A host of events across the University are taking place throughout April. Here are some of the highlights:
Eleanor Rathbone Social Justice Lecture 2016-17
The defining down of Britain: How an entire country was made to work for the enrichment of a small elite in London
Wednesday 26 April, 5-7pm. Free.
Eleanor Rathbone Building
Aditya Chakrabortty is senior economics commentator for the Guardian. He will discuss the important choices made in post-crash Britain and how, and why, the national economy has become focused on a rich elite in London.
Open Lectures on Risk: The role of risk and uncertainty in decision making
Monday 24 April, 5.30-6.30pm. Free.
Victoria Gallery & Museum
Understand the principles of risk and uncertainty and why they are crucial to decision making. Dr Veronica Bowman from the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory will illustrate her talk with a scenario involving the spread of a disease in a city.
Responding to the refugee challenge
Thursday 27 April, 1.30-5pm. Free.
Rendall Building
Explore responses to the challenges posed by the influx of refugees from war-torn Middle Eastern countries with three experts in migration and asylum policies: Professor Annette Junemann from the University of Hamburg, Dr Selma Porobic from the Centre for Refugee at the University of Sarajevo, and Dr Lucy Mayblin from the University of Warwick.
New challenges in medical negligence law
Thursday 20 April, 9.15am-4.30pm. £40/ £15.
Bluecoat Chambers
The balance between concerns for patient rights and an nervousness about a spiralling compensation culture is leading to a highly charged debate in the press. Join experts to critically reflect on this important area of law at a time when the NHS is facing unparalleled financial challenges.
Anatomy’s photography
Wednesday 26 April, 3.30-5pm. Free.
Liverpool Medical Institution
Discover the variety of ways specialists and non-specialists have used anatomical images between 1860-1950, in political, religious, scientific, social and legal contexts. The speaker Michael Sappol is the author of ‘A Traffic in Dead Bodies: Anatomical Dissection and Embodied Social Identity in 19th Century America‘.
Ovid’s missing Corpus
Tuesday 25 April, 5-6.30pm. Free.
Rendall Building
Ovid’s remains were never discovered. Dr Nora Goldschmidt, from the University of Durham, examines the attempts made by writers, artists and archaeologists to use the Latin poet’s textual corpus to supply the absence of Ovid’s material body.
Lunchtime concert series
Wednesdays, 1pm. Free.
Victoria Gallery & Museum
Join the School of Music for a series of free chamber music concert.
26 April: Roopa Panesar and Kousic Sen
Victoria Gallery & Museum
UK/China Cultural Exchange Lab
Friday, 7 April, 11am-3pm.
Part of the LOOK 17 Festival, the lab will explore current practices of cultural exchange between the UK and China, with the aim of developing practical collaborations.
North End Writers
Saturday, 8 April, 11am-1pm.
North End Writers is a group seeking to promote creative writing and its many benefits.
Easter Holiday Workshop
Thursday, 13 April, 1-4pm.
Get crafty and make colourful egg bunting and cute bunny ears.
Thursday 20 April, 1-4pm
Make your own 3D cardboard sculpture of an Easter bunny or chick to take home.
Family Saturday
Saturday, 29 April, 1-4pm.
Create a folded rat out of an unwanted book, inspired by the VG&M’s plague exhibition.
Ness Gardens
RSPB up with the larks & breakfast
Saturday 8 April, 7-9am.
The gardens provide homes to 84 species of birds. Enjoy an early morning walk with experts from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.
Wild Food Day
Sunday 23 April, 9.30am-4.30pm.
Spend the day in the gardens at the height of spring, getting to know the edible wildlife.
Wirral potters exhibition
Thursday 27 April-Sunday 7 May, 10am-5pm.
Come and see the work of the 20 Wirral Potters, a group of enthusiastic local artists.
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