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Trevor Stack, CISRUL Director

Seminars

February 2016

I am pleased to report the publication of our edited volume Religion as a Category of Governance and Sovereignty in May 2015 by the European publisher Brill. The volume was the outcome of the British Academy conference which CISRUL co-hosted in 2010, and of the workshop held at Aberdeen in 2012. I was the lead editor of the volume, and contributed the introduction and a chapter, as did another CISRUL affiliate, Brian Brock.

Our second major publication will be the edited volume Political Community: The Idea of a Self-Governing People, which is the outcome of our 2013 and 2014 CISRUL workshops. There has been strong interest in publishing the volume.

Our publications will keep coming since we’re all developing plans for new research, and are actively applying to fund them. Several projects also have a focus on public impact. For example:

Another edited volume will come out of our 5th CISRUL workshop, which will take place this June on the topic of ‘Radical Protest in Constitutional Democracy’. The workshop will bring together many of the issues we’ve been debating in CISRUL over the past 4 years, including civil society, political community, and rule of law, as well as touching on many of the liveliest topics in the world today, including the policing of protest.

As well as the workshop, we held 2 public lectures last spring and have 2 more planned for the spring. The first public lecture last spring was by Professor Stanley Hauerwas, who is probably  the best-known US theologian. The second was by Professor Michael Keating, who is a leading authority on European nationalisms and was regularly invited by the BBC to speak on the Referendum last year.

We can also report that CISRUL’s first 4 PhD students have now successfully graduated:

Given that these students are leaving, we’re delighted that we were able to admit the highest number of new PhD students so far, 3 of whom have since started in September and 1 in January:

This brings to 13 the total number of students who are or have been in the CISRUL PhD programme. We continue to put considerable effort into ensuring the students interact with each other, as well as with us, in order to offset the notoriously lonely predicament of UK PhD students. We’ve also benefited enormously from having such an able, lively, diverse and cosmopolitan group of students, who engage fully in all our CISRUL events.

We’re now hoping to advertise further PhD studentships by the end of February 2016, to start in September 2016.

Finally, we’re focusing on encouraging prospective applicants for Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (e.g. from European Commission) to choose CISRUL as their host organization. To that end, we’re in the process of advertising funding to bring prospective Fellowship applicants for up to a week to develop their application with us.

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