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24 February 2025 - 24 February 2025

6:00PM - 8:30PM

Durham University Business School, The Waterside Building, Riverside Place, Durham DH1 1SL

  • Free

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Convocation: Panel Discussion and Annual Review of 2024

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Vice-Chancellor and Warden, Professor Karen O'Brien

Our Vice-Chancellor and Warden, Professor Karen O’Brien, invites you to join her on Monday 24 February 2025 on campus for this year’s meeting of Convocation. 

As part of the evening, Professor Janet Stewart will chair a panel of leading academics who will discuss the subject of Transformative Humanities.  

Following the panel discussion there will be a University update by Professor O'Brien.  

On conclusion of the evening’s formalities, there will be light refreshments served and the opportunity for socialising and networking with alumni.  

Doors open at 5.30pm for a 6pm prompt start.

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Speakers

Transformative Humanities

Transformative Humanities brings together distinctive approaches to humanities research and education within the academy and across a wide range of partners and communities. Inflected across and between disciplines it focuses on six thematic areas including Social Justice, Community and Policy; Digital Humanities and Culture; and Creativity, and Heritage.

Professor Edith Hall, Professor Alex Broadbent, Professor Anna Rowlands and Professor Simon James on our panel of leading academics will bring their unique experiences and expertise in this field to the table.    

Professor Edith Hall’s research, publications and public engagement have always put urgent contemporary issues at the centre of the radar, using ancient Greek and Roman culture to sharpen modern thinking on ethnicity, gender, social class, mental health and the environment. She will draw on her current position, leading a programme delivering courses that use classical sources for developing skills and competencies in His Majesty's Prisons across the United Kingdom. 

Professor Simon James will highlight his work leading research projects with The Durham Commission on Creativity and Education (2017-present) and Child of the North (2025). Posing questions surrounding human creativity, such as 'does our current education system do all it can to encourage children and young people to be creative and to think creatively?', he will discuss potential impacts for teachers, cultural organisations and policymakers.   

Professor Anna Rowlands has been working as an adviser within the Vatican, enabling her to give unparalleled insights. She will discuss the unprecedented global listening process with grassroots Catholics that the Vatican has been engaging with over the last three years. The Church faces, in a vast intercultural context, many of the same issues facing our political cultures: questions of trust, power, participation, and building a community of communities for the common good. 

Professor Alex Broadbent directs the Centre for Philosophy of Epidemiology, Medicine, and Public Health, a joint enterprise between Durham and the University of Johannesburg. He publishes in philosophy, epidemiology, medicine, and law journals, and has engaged with policy and litigation around public health. He will talk about the prospects for bringing the humanities and sciences closer together, for practical as well as intellectual benefits. He may even suggest that humanities and science faculties should be combined.

Pricing

Free