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Following the establishment of the Midlands African Studies Hub (MASH) in Birmingham in September 2017, we are holding a one-day conference at Coventry University on the theme of ‘Contesting Injustice: People’s mobilisation from below’ and invite you to submit a paper proposal.
In Kenya, as in many ODA countries, climate change and violent extremism (VE) are pressing societal challenges.
Self-funded CBiS studentship: what is the impact of Intellectual Property Rights protection on Foreign Direct Investment? A panel analysis in developed and developing countries.
Professor Marylyn Carrigan was an invited keynote speaker at the BAM Marketing and Retail special interest group workshop on Sustainability and Ethical Consumption held at the University of Surrey, May 28th, 2016.
A new ‘Living Library’ showcasing good-practice examples of collaborative short food supply chains has been launched.
The Centre for Intelligent Healthcare (CIH) has established a specialist research facility at Coventry University’s Technology Park which is investigating the benefits of new equipment and techniques that could be used for microvascular imaging – generating pictures of the body’s smallest blood vessels.
CEP-UK has announced that Clinical Exercise Physiologists are now eligible for professional registration with the Registration Council for Clinical Physiologists, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Academy for Healthcare Science (AHCS).
This seminar will explore a paper on food waste that used survey data and Bayesian models and it will discuss how these models can be applied to survey data.
This event will discuss the challenges and opportunities facing transport policymakers due to the transition to net zero.
This seminar will study the market for CEOs of large publicly traded US firms, analyse new CEOs’ prior connections to the hiring firm, and explore how hiring choices are determined.
CDS is hosting Dr Yuan Yang, Assistant Professor in Biomedical Engineering at University of Oklahoma, USA, to deliver a seminar on novel interventions into non-invasive brain stimulation technology on stroke patients.
Whilst both collective and collaborative drawing is being widely explored internationally, both within and beyond educational institutions, there is surprisingly little serious research published on the topic. This realisation led to the first international Drawing Conversations Symposium, accompanied by the Drawn Conversations Exhibition at Coventry University, UK, in December 2015, and a series of publications.
Professor Mark Wheatley and collaborators from Aston University, Dr John Simms and Professor David Poyner, have been awarded a grant of £177,497 from the BBSRC Follow-on Fund to develop new technology that will potentially revolutionise the drug discovery process.
COPIM is an international partnership of researchers, universities, librarians, open access book publishers and infrastructure providers. It is building community-owned, open systems and infrastructures to enable open access book publishing to flourish.
Urban Villages aims to bring together Roma and non-Roma to co-create a short film, images and a digital scrapbook exhibition that focuses on the experiences, identity and voices of the Roma people told by the Roma people.
The Makaneyyat research group is working to study and build durable agroecosystems at the landscape scale in Palestine.
A series dedicated to exploring how intimate spaces are shaped by postdigital media culture and our means of knowing and feeling the domestic, private and familial through social media, film, television, physical culture, screen media arts, performance.
The mountains, hills and valleys of Wales play a central role in the culture, recreation, economy and environment of the Welsh nation and yet they are declining. The semi-wild (or semi-feral pony) is native to Wales and can play a critical role in reversing that decline.
The Future of Food 2 symposium invites stakeholders across business and society to present, discuss and collaborate in moving forward the sustainable food agenda: eating socially and sourcing sustainably.
This webinar by the Centre for Data Science will discuss why a neural network might mistake what clearly looks like a panda for a gibbon and other questions pertinent to interpreting neural network outputs.