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Inaugural Lecture - The Porous University: Creating Partnerships in a Global City

13 March 2015

Main Quad Michael Stewart

Professor Michael Stewart is to give an inaugural lecture at 6.30pm on Tuesday 5 May 2015, at Wilkins Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, 2nd Floor, South Junction, Wilkins Building, UCL, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT.

UCL was founded to open the world of learning to the excluded for the betterment of all. Like many institutions, over time and under many pressures, UCL has become encased in a self-protective shell. The founding principle that knowledge would be taken out and applied to make the world a better place is relegated to an aspiration as seemingly more urgent agendas hold sway. In a changing world it is pertinent to ask how we can both fulfil new obligations and uphold the radical empowering spirit of our founders. How do we soften the shell around the university to make it porous to the world around us? What would embedding cultural, social and economic partnerships do to the way we teach, research and engage? What would it mean to truly and deeply think of ourselves as a global university in a global city? 

Professor Michael Stewart

Michael Stewart is a social anthropologist whose work focuses on breaking down barriers between the marginal and the mainstream. He has written extensively on the Roma of eastern Europe and produced documentaries for broadcast television. Inspired by UCL's 'can do' attitude, he creates cultural partnerships that open more of UCL to the world around it.

Find out more about Inaugural Lecture Series organised by UCL Faculties of Arts & Humanities and Social & Historical Sciences.

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