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politics

Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

How journalism faces a second wave of disruption from technology and changing audience behaviour

Nic Newman (former Future Media Controller, BBC and RISJ Research Associate) gives a talk for the Reuters Institute seminar series.
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Speaking Truth to Power and Naming Names: Comedic Critique in the Aftermath of 14 January

Nathanael Mannone (SOAS) gives the third talk in Panel 6: Re-ordering Society, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath.
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Daughters of Bourguiba, Daughters of Khadija? Mythical Genealogy and the Future of the Secular and Islamic Feminisms in Post-Revolutionary Tunisia

Lamia Ben Youssef (University of Alabama) gives the second talk in Panel 6: Re-ordering Society, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath.
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Youth Activism in Tunisia: From Occupying Streets to Liberating Institutions

Samar Samir Mezghanni (University of Cambridge) gives the first talk in Panel 6: Re-ordering Society, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Party Identification in Post-revolutionary Tunisia: Nida Tunis and Ennahda Compared

Ferdinand Eibl and Dörthe Engelcke (University of Oxford) gives the second talk in Panel 5: Post-revolutionary Politics, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Monitoring the New Politics: The Work of Al-Bawsala

Amira Yahyaoui (Al Bawsala) gives the first talk in Panel 5: Post-revolutionary Politics, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Reframing Gender Narratives through Transitional Justice in the Maghreb

Doris Gray (Al Akhawayn University) gives the third talk in Panel 4: Managing the Transition, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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The Tunisian Media in Transition

Nabil Cherni (University of Manouba) gives the first second in Panel 4: Managing the Transition, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Civil Society in the Tunisian Revolutionary Process

Mouldi Guessoumi (University of Tunis) gives the first talk in Panel 4: Managing the Transition, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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There’s a Riot Going On: From Haiti to Tunisia

Ronald Judy (University of Pittsburgh) gives the second talk in Panel 3: Locating the Tunisian Revolution and Its International Dimension, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Tunisia and Egypt: Commonalities and Differences

Gilbery Achcar (SOAS) gives the first talk in Panel 3: Locating the Tunisian Revolution and Its International Dimension, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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The Revolution in Sousse and the Rebuilding of Ennahda

Rory McCarthy (University of Oxford) gives the third talk in Panel 2: The Actors of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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The Labour Movement and the Culture of Protest: A Long View of Close Ties

Mohamed-Salah Omri (University of Oxford) gives the first talk in Panel 2: The Actors of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Origins of the Tunisian Revolution: Social Explosion and Political Frustration

Abdelwahed Mokni (University of Sfax) gives the first talk in Panel 2: The Actors of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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From the Ills of Poverty to the Will to Dignity: Some Causes of the Tunisian Uprising

Michael Ayari (International Crisis Group) gives the third talk in Part 1: Origins of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Rents, Politics and Development: Evidence from Ben Ali’s Tunisia

Adeel Malik and Ferdinand Eibl (University of Oxford) gives the second talk in Part 1: Origins of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Architecture of Dissent in Ben Ali’s Tunisia: 2001-2011

Laryssa Chomiak (Centre d’études maghrébines à Tunis) gives the first talk in Part 1: Origins of the Revolution, part of The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
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Opening of the conference

Dr Michael Willis, Director of the Middle East Centre, and Mohamed Salah-Omri, Associate Professor at St John’s College introduce The Tunisian Revolution: Origins, Course and Aftermath
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)

How did the UK national press portray Bulgarians and Romanians prior to the lifting of transitional controls on 1 January 2014?

William Allen, Migration Observatory, COMPAS, University of Oxford, gives a talk for the COMPAS Breakfast Briefing series.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Social Media: A Critical Introduction

Christian Fuchs, Professor of Social Media at Westminster University, leads the discussion of his recently published book Social Media: A Critical Introduction, which navigates the controversies and contradictions of the complex digital media landscape.

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