ÌÇÐÄVlog

EXPERIMENTS

Badger Culling and Perturbation
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> Badger Culling and Perturbation

Why are Government culling badgers for the sake of bovine Tuberculosis? How does badger culling affect badger and disease mobility across the country? Jess Phoenix, PhD student at Lancaster, tries to answer these questions in this blog post.   My PhD focuses upon...

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What’s mobile: Researching disasters
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> What’s mobile: Researching disasters

Monika Büscher, professor of Sociology at ÌÇÐÄVlog and the director of the Centre for Mobilities Research, tells us what's mobile about researching floods and earthquakes.     Imagine a flood, an earthquake, a pandemic. What do people do to stop...

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23 March 2016 Mobilities Reading
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> 23 March 2016 Mobilities Reading

"Geolocation and Video Ethnography: Capturing Mobile Internet Used by a Commuter" by Voilmy, Smoreda & Ziemlicki, 4-5PM, Bowland North B37 (Mobilities Lab). Thanks to Visiting PhD Zofia Bednarowska for the suggestion. Everyone is invited to attend and join in the...

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Thomas More’s Utopia
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> Thomas More’s Utopia

Thomas More's Utopia will be discussed at this joint ISF/Mobilities Reading Group, 4-5PM, FASS Building, Meeting Room 1. Everyone is invited to attend and join in the discussion! The book is available in various formats here: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2130

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The (im)mobilities of Storm Desmond
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> The (im)mobilities of Storm Desmond

As we’re slowly heading into the Spring, it’s time to recap the biggest event to hit Lancaster this past Winter: #StormDesmond. Our Satya Savitzky, who together with colleagues is currently conducting research on the events, uses his own experience of the flooding to...

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Historical Mobilities
<ÌÇÐÄVlog class="entry-title"> Historical Mobilities

'Are alternative ways of modelling the relationship between past, present and future in order to move historical and/or text-based mobilities research rather more to the centre?'. Professor Lynne Pearce, our guest blogger this week, tries to answer this question....

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