Panel and networking event – Reimagining Welshness: New & Emerging Research

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams and Head of BBC Radio 1 Aled Haydn Jones will be among the contributors at Aberystwyth University’s Festival of Research later this month.

As part of the festival, the Centre for Welsh Politics and Society has organised a panel discussion entitled ‘Reimagining Welshness: New & Emerging Research’.

The event will showcase emerging work by early-career researchers from across Wales that contributes to developing new and evolving images of what constitutes ‘Welshness’. Together, the panel will seek to understand how we understand and define Wales today. 

The Panel will be chaired by Professor Matthew Jarvis, Deputy Head of the Graduate School at Aberystwyth University, and co-Chair of the Association for Welsh Writing in English. After the panel there will be an opportunity to network with complimentary teas, coffees, and pastries.

The annual festival highlights the world-leading research undertaken at Aberystwyth, with this year’s event forming part of the institution’s 150th anniversary celebrations.  

World-renowned expert on the history of slavery, Professor Olivette Otele, will deliver a public lecture while BBC Climate Editor Justin Rowlatt will speak about the climate change challenges the world faces post COP27 in Egypt.

Panel discussions will explore different aspects of Wales’ future, including Dr Rowan Williams and Professor Mererid Hopwood discussing the role of dialogue in creating better futures.  

Lee Waters MS, Wales’ Deputy Minister for Climate Change, will formally launch Aberystwyth University’s Centre for Transport and Mobility, promoting research on sustainable transport and travel patterns.

Further information and free tickets for the Festival’s public events are available by going to: aber.ac.uk/researchfest  

Professor Rhys Jones, Chair of the Aberystwyth University Festival of Research 2022, commented:

“One of the key aims of the Festival is to engage with local communities as well as sharing ideas and insights. We want to promote constructive dialogue between our University, our politicians and the public. I’m sure the discussions at the Festival will help shine a light on the urgent issues ahead of us as a country and a planet, and stimulate rigorous debate across all disciplines.”

Professor Elizabeth Treasure, Vice-Chancellor of Aberystwyth University, added: 

“It is great to see a wide range of speakers in a variety of fields taking part on so many engaging topics. The Festival of Research is a fantastic opportunity to bring some of the important work done here at the University to local and national audiences. 

“As we celebrate our 150th anniversary as Wales’ first university, it is an apt time to look forward to the challenges which face us and discuss the worlds in which we want to live.”This news originally appeared on the Aberystwyth University website.


Links

http://aber.ac.uk/researchfest