The CMR Seminar Series is an annual event that brings together scholars working cross-disciplinarily with minorities.
* The First Seminar Series – Minorities in Times of Scarcity and Conflict will be featured in RAMS, Routledge – 🔗 Routledge Publication
Reconciliation in a Fragmented World: Rethinking Justice, Accountability, and Inclusion
Join us on the latest CMR seminar series as we bring together scholars exploring the complexities of reconciliation in an era defined by intensive transformations. Amidst the chaos of the contemporary world—where the future paradoxically poses as both a source of hope and an abyss of uncertainty—rec…
Read MoreLiving Heritage: Challenges in the politics of ownership and belonging
Join us on the latest CMR seminar series. The event will bring together scholars working with the concept and context of living heritage that either constrains or enhances diversity, minority positions and dimensions of indigeneity. The proposed approach will consider the relevant framework spelt ou…
Read MoreTransformative embodiments: Disruption, affect and empathy in minority lives
You are welcome to attend the latest CMR seminar series. The event will bring together scholars working across disciplines on migration, colonialism, othering, diversity, and indigeneity beyond conventional text-centred interpretations, to explore the social, experiential, affective and relational d…
Read MoreRoutledge Advances in Minority Studies
We are very happy to share a new series “Routledge Advances in Minority Studies” which Stavroula Pypirou is co-editing with Kyriaki Topidi of the European Centre for Minority Issues. The series will be home to interdisciplinary approaches to intersectional understandings of minorities.
Read MoreMinorities in Times of Scarcity and Conflict
You are welcome to attend the latest CMR seminar series. The event will bring together scholars working crossdisciplinarily on migration, colonialism, othering, indigeneity and diversity who go beyond the conventional approach to resource scarcity as the product of demographic stress on the natural …
Read More