
- Launch Event, Mini-Public Deliberative Forum
- euandi Voter Advice App
- New MA in Gender, Politics and International Relations
- Artwork commissioned for GLOBUS research project
- Launch Event held for the Mini-Public Deliberation on Constitutional Futures
SPIRe to Host Lecture Series on Chinese Politics & International Relations
SPIRe will be hosting 6 public lectures on the theme "Chinese Politics & International Relations: Perspectives & Frontiers in Social Science Research". Dr Alex Dukalskis has been awarded funding from the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange to support the delivery of the series over the next two academic years.
Outline Schedule
6 February 2020, precise time & location TBD
Professor Andrew G Walder, Professor, School of Humanities and Sciences and Senior Fellow, Freeman-Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University
Professor Rosemary Foot, Professor and Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Politics and International Relations, Emeritus Fellow of St Antony's College, Oxford University.
Podcast of lecture: "China’s Resurgence and US Power: Is the Asia-Pacific Political Order Being Renegotiated?” (2 October 2019, 4pm, University Club)