Listmembers may be interested in this event, which includes contributions from narrative projects on health and wellbeing issues.
Living with the cuts: Policy, politics and everyday lives in the recession
Friday 30th May 2014, 9.30-17.30, British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB
A day conference organised by the University of East London (UEL), Centre for Narrative Research (CNR) at UEL, & NOVELLA (Narratives of Everyday Lives and Linked Approaches) Research Methods Node at the Institute of Education, with the Tavistock Centre.
Many people in the UK are now living with the impact of recession and public spending cuts in their daily lives; larger effects are still to come. Government and policy-makers predict that cuts will continue till the end of the decade, yet these measures' usefulness and necessity are much debated. This day conference brings together academics, policymakers, practitioners, and community researchers, to discuss the issues and levels of analysis that need to be taken into account when studying the cuts, and to explore the human effects and socio-political significance of living in recession.
Speakers include:
Anita Tiessen, UNICEF UK
Ann Phoenix, NOVELLA
Marcus Evans, Tavistock Centre
Mike Savage, LSE
Faiza Shaheen, New Economics Foundation
Tim Hall, University of East London and the Living Wage Campaign
Mike Rustin, Centre for Narrative Research, University of East London and Tavistock Centre
Martha Nussbaum, University of Chicago
For more information and to book a place at the conference, please visit our online store
http://store.ioe.ac.uk/browse/extra_info.asp?compid=1&modid=2&deptid=112&catid=42&prodid=281
Conference fees: £25 – Students, unemployed and low-waged; £50 – All other delegates
Lunch and light refreshments are included.
Conference Schedule:
9.30-10.00: Registration; introduction 10.00-11.30:
Panel 1: Policies, stories and realities of recession living Chair: Rebecca O'Connell, NOVELLA
Anita Tiessen, UNICEF UK: Child well-being: How are children in the UK faring?
Ann Phoenix, NOVELLA: Narratives of negotiating are not enough: Children, families and consumption in straitened circumstances.
Marcus Evans, Tavistock Centre: 'I'm beyond caring'. The failure in social systems to support staff and the patients they care for: A response to the Francis report.
Discussant: Janet Boddy, NOVELLA and Sussex University
Tea/coffee: 11.30-11.45
11.45-1.15: Panel 2: Inequality, poverty and division. Chair: Gavin Poynter, London East Research Institute, UEL
Mike Savage, LSE: Class divisions in contemporary Britain: insights from the BBC's Great British Class Survey.
Faiza Shaheen, New Economics Foundation: Insecurity, poverty and inequality - a temporary blip or here to stay?
Tim Hall, University of East London: Living wage campaigns
Discussant: Nira Yuval-Davis, UEL (Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging)
1.15-2.15: Lunch; tea and coffee
2.15-3.45: Panel 3: Everyday lives and the cuts. Chair: Cigdem Esin, CNR
Angie Voela, Myrto Tsilimpounidis and Alice Sampson, UEL (Centre for Social Justice and Change and Psychosocial Studies Research Group): Foodbanks: Charity and the charitable subject at a time of crisis.
Ian Tucker, UEL (CNR and Psychology and Social Change Research Group): Austerity, social media and mental health communities
Corinne Squire, NOVELLA and CNR: Living with HIV: Precarity and para-liberalism
Tracey Jensen, UEL: Austerity media, 'poverty porn', and welfare reform
The Drawing Shed.
Discussant: David Harper, UEL (CNR and Psychology and Social Change Research Group).
3.45-4.00: Tea/coffee
4.00-5.30: Panel 4: Reframing the future. Chair: Corinne Squire, NOVELLA/CNR
Martha Nussbaum, University of Chicago: Austerity and the fate of the humanities
Michael Rustin, UEL and Tavistock Centre: Living with the cuts - or not
Discussant: Meera Tiwari, UEL
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