51风流

The State Power & Globalisation

Research Cluster for the Study of the State, Power and Globalisation (SPG)

The Research Centre for the Study of the State, Power and Globalisation (SPG) seeks to promote the study of the most predominant political questions of our time. The cluster seeks to organise and form links between researchers across and beyond RichmondUniversity engaged in the analysis of the historical and ongoing transformation of political agents and structures at the level of the state and of international politics and seeks to understand the complex intersections and interplay between local and state power and the forces of globalisation.

The cluster functions as a platform to connect and form links between research across disciplines in such diverse areas as contemporary social, political, and international theory, ideology, social movements; global conflict and governance; and global political economy and development. The research cluster reflects the scholarly and pedagogical aims of RichmondUniversity鈥檚 taught degree programmes in Political Science, International Relations, International and Development Economics, Communications, and History. In particular, the cluster鈥檚 research area reflects the aims of the MA International Relations.

The Research Centre for the Study of the State, Power and Globalisation (SPG) is led by Dr. Kandida Purnell.

Danilova, N. and Purnell, K.(2019), 鈥楾he museumification of the Scottish soldier and the Meaning-making of Britain鈥檚 Wars鈥,听Critical Military Studies,听Online First.

Rekret, P. (2019), 鈥樷 in Camille Barbagallo, Nicholas Beuret, & David Harvie (eds)听Silvia Federici & George Caffentzis, Pluto Press.

Rekret, P. (2019) 鈥樷, in Jeremy Jennings (Ed.),听The Cambridge History of French Thought, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Brown. M, & Romano, A. (2018), 鈥楨xecutors or creative deal-makers? The role of the diplomats in the making of the Helsinki CSCE鈥, in S. B. Snyder & N. Badalassi (eds.),听The CSCE and the End of the Cold War. Diplomacy, Societies and Human Rights, 1975-1990, Berghahn Books, New York, pp. 43-73.

Brown, M (2018), 听鈥楾he Czechoslovak Government-in-Exile and the Legacy of Population Transfers: An Analysis of the English Language Discourse鈥, in V. Smetana & K. Geaney (eds.),听Exile in London:The Experience ofCzechoslovakia and the Other Occupied Nations, 1939-45, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 167-190.

Rekret, P. (2019) 鈥楽eeing Like a Cyborg? The Innocence of Posthuman Knowledge鈥 in Christian Fuchs & David Chandler (eds.), Digial Objects/Digital Subjects: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Big Data Capitalism, London: Westminster University Press.

Soborski, R. (2019) 鈥楶refigurative Politics in Anti-Neoliberal Activism: A Critique鈥.听Perspectives on Global Development and Technology Volume听18, Issue 1-2,79-92.

Jer贸nimo听Kersh,听D. (2019)听Women鈥檚 Work in Special Period Cuba: Making Ends Meet, New York, Palgrave Macmillan.

Jer贸nimo听Kersh,听D. (2018)听鈥楻eturning to Pre-Revolutionary Divisions of Labor: Women鈥檚 Informal Employment during Cuba鈥檚 Post-Soviet 鈥淪pecial Period鈥 Economic Crisis 1990-2005鈥,听Latin American Perspectives, Vol: 45, issue: 1, pp. 175-194.

Rekret, P. (2018) Derrida and Foucault: Philosophy, Politics, Polemics, (鈥楻eframing the Boundaries: Thinking the Political鈥 series) London & New York: Rowman & Littlefield.

Soborski, R. (2018) Ideology and the Future of Social Movements, London & New York: Rowman and Littlefield.

Boys, J. (2018) Clinton鈥檚 War On Terror: Prelude to Catastrophe 1993 -2001, Colorado: Lynne Rienner.

Keating, M.F., A. Goldthau and C. Kuzemko听 (2018) (eds.) The Handbook of the IPE of Energy and Resources, Edward Elgar.

Rekret, P. (2018), 鈥楾he Head, the Hand and Matter: New Materialisms and the Politics of Knowledge鈥, Theory, Culture & Society 35(7-8): 49-72.

Rekret, P. (2018) 鈥楶osthumanism鈥檚 Tabula Rasa: On Theory, Innocence, and Consumption鈥, in听 Research in Education: Policy, Theory and Practice 101(1): 25-29.

Taylor, I. (2017) Media Relations of the Anti-War Movement: The Battle for Hearts and Minds, London: Routledge.

Wylde, C. 2017. Emerging Markets and the State: Post-neoliberal Regimes in Latin America and Asia (London: Springer).

Soborski, R. (2017) 鈥業deological imbalance following the credit crunch: neoliberalism versus the politics of resistance鈥. In J. Smith et al. (eds) Social Movements and World-System Transformation. Routledge, 94鈥111.

Flood, C. and Soborski, R. (2017) 鈥楨uroscepticism as ideology鈥. In B. Leruth, N. Startin and S. Usherwood (eds) Routledge Handbook of Euroscepticism. Routledge, 36鈥47.

Brown, M. (2017) 鈥楾he missing 鈥榟uman dimension鈥 of the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), 1975鈥, Diplomaatia, No. 171, November听 2017.

Alessio, D., P. Olle & K. Arnold (2017) 鈥淪pain, Germany and the United States in the Marshall Islands: Re-imagining the imperial in the Pacific鈥 Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies 4, 2:115-136.

Rekret, P. (2017) Down With Childhood: Pop Music and the Crisis of Innocence, London: Repeater Books.

Rekret, P. (2017) 鈥淭he Sovereignty of Sovereignty and the Restricted Object of Critical IR鈥 in Bronwyn Winter & Lucia Sorbera (eds), Contending Legitimacy in World Politics: the State, Civil Society and the International Sphere in the Twenty-First Century, London: Routledge.

Rekret, P, (2017) 鈥淲orking Holiday: On Labour and Leisure in Trap鈥, Cesura//Acceso: Journal for Music Politics and Poetics.

SPG Membership

The State Power & Globalisation past events

Spring 2021 Events

‘Rethinking the Body in Global Politics’
Kandida Purnell’s book launch, Wednesday April 14

A roundtable discussion of RichmondAssistant Professor of International Politics, Kandida Purnell’s new book, published with Routledge. With Jessica Auchter (U of Tennessee), Marysia Zalewski (Cardiff), Tom Gregory (Auckland), and Lauren Wilcox (Cambridge).

鈥榃hen is a justice campaign over? Transitional justice, 鈥榦vering鈥 and Bloody Sunday’
Tom Bentley (Aberdeen), 12th April 2021

This article explores the political, strategic and emotional issue of victim groups deciding to continue or discontinue central components of a justice campaign in the aftermath of receiving 鈥榯ruth鈥. Drawing on in-depth interviews, the article focuses on relatives and other stakeholders鈥 varying positions on (dis)continuing the annual Bloody Sunday commemoration march after the publication of the Report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry and the UK Prime Minister鈥檚 apology for the massacre.

鈥楧ebt and the woman: Pondering extractive relationships that trouble women entrepreneurs in Sri Lanka’s post-war economy鈥
Anupama Ranawana (Christian Aid/University of Roehampton), 19th April 2021

This lecture applying a feminist and decolonial lens, wonders at new ways to reflect about and beyond this 鈥榗risis, and thus challenge epistemic and ethical boundaries. In particular, the paper reflects on what is further obscured or silenced- such as caste, gender and religion- within these extractive relationships.

‘The Ideological History of Fascism’
Matthew Feldman, Wednesday April 7

Professor Matthew Feldman is a specialist on fascist ideology听and听the far-right in Europe听and听the USA. He has written widely on these subjects, for both academic听and听general audiences. He has long researched the interaction between politics听and听faith in the modern world,听and听has taught these subjects for some two decades to school, undergraduate听and听postgraduate students. An Emeritus Professor in the History of Modern Ideas at Teesside University, in 2013 Prof. Feldman led Britain鈥檚 first unit dedicated to analysis of radical right extremism, the Centre for Fascist, Anti-fascist听and听Post-fascist Studies (CFAPS),听and听prior to that, directed the Radicalism听and听New Media Group at the University of Northampton. He is a Visiting Professor at 51风流, the American University in London, having previously held fellowships at the universities of Bergen (Norway), Birmingham听and听Oxford (thrice). He is an editor of Wiley-Blackwell鈥檚 online journal,听Compass: Modern Ideologies听and听Faith,听and听co-edits two academic book series Bloomsbury Publishers,听Modernist Archives听and听Historicizing Modernism.

The story of fascism, or rather its birth after WWI, is familiar enough from documentaries听and听books on the Axis. But that is only part of the story. The nationalist regimes in Italy听and听Germany can also distort our understanding of fascism. Seen from a centennial perspective, namely that of Mussolini, the first Fascist who successfully marched on Rome in October 1922听and听then unveiled totalitarian rule in Italy in 1925, fascism today looks less like history than current affairs. But is it?听This talk tries to address these questions by telling a narrative history of fascist ideology.

‘Equality, diversity and inclusion? International volunteering for development in Africa’
Angela Haynes, April 6

Angela Haynes worked in the international development sector for over 25 years in a range of NGOs and is currently based in the Department of Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). There she manages an international research project and is an Associate Tutor.

This talk focuses on her doctoral research, which looks at international volunteering in Africa. She discusses her question, findings, positionality and some of the issues she encountered during the course of looking at professionals of African heritage who travel to Africa to provide free healthcare and thus 鈥榞ive back鈥.

‘Tackling Hate in the Homeland: US Radical Right Counter-Narratives in a time of Renewed Threat’
William Alchorn, Wednesday February 24th

Dr William Allchorn听is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Leeds听and听Associate Director at the Centre for the Analysis of the Radical Right. He is an expert on anti-Islamic radical right social movements in the UK. His book, Anti-Islamic Protest in the UK: Policy Responses to the Far Right is published by Routledge. As of August 2020, he has started a new research project, testing violent radical-right extremist narratives听and听counter-narratives globally. His forthcoming book based on the project, Moving beyond Islamist Extremism – Assessing Counter Narrative Responses to the Global Far Right, is under contract with Ibidem (an imprint of Columbia University Press)听and听is due for release in Autumn 2021.

This paper gets under the currents of key US radical right extremist groups听and听their anti-government narratives that they propagate now. Using case study examples, the paper suggests ways forward in tackling US-based radical right violent extremist narratives, concluding with recommendations for security practitioners听and听policymakers in the Biden administration interested in countering radical right-inspired violence. It is argued that only a mixture of upstream (i.e. counter extremist initiatives aimed directly at individuals in the process of radicalisation)听and听downstream initiatives (i.e. using trusted individuals听and听informal civil-society actors to further embed broader-based societal counter-narratives), that the United听States will do better in inhibiting the spread of violence within the radical right extremist scene听and听inoculate citizens from engaging in such activism in the first place.

Fall 2020 Events

‘Decolonising Political Theory’
Simon Choat, Monday November 30th

Simon Choat is Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Kingston University. He is the author of Marx Through Poststructuralism: Lyotard, Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze (Continuum 2010) and Marx’s Grundrisse: A Reader’s Guide (Bloomsbury 2016). He is currently co-editing a volume entitled Decolonising Political Theory (Oxford University Press).

Drawing on original research of political theory modules at 92 UK universities, Simon Choat shows that non-white thinkers and discussions of colonialism and race are marginalised and neglected within the teaching of political theory. Choat argues that there are intellectual, political, and pedagogical reasons why this neglect is problematic and should be reversed.

‘The Crisis in Papua’
Connor Woodman, Wednesday November 13th

Connor Woodman is a writer and former Research Fellow at the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies. He currently provides technical assistance to the United Liberation Movement for West PapSaveua.

‘US Elections 2020: Examining the Stakes’
Friday November 6th

Dr. Ronald J. Ranieri from US Army War College & Dr. Johannes Thimm (Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik) come to the Research Centre to discuss the upcoming US Presidential elections and their global significance.

‘Thinking Aloud the World After Covid-19’
Tuesday October 13

Join Richmondfaculty from across a range of disciplines as they examine the potential long-term effects of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Talks will include Dr. Kandida Purnell, 鈥楾he Body Politics in a Time of Pandemic鈥; Dr. Nick Ferguson, 鈥楢fter The Airport City鈥 and Dr. Eunice Goes, 鈥楢nother World is Possible?鈥

Fall 2019

鈥楥ompetitive Political Victimhood: Exploring the Relationship Between Righteousness and Insecurity鈥
Noga Glucksam, Wednesday September 25th, 6.00pm听 216 Asa Briggs Hall

鈥楳oving beyond Islamist Extremism: Counter Narrative Responses to the Far Right鈥
William Alchorn, October 2nd, 6.00pm, 216 Asa Briggs Hall

Will Alchorn is Associate Director of the Center for the Analysis of the Radical Right and Research Fellow at University of Leeds.

鈥’Violent Non-State Actors and the Quest for Territory鈥
Caroline Varin, October 9th, 3pm, 108 Asa Briggs Hall

Caroline Varin is Lecturer in Security and International Organizations at Regent鈥檚 University London and Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. She will be discussing her recently volume Violent Non-State Actors in Africa: Terrorists, Rebels, and Warlords (Palgrave, 2017).

‘Positive Women, Heartache Hope and Living With HIV 鈥 Film Screening and Lecture’
Anne Lotter, 9 Oct 6pm, Briggs Caf茅, Asa Briggs Hall

Anne Lotter is an Assistant Professor at Richmondand Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute

Filmmaker Bex Devaraj and anthropologist Anne Lotter were given unique access to one of the biggest slums in Kampala, Uganda, where every day is a struggle for survival. In this intimate film, six courageous women share their stories of heartache, hope and living with HIV.

(Joint IVAC event with SPG Research Centre)

‘The Crisis in West Papua’
Connor Woodman, November 13, 9.00am, 108 Asa Briggs Hall

Connor Woodman is a writer and former Research Fellow at the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies. He currently provides technical assistance to the United Liberation Movement for West Papua.

‘The First World as Imperial Conflict’
Zapryan Dumbalski, November 20, 9.00am, 108 Asa Briggs Hall

Zapryan Dumbalski is an independent researcher with extensive experience in the history of the First World War. His research interests also include Central and East European history, collective and cultural memory, the history of the Gulag, war memorials and remembrance, and poetry, in particular war poetry. He is currently working on an anthology of European poetry.


Spring 2019

‘The European Union as a System of Governance’
Dr Maxine David, Leiden University

‘Talking About Human Rights: An Introduction to the Sociology of Human Rights’
Dr Darren J. O鈥橞yrne, University of Roehampton

‘Gender Socialization and Oppression’
Dr Roberta Guerrina, University of Surrey

鈥楾he Great Escape: The Discursive Construction of Brexit and Global Britain鈥
Dr. Oliver Daddow, University of Nottingham, Bennett Institute University of Cambridge. March 20, 2019.

鈥楾he European Union Strategy for International Cultural Relations: Framworks and Tensions鈥
Mafalda Damaso, February 20, 2019.

‘Learning from the Field: Conflict Resolution Praxis and Development’
Dr. David Bremner, Independent conflict resolution and transformation expert. February 14, 2019.

鈥業nternational Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF)鈥
Snje啪ana Bokuli膰, Director, Performance Division, January 2019.

鈥楶olicing the Arab Carceral City鈥
Bruce Stanley & Hattie Field, RichmondUniversity, January 23, 2019.


Fall 2018

鈥楥risis and Polarisation in Latin America鈥
Jeff Webber, Queen Mary University of London, October 1, 2018.

鈥楥limate Change as Security Issue鈥
Caroline Varin, Professors Without Borders, 17 October, 2018.

鈥楩ortress Europe: The Historical Origins of the European Frontier鈥
Luke Cooper, Anglia Ruskin University, October 30, 2018.

鈥楿krainian Foreign Policy: Reality and Perspectives鈥
Hon. Mrs. Natalia Galibarenko, Ukrainian Ambassador to the United Kingdom, November 14, 2018.

鈥楬ow England鈥檚 Merchants Founded America And Launched The British Empire Before The Pilgrims鈥
Dr. Simon Targett, November 28, 2018.


Spring 2018

鈥楴ew Books in Politics with Michael Keating, Rafal Soborski, and Paul Rekret鈥
February 14, 2018.

‘Cyber and Political Risk鈥
Khaled Fattal, March 13, 2018.

Fall 2017 SPG Seminar Series

Fantasy Apocalypse
A One-Day Joint Symposium of all things Science Fiction, fantasy and horror with The University of Northampton and RichmondUniversity

‘Diego Garcia: What, How, Where Now?’
Allen Vincatassin, President of the Provisional Government of Diego Garcia & Chagos Islands, November 30, 2017.

‘Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the EU’
Dr. Eunice Goes (51风流), November 23rd, 2017.

‘America First or America Alone? Trump on collision course with China’
Prof. Wolfgang Deckers (51风流), 15 November 2017.

‘Virtual Warfare: 21st Century Warfare
Daniel Wagner (CEO Country Risk Solutions), 29 November, 2017.

‘Emerging Markets and the State: Developmentalism in the 21st Century’
Dr. Chris Wylde (51风流), 28 November, 2017.

‘Why (and How) International Commercial Law Matters to International Political Economy’
Dr. Edward S. Cohen (Westminster College), 12 October 2017.

‘US Presidential Election 2016: What Happened’
Dr. James Boys (51风流), October 2017.


Spring 2017 SPG Seminar Series

‘English Uprising: Brexit and the Right-Wing Revolt’
Dr. Paul Stocker (51风流), 12th April.

‘The Armature of Sumud: Gaza’s Network of Resilience’
Prof Bruce Stanley, (51风流), March 2, 2017.

‘US-UK Special Relations’
Mr Lew Lukens (Charg茅 d鈥橝ffaires ad interim, U.S. Embassy in London), 18 February 2017