2005 Conference

St Catherine’s College, Oxford 6-8 January 2005
Event timetable

Thursday 6th Jan 2005

2.00 – 4.00                  Arrival

4.00 – 4.30                  Tea

4.30 – 6.00                  Serena Olsaretti, University of Cambridge

                                      ‘Adaptive preferences’

6.00 – 7.00                  Reception sponsored by Imprint Academic and the editors of History of Political Thought

7.00 – 8.30                  Dinner

8.30                               Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University

‘Representation revisited:  the case for less accountability’

Friday 7th Jan 2005

8.00 – 9.00                 Breakfast

9.15 – 10.45                 Annabel Brett, University of Cambridge

                                    ‘Marsilius of Padua and the politics of freedom’

10.45 – 11.15               Coffee

11.15 – 12.45               Simon Caney, University of Birmingham

                                    ‘Cosmopolitan justice and global interdependence’

1.00 – 2.00                  Lunch

2.00 – 3.30                  Free Time

3.45 – 4.15                   Tea

4.15                               AGM

4.45 – 6.15                  Richard Tuck, Harvard University            

‘Hobbes and Rousseau’

6.15 – 7.15                  Contemporary Political Theory Reception

Sponsored by Palgrave Macmillan

7.15 – 8.30                  Dinner

8:30                              David Armitage, Harvard University

                                    ‘What sex is the state?’

Saturday 8th Jan 2005

8.00 – 9.00                  Breakfast

9.15 – 10.45                 Judith Squires, University of Bristol 

‘Fairness for all?  Evaluating the new Equalities Agenda’

10.45 – 11.15              Coffee

11.15 – 12.45              Stuart White, Jesus College, Oxford

‘Freedom of speech and respect for religion’

12.45                            Conference Ends

 


 

Reserve speakers: Christopher Brooke & Sonia Kruks

List of Conference Attendants 2005

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Publications

Clare Chambers on 'Talking Politics'