10 May 2021 Live stream begins at 6.30pm
Online: www.rgs.org/livestream
Free Free for members
Watch here
Professor Patricia Daley will talk about charting a career in geography as a Black British woman researching refugee migration in Africa. She asks how lessons from her experience might inform the development of anti-racist practices in the discipline.
After the lecture, the Younger Members Committee will be hosting an informal get together in our Virtual Map Room on Zoom. All Fellows and members are welcome to attend, it will be a great opportunity to meet others and discuss the themes of the lecture.
Current coronavirus restrictions mean we will not be able to admit an audience to the Ondaatje Theatre to watch our Monday night lectures in person this term. However, all of the lectures will be live streamed and we will let you know when we are able to host a physical audience again.
This lecture will be streamed online here. You will need to log into the website to view the content. You can pause and rewind the content, as well as watch at a later time.
There will be an opportunity for you to ask questions to the speaker throughout the event, until 7.45pm.
Monday night lectures are open to Fellows and members, and are included in the cost of membership.
[Online] Archives and collections assembled as part of colonial projects are troubling presences in our cultural and scientific institutions. Can they also play a role in repairing past injustices and building more positive relationships in the present?
[Online] Joanna will outline the scientific evidence for a human influence on climate and discuss pathways to limit the rate of global warming and its disastrous impacts.
[Online] Wade Davis tells the story of Colombia, a nation that has not deserved its agonies, a land with the greatest cultural, ecological and biological diversity on the planet.
[Online] Jonathan takes us on a botanical adventure, in which science, geography, history and folklore are intertwined and brought to life through surprising stories of plants and their curious relationships with humans.
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