Why Politics Is Failing Disabled People – And What To Do About It
An eye-opening new book exposes the barriers preventing fairer, more inclusive representation.
An eye-opening new book exposes the barriers preventing fairer, more inclusive representation.
In this contribution to Bulletin 28, Elizabeth Losh thinks through the implications of the Biden Administration’s proposed AI Bill of Rights.
In this contribution to Bulletin 27, Costas Gousis explores what he calls digital infrastructures of dissent, taking two migrant protests in Greece as case studies.
On Wednesday 9 November 2022, ISRF and the Interdisciplinary Global Development Centre (University of York) are hosting a webinar on “Rethinking recovery in Latin American landscapes: knowledges, conservation and justice.”
In this contribution to Bulletin 26, Elizabeth Evans speaks to the barriers disabled people face when seeking to run for political office in Britain and explores the implications this carries for questions of justice and representation.
Putin’s war has rekindled the civilisational clash between democracy and authoritarianism. However, a fundamental contradiction lies at the heart of Western foreign policy: economic liberalism undermines democracy promotion.
In November 2021, former ISRF Fellow Mike Makin-Waite discussed his book On Burnley Road: Class, Race and Politics in a Northern English Town with Manjeet Ramgotra and Councillor Anwar Afrasiab.
Former ISRF Fellow Craig Jones presents his new book, The War Lawyers. In this groundbreaking study, Jones explores how important law and war lawyers have become in the conduct of contemporary warfare, and how it is understood.