Wednesday, 4 January 2023

[Conference Programme] From Student Unions to Trade Unions: Campus-Based Activism and Beyond

 We are delighted to announce the programme for our event "From Student Unions to Trade Unions: Campus-Based Activism and Beyond". This conference is supported by the Society for the Study of Labour History (SSLH). It will take place over two days (12 and 13 January) in Newcastle upon Tyne, followed by some online sessions on 27 January. For further information, please contact Daniel Laqua (daniel.laqua@northumbria.ac.uk) or register via this link (individual sign-up for each day).


From Student Unions to Trade Unions: 

Campus-Based Activism and Beyond

 

 12–13 January 2023 (Newcastle upon Tyne) and 27 January 2023 (online)

 

 

Thursday 12 January

 

15h00 – Welcome Session

·       Daniel Laqua (Associate Professor of European History, Northumbria University) – Introduction

·       Georgina Brewis (Professor of Social History, University College London) – New research into archiving and record keeping practices in UK student union


15h20 – International Students (chair: Emily Sharp, PhD Candidate in History, Northumbria University)

·       Edward Anderson (Assistant Professor in History, Northumbria University) – Anti-Imperialism, Student Politics, and Memorialisation: Indian Students in Newcastle at the Twilight of the British Empire

·       Jodi Burkett (Senior Lecturer in History, Portsmouth University) – In Service of the Community or the State? Overseas Students and Language Provision [online]

16h20 – Coffee, Tea and Cake

 16h35 – Protest in the ‘Long 1970s’ (chair: Sam Blaxland, ‘Generation UCL’ Fellow, University College London)

·       Frederick Coombes (PhD Candidate in African History, University of Leeds) – ‘I Was Really Privileged’: The Ambiguities of Protest in the Face of Repression, Deportation and Incarceration around l’Université de Dakar, 1966–1973

·       Chris Perkins (Senior Lecturer in Japanese, University of Edinburgh) – Japan’s 1968 on Trial

·       Sarah Campbell (Senior Lecturer in Irish and British History, Newcastle University) – ‘The Lines Have Been Drawn’: The H-Block Protest and Student Activism in Northern Ireland, 1977–1981

 18h00 – End of Day 1

 

 

Friday 13 January

 9h20 – Arrival / Coffee and Tea

9h35 – Confronting Political Change (chair: Charlotte Alston, Professor of History, Northumbria University)

·       Rory Hanna (PhD Candidate in History, University of Sheffield) – Between Solidarity and Scepticism: West German Students and Afro-Asian Activism, 1956–1962

·       Emily Sharp (PhD Candidate in History, Northumbria University) – British Students and the Practice of Solidarity in the 1970s and 1980s

·       Anne HEFFERNAN (Assistant Professor in Southern African History, Durham University) – Students in (the) Transition: How Student Movements Navigated South Africa’s Political Transition into the Post-Apartheid Era

 11h00 – Coffee and Tea

11h15 Beyond University Students (chair: Georgina Brewis, Professor of Social History, University College London)

·       George Bodie (Lecturer in History, Goldsmiths College) – ‘A Terrible Blow to All National Liberation Movements’: The Cuban Missile Crisis through the Eyes of African Trade Unionist-Students in Berlin, 1962

·       Laura Tisdall (NUAcT Fellow in History, Newcastle University) – The National Union of School Students (NUSS) and Age-Based Activism in Cold War Britain

 12h15 – Lunch

13h10 – Protest and Subversion Today (chair: Linsey Robb, Associate Professor of British History, Northumbria University)

·       Jean-Thomas Martelli (Research Fellow, International Institute for Asian Studies, Leiden University) – Can the Popular Disembody Populism? Students and the Re-appropriation of the Nationalist Floating Signifier in Contemporary Indian Politics

·       Heather McKnight (Magnetic Ideals Collective, Brighton) – Reimagining the University through Resistance: The Prefigurative Possibilities of Joint Working, Protest and Academic Freedom

 

14h10 – Coffee and Tea

 

14h30 – Personal and Political Trajectories (chair: James Koranyi, Associate Professor of History, Durham University)

·       Andreea Dahlquist (Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies) – Fascist Activism in the Interwar Years: From Student Movement to Political Militantism in the Shadow of the Romanian-Polish Alliance [co-authored paper, with Bogdan-Alexandru Schipor (Senior Researcher in Contemporary History, A.D. Xenopol History Institute of the Romanian Academy)]

·       Dan Hodgkinson (Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, University of Oxford) – Living with Ruins: Past Dreams and Their Personal Effects at the End of the Cold War in Zimbabwe

·       Safia Dahani (Postdoctoral Fellow, École des hautes études en sciences sociales / Centre européen de sociologie et de science politique, Paris) – A New Branch of Political Recruitment? The Recent Conversion of FAGE Leaders in the French Political Field

 

15h55 – End of Day 2 (closing words: Daniel Laqua, Associate Professor of European History, Northumbria University)

 

 

Friday 27 January

 10h40 Online Panel 1: Students and Social Movements

·       Opening / Reflections on in-person events

·       Antonin Dubois (EHESS Paris / Université de Franche-Comté) – Should Students Unionise? Debates on Trade-Unionism among French Students, 1900–1946

·       Giuseppe Lipari (PhD Candidate, Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence) – School Student Unions and Trade Unions in the Mobilisations of 2014–2015 in Italy

 11h50 Lunch Break

 12h40 Online Panel 2: Student Lives

·       Ellen R. Dixon (PhD Candidate in International Relations, Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington / President, New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations), Jacqueline Watt (PhD Student in Social Anthropology

Massey University / Co-President, Massey @ Distance Students’ Association) and Gwen Palmer Steeds (Researcher and Equity Officer, Victoria University of Wellington Students’ Association)  – In-Debted Lives: The Political Ecology of the Campaigns Against Student Debt in Aotearoa New Zealand

·       Sarah Crook (Senior Lecturer in British History, Swansea University) – Building the Healthy Campus: Students and Mental Health Activism in 1960s and 1970s Britain

·       Discussant: Heather Ellis (Vice-Chancellor’s Fellow, School of Education, Sheffield University)

 13h50 Break

 14h05 Online Panel 3: Students and (Inter-)National Politics

·       Miroslav Vašík (PhD Candidate in History, Charles University Prague) – Czech Students in the 1848 Revolution: Connecting Prague and the Countryside?

·       Ana-Maria Stan (Senior Researcher in History, Babeş-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca) – La Petite Entente des Étudiants: An Example of Student Activism and Student Diplomacy in Interwar Eastern Europe

·       Nikhil Tiwari (Ph.D. Candidate, Centre for East Asian Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University) – Inquiry into the Role of Student Movements in Taiwan’s Democratisation and Democratic Consolidation

·       Discussant: Ljubica Spaskovska (Lecturer in European History, University of Exeter)

 

15h30 Break

 

15h45 Launch Event

·       Daniel Laqua (Associate Professor of European History, Northumbria University) and Nikolaos Papadogiannis (Lecturer in European History, Stirling University) – Youth and Internationalism in the Twentieth Century: Special Journal Issue of Social History


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