- Designing Policies for Growth
Date: Monday 19 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speaker: Professor Philippe Aghion - Regulating doctors and the custody of virtue
Date: Tuesday 20 January 2009 1.00pm
Location: H615 (CARR seminar room), Connaught House
Speakers: Professor Mary Dixon-Woods; Chair: Professor Sally Lloyd-Bostock - All That It Was... All That It Is
Date: Tuesday 20 January 2009 1.05pm
Location: Shaw Library, Old Building
Speaker: Andrew Jackson - Designing Policies for Growth
Date: Tuesday 20 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speaker: Professor Philippe Aghion - World War Two: behind closed doors
Date: Tuesday 20 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House
Speaker: Laurence Rees - Thinking Like a Social Scientist: a lecture by Professor Robin Mansell
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 1.05pm
Location: U8, Tower 1
Speaker: Professor Robin Mansell - How is China Powered for its Economic Growth – can we learn any lessons from it?
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 4.00pm
Location: D302, Clement House
Speaker: Dr Guy S. Liu - The Islamic Republic of Iran and the GCC States: Thirty Years of Revolution and Realpolitik
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 4.30pm
Location: S78, St Clements Building
Speaker: Dr Stephanie Cronin - Oral Epic and the Idea of National Literatures in Europe: Hasanaginica, Herder and Vico
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 6.00pm
Location: Room 1.15, New Academic Building
Speaker: Professor Joep Leerssen - The Incompatibility of Science and Religion
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: U8, Tower 1
Speaker: Professor John Worrall - Georgia: has Europe let Russia off the hook?
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House
Speaker: Professor Salome Zourabichvili, Sabine Freizer - The Reality of Hope: Obama and Europe after the Election
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speakers: Robert Kagan, Charles Grant, Robin Niblett; Chair: Professor Mick Cox - Designing Policies for Growth
Date: Wednesday 21 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speaker: Professor Philippe Aghion - Translating an organizational form: The case of Indymedia
Date: Thursday 22 January 2009 12.30pm
Location: New Academic Building 1.18
Speaker: Professor Andre Spicer, Chair: Professor Jude Howell - Alexandra Dariescu (piano)
Date: Thursday 22 January 2009 1.05pm
Location: Shaw Library, Old Building
- The Great Transformation: how China changed in the long 1970s
Date: Thursday 22 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speaker: Professor Chen Jian - Liberal Fascism: the uses and abuses of the F-word
Date: Tuesday 27 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House
Speaker: Jonah Goldberg - The Shifting Distribution of World Economic Activity: China and global imbalance
Date: Tuesday 27 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speaker: Professor Danny Quah - China and the Rule of Law: no quick fix
Date: Wednesday 28 January 2009 2.00pm
Location: D202, Clement House
Speaker: Katie Lee - Bad Science
Date: Wednesday 28 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speaker: Dr Ben Goldacre - Is Global Democracy Possible?
Date: Wednesday 28 January 2009 6.30pm
Location: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speaker: Professor Daniele Archibugi, Professor Michael Cox, George Monbiot - Adrian Ward (tenor), Simon Lepper (piano)
Date: Thursday 29 January 2009 1.05pm
Location: Shaw Library, Old Building
- China 2009: the critical year of China’s economy
Date: Saturday 31 January 2009 9.15am
Location: Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House
Speaker: Dr. Kerry Brown, Dr. Kent Deng, Professor Paul Herrling, Professor Athar Hussain, Professor Zhang Jun, Professor Peter Nolan, Daniel Pearson, Professor Danny Quah, Dr. Paul Sheng, Gabriel Stein, Professor Wang Yiming and Professor Arne Westad
"What the caterpillar calls the end, the rest of the world calls a butterfly." Lao Tzu
Lectures at LSE
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Approach to teaching
Methods there are many, principles but few, methods often change, principles never do
So...we will go to all of these right???EF will organise it again right???And we just have to pay lunch,is it?
ReplyDeleteLast time 8 people were 'definitely' going to go and after alot of organisation, on the day of the trip they 'suddenly' changed their minds. Instead they were going to Oxford and 'suddenly' changed their minds which was all hopeless.
ReplyDeleteTherefore how do you suggest I convince EF that people will actually go?
If you can suggest that then we can visit a lot of lectures - we have a lot of time...