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GRADUATE/FACULTY RESEARCH GROUPS


The CRASSH graduate/ faculty groups act as a barometer for disciplinary development and curricular change, aptly demonstrated by the research interests explored by graduates and faculty over the past year. Eleven groups ran a range of activities, from Postcolonial Empires to Science, Technology and Bio­Social Studies.


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Cambridge Endangered Languages and Cultures Group Thomas M Artiss (Sociology, PPSIS) Thomas Godard (Linguistics, MML) Elena Pala (Linguistics, MML) Natalia I Petrovskaia (Anglo­Saxon, Norse and Celtic) Cambridge Interdisciplinary Reproduction Forum John Appleby (Family Research) Salim Al­Gailani (History and Philosophy of Science) Susanna Graham (Family Research) Zeynep Gürtin­Broadbent (Family Research) Jesse Olszynko­Gryn (History and Philosophy of Science) Natasha Theodosiou (Clinical Medicine) Cambridge Late Antiquity Network Seminar Margaret McCarthy (History) Mike Humphreys (History) Robin Whelan (Faculty of Classics) City Seminar Anita Bakshi (Architecture) Konstantin Kastrissianakis (Architecture) Marlene Schafers (Anthropology) East European Memory Studies Research Group Julie Fedor (Slavonic Studies) Judy Brown (Slavonic Studies) GreenBRIDGE Buildings, Research, Innovation, Development, Governance, Energy Tatiana V Vakhitova (Sustainable Development)


Aidan Parkinson (Sustainable Development) Berhard Dusch (Institute for Manufacturing) Magdalini Makrodimitri (Architectural and Urban Studies) Health and Welfare Research Group Julie Walsh (History and Philosophy of Science) Erica Borgstrom (Public Health) Christopher Bunn (Metabolic Science) Neil Singh (Clinical Medicine)


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Rebecca Whyte (History) Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Network Bruno De­Nicola (Asian and Middle Eastern Studies) Ignacio Sánchez (Asian and Middle Eastern Studies) James Weaver (Middle Eastern Studies) Postcolonial Empires: Transnational Being and Ontological Politics Catherine Rashid (English) Catriona McAllister (Latin American Studies) Jonathan Agensky (POLIS)  Dacia Viejo­Rose (Archaeology) Naoise MacSweeney (Archaeology) Science, Technology and Bio­Social Studies Forum Adam Bostanci (History and Philosophy of Science) Alvaro Figueredo (Judge Business School) Dmitriy Myelnikov (History and Philosophy of Science) Hauke Riesch (Judge Business School)


centre for research in the arts, social sciences and humanities


EXPLORE SUSTAINABILITY IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT!


» GreenBRIDGE University Society is an interdisciplinary group of students at the University of Cambridge interested in the sustainability of the built environment.


» ‘BRIDGE’ in our name stands for Buildings, Research, Innovation, Development, Governance and Energy.


» GreenBRIDGE offers a platform for discussion of ecological, social, cultural, technological and economic issues which affect the built environment.


» GreenBRIDGE aims to provide connections both between and within disciplines and cultures; a bridge from the past to a sustainable future, based on shared values. More generally, the Society aims to disseminate knowledge and raise awareness about different aspects of sustainability in the built environment to a wider audience.


» More information on our web-page: www.greenbridge.org.uk


11 may 2011 rassh


17 mill lane ambridge


a collaboration between the CRASSH research seminar on “Postcolonial Empires: Transnational Being and Ontlogical Politics” and the


“Radical Distrust” research programme at the Centre for Colonial and


Postcolonial Studies, University of Kent


It was through CRASSH’s support, in funding,


administration and publicity, that a series of chance meetings between postgraduate students was


transformed into a well­established group of researchers s.


ELENA PALA (Linguistics) and THOMAS M ARTISS (Sociology) Graduate/ Faculty Group Conveners


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