Events

National CGE Modelling Workshop

JG Crawford Building, 132 Lennox Crossing, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia JG Crawford Building, 132 Lennox Crossing, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia

The Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU, and the VU Centre of Policy Studies are hosting the National Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) Modelling Workshop at the Weston Theatre in the Crawford School of Public Policy. The National CGE Workshop is an annual event that provides a forum for CGE modellers to exhibit and discuss their work. Register to be part of the audience and/or give a presentation. Students are encouraged to participate. The program will include a longer presentation from the key note speaker, and short presentations from participants of about 15—20 minutes, followed by questions The workshop will interest those new to CGE modelling, expert modellers and policy advisors who rely on modelling to analyse events with economic impacts. Link to the program: https://www.vu.edu.au/about-vu/news-events/events/national-cge-modelling-workshop Program & venue The program will be over 2 days. A draft program is now available. Draft program - National CGE Modelling Workshop The workshop venue is the Weston Theatre, JG Crawford Building, 132 Lennox Crossing, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia.

Free

Harmful care, careful harm: relational entanglements in migration

Virtual

Hosted by the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies, this timely event will bring together experts from the diverse corners of the field of migration studies to consider the complex and dynamic relationship between care and harm in international migration. Scholars of migration have documented the multivarious forms of harm that arise from the systems, institutions and interactions surrounding the movements of people across borders. Researchers have also explored the many forms of local and transnational care that are created by, or persist despite, international migration. In this event, we explore the ways care and harm are interwoven, interdependent and mutually constitutive in diverse migration contexts. Relationships of care (for example, between migrants or between migrants and ‘allies’ in civil society) may arise in response or resistance to the harms imposed by exploitative policies and practices. Equally, policies and practices that appear to be ‘caring’ may reproduce, obscure or naturalise harm, at times perpetuating the very inequalities and injustices they purport to address. Grounded in diverse settings including immigration detention, aged care, temporary labour migration schemes, the family home, and media platforms, the speakers will present brief talks drawing on their specialist research. The speakers will then come together for a panel discussion of harmful care, careful harm, and the […]

Free

HDR/ECR Workshop: Scholarly publishing in the Social Sciences

Macquarie University 25 Wally's Walk, North Ryde

For Social Sciences Week 2024, Visiting Research Fellow Kirsten Bell (Imperial College London) and Professor Lisa L. Wynn (Associate Editor of the journal American Ethnologist) will host a publishing workshop discussing changes afoot in the publishing arena, including a discussion of the effects of open access initiatives, combined with practical advice on getting published. This is an excellent opportunity to learn about trends in the academic publishing space and to ask questions about publishing your own work.  Bell is a former journal editor (of Critical Public Health) and Wynn is a current journal editor (an associate editor of American Ethnologist). In addition to her experience as a journal editor, Bell has published three columns in the former Chronicle of Higher Education blog, ‘Vitae’, providing tips on getting published. She also holds a Master of Publishing from Simon Fraser University, is a former member of the Executive Committee of Libraria, a collective of social scientists exploring new models of publishing that supported Berghahn and Pluto to move their stable of journals open access under a ‘subscribe to open’ model, and has helped the editorial team and board of Critical Public Health to leave their owner and publisher, Taylor & Francis, and move to a diamond open access journal. ​​

Free