VIULECTURES 1|14 |
Wednesday, 21 May 2014 5 pm, room 1G
Amnon Bar Or is Head of the program on Built Heritage Conservation Studies in the Azrieli School of Architecture, Tel Aviv University, where he is also Lecturer and Tutor in the affiliated Conservation Studio. He is founder of an independent architects’ studio specializing in the planning of preservation and restoration of historic sites, acting throughout Israel. In his recent publication A Time for Conservation, he questions how we should cope with the memory of a place and how we assimilate the past in the contemporary environment, using his own professional experience in Israel. Prof. Bar Or is teaching two courses during the Spring 2014 semester of the VIU Globalization Program: Cultural Conservation in the Holy Land and Between East and West: Modern Architecture in Mandatory Palestine and Israel.
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Wednesday, 16 April 2014 5 pm, room 1G
The World is Rooted in Air: Atmosphere, Lawscape, Spatial Justice
Air brings together but also sets apart bodies by facilitating a division between inside and outside, inclusion and exclusion, continuum and rupture. Taking inspiration in Tomas Saraceno’s glasshouse installations, this talk looks into the way air (and other elements) are partitioned in ‘glasshouses’ of atmospheric affect. Partitioning comes from material boundaries (walls, pavements, apertures) but also immaterial, legal and political delimitations, such as private property, urban commons, public access areas and so on. Atmospheres (especially urban) tend to be tightly regulated in order to avoid uncontrolled and unpredictable revolts, thus pushing bodies in specific, pre-fabricated directions. Building on my previous work on the lawscape, namely the tautology between law and space, and with the help of Wagner's leitmotifs, the writings of Sloterdijk, Irigaray, Deleuze, Negarestani and Serres, as well as posthumanism, gender studies, ecology, new material and vitalist ontologies, and critical legal theory, the talk aims at reconceptualising current understandings of atmospheres within a context of an embodied, conflictual and fully contextualised spatial justice. This guest lecture is part of Giovanna Marconi’s course on Globalization, Ethics, Welfare and Human Rights.
Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos is Professor of Law & Theory at the University
Wednesday, 2 April 2014 5 pm, room 9A
Actors of Global Governance
VIU invites two expert guests to speak to students about their experience working in international organizations that play a role in global governance. This guest lecture is part of Cristina Dallara’s course on Global Governance for Peace and Security, Cooperation and Development, which focuses on the concept of Global Governance and its relevance for peace, security, development and international cooperation. The course explores how practices of Global Governance function in different fields of the contemporary societies and how these practice could be relevant to solve and manage global current challenges and threats.
Alberto D'Alessandro is Director of the Venice office of the Council of Europe, _____________________________________________________________________________
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