
Cambridge is fielding a series of talks and debates by leading academics on a range of global challenges at this year's Hay literary Festival.
Cambridge is fielding a series of talks and debates by leading academics on a range of global challenges at this year's Hay literary Festival.
探花直播Cambridge experts cut through the political and media spin on big issues and look at them with real attention and intellectual rigour.
Peter Florence
A series of talks and debates by Cambridge academics on pressing contemporary issues kicks off this week at the Hay Festival.
This year is the 25th anniversary of the Festival and the fourth year running that the 探花直播 of Cambridge has run a series of talks there as part of its commitment to public engagement.
This year's line-up includes Paul Cartledge, A.G. Leventis Professor of Greek Culture, who will be participating in three of the 10 sessions on in the Classics series on Herodotus, the 鈥淔ather of History鈥, on Plato and on the aspirations and concepts of civilisation, democracy, drama, virtue, victory, liberty and xenia and what the study of Classics has meant in the wider world.
For the first time, Cambridge academics will take part in a series of debates about contemporary political and social issues, including Europe, democracy and urban violence.听 Among those taking part in the Europe debate is Professor Robert Tombs who has written a blog on the implications for France and Europe of the election of Francois Hollande as president of France.
Another debate covers the broader cultural implications of current events, with Professor Adrian Poole, Professor Alison Sinclair and Jennifer Wallace discussing the modern meaning of tragedy and literary representation of current events. Other speakers include Professor Susan Golombok on alternative family structures, Professor Martin Jones on the archaeology of food, Carolin Crawford on the birth and death of stars, Dame Patricia Hodgson on media regulation in the shadow of the Leveson Inquiry, Professor David Spiegelhalter on our risk society and Professor Stefan Collini on what universities are for.
Professor Lawrence Sherman will talk about how science is transforming policing in a session entitled 鈥 探花直播new police knowledge鈥. 探花直播session will be introduced by Her Majesty鈥檚 Chief Inspector of Constabulary Sir Denis O鈥機onnor.
Brendan Burchell, senior lecturer in the Sociology Department, will be in conversation with Julia Hobsbawm, honorary visiting professor in networking at Cass Business School, about the future of work.
Other Cambridge academics speaking at Hay are Professor John Thompson, Professor Robert Macfarlane, Professor Martin Rees, Professor John Barrow, Dr Julian Allwood and Professor David MacKay.
Nicola Buckley, head of public engagement at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, said: 鈥 探花直播Cambridge series is a wonderful way to get the fascinating research being done at the 探花直播 out to the public. 探花直播Hay Festival draws an international cross-section of people, from policy makers to prospective university students. It is a fantastic platform for our research and this year鈥檚 debates aim to highlight the broad range of what we do at the 探花直播 and its relevance to the key issues we face today.鈥
Peter Florence, director of the Hay Festival, said: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 thrilling about this year鈥檚 series is how exacting it is about society. 探花直播Cambridge experts cut through the political and media spin on big issues and look at them with real attention and intellectual rigour听听- from policing to European integration and 21st century family structure and risk. It鈥檚 a timely reminder about the value of authority; an aspiration that 鈥榩olicy鈥 might be formed by the best ideas and analysis rather than doctrinaire inclination or what鈥檚 easiest to sell. What else would you want from the world鈥檚 greatest 探花直播 but the best thinking on subjects that matter?鈥
This work is licensed under a . If you use this content on your site please link back to this page.