From Fatwa to Jihad: 20 Years of Free Speech Wars
IoI in association with Index on Censorship
Lectures by Kenan Malik and Tariq Modood. Panellists include: Jo Glanville, Stephen Law, Amol Rajan, Maheila Malik, Inayat Bunglawala
Thursday 30 April, 7.30pm
‘Broken Britain’: can we fix it?
Thursday 28 May, 7.30pm
Parliament: what is it good for?
All tickets from http://www.bishopsgate.org.uk/events or phone 020 7392 9220
Friday 6 March, 4.30pm
Consuming children - the battle for children’s minds
IoI in association with ESRC Festival of Social Science @ Bath Literature Festival
Speakers include: Dr Helene Guldberg, Dr Agnes Nairn, Sue Palmer
The ESRC is making available 50 FREE tickets for school, FE and HE students (pre-registration required from Bath Festivals Box Office)
Tuesday 24 March, 7.00pm
Are we over-protecting children?
IoI @ Think-in-Kingston festival
Speakers include: Dr Helene Guldberg, Christopher Cloke, Hugh Thornbery
Wednesday 1 April
Teenage gang violence
IoI @ Oxford Literary Festival
Speakers include: Frank Furedi, Peter Hitchens, Julian Walker, Alex Wheatle
The 2006 Battles in Print have been republished. A collection of over 50 essays on technology, the arts, law, international relations, science, education and much more, the BiPs 2006 accompanied the themes of the 2006 festival - Nature, Innovation, Law, Media - and provide a valuable resource especially when combined with our new search by year functionality.
Missed a session at the Battle of Ideas 2008? You can now watch videos of the debates on FORA.tv. The vast majority of sessions were recorded and will be accessible via their respective session pages or from the Battles on Video index page as they are published.
Watch the keynote controversy The Battle for Truth here.
SCETT and the IoI (IoI) have undertaken a short survey on what teacher professionalism means today.
Read a summary of the early findings of the survey to which nearly 300 people have contributed so far.
This survey complements the session: Trust me - I’m a professional.
Furious parent groups have spoken out today against the news that a chain of nurseries are to fingerprint parents, slamming this as the latest attack on trust between adults. The groups, who are coming together at the weekend to discuss increased interference in family life at the Battle of Ideas 2008 festival, were incensed by the idea of turning nurseries into surveillance factories.
Jennie Bristow of Parents With Attitude.com, and co-author of ‘Licensed to Hug’, a critique of the national vetting scheme, said:
This is yet another ridiculous action that sends a loud and clear message to our children ‘Adults are not to be trusted’. This attitude warps relationships between adults and children. It is an extension of the government-induced paranoia that has parents asking each other ‘Have you been CRB (Criminal Record Bureau) checked?’ before their kids play with each other. We really need to stand up as parents and say ‘Enough is enough!’
The convenor of the IoI Parents Forum, Jane Sandeman, was damning about the collection of biometric data from children, which could also be used to monitor school attendance.
Nurseries and schools are places where children go to be looked after, not remand centres or prison cells. This unjustified suspicion of parents and those working with children shows contempt for all adults. That’s why many angry parents are coming together to stop this interference and reclaim our family life.
Joining Bristow and Sandeman at the weekend is Nancy McDermott, chair of the advisory board of Park Slope Parents, the second largest parenting group in the USA. Several expert researchers on family life will join the debates including Val Gillies from the Economic and Social Research Council’s Families and Social Capital Group and Dr Jan McVarish, author of Teenage Parents’ Experience of Parenthood, as well as Yvonne Roberts from the Young Foundation.
WE WILL STOP SELLING TICKETS ONLINE AFTER 4PM ON FRIDAY 31ST OCTOBER
There are limited tickets available on the day for the festival. If you cannot buy online before the Friday deadline, you can buy tickets on the door at the RCA from:
9.15am on Saturday 1st November
and from 9.30am on Sunday 2 November.
Indian political, business and cultural leaders are heading to London this weekend (1 – 2 November) to ask ‘what next?’ following the global economic crisis.
Joining European and American counterparts at the Battle of Ideas 2008 festival at Kensington’s Royal College of Art, India’s leading thinkers will get to grips with the impact of the credit crunch on emerging economies, such as India, in front of a 2,000 strong UK audience.
Sanjaya Baru, former advisor and spokesman for the Indian prime minister and a leading authority on global economics, will tackle the question Capitalism: what is it good for? at a keynote debate. Fellow panellist, the UK’s leading sociologist, Frank Furedi, has already challenged both developed and developing countries to think afresh about global economics and politics:
We can’t fall back on the economic and political solutions of yesterday, whether it’s the insights of Adam Smith or Karl Marx. Younger generations must rethink the problems of today for themselves. This is particularly true for the emerging economies and young people in those countries, whose growing influence will shape not just their own future but the world’s.
A day of debates devoted to the emerging economies will see world financial experts and business leaders lock horns over development in the post-credit crunch world. The FT’s Martin Wolf will be joined by: Sundeep Kumar, director of SABMiller’s corporate affairs in India; Goldman Sachs’ Jim O’Neill, the man who coined the term BRICs; leading international development thinkers Xiaolan Fu and Adrian Wood; and two renowned authorities on the emerging economies, Ha-Joon Chang and Linda Yueh.
An in-conversation with The Times’ Parminder Bahra, Wireless Grids Corporation’s chief strategy officer, Norman Lewis, and BT’s head of sustainability practice, Dinah McLeod, will ask if China and India are the new technological innovators.
The Battle for Progress keynote debate will bring the discussions about India and the emerging economies to a head, asking what progress means in our world today: Leela Gandhi, flying in from the University of Chicago, will debate if prosperity equals progress any more with: Fukuoka Asian Culture Prize winner, Ashis Nandy; editor in chief of Green Futures, Martin Wright; and Austin Williams, director of London’s Future Cities Project.
As well as economics and politics, leading lights from the world of Indian arts and culture will also feature at the weekend: Anmol Vellani, director of the Indian Foundation for the Arts will battle over Your Culture or Mine? with Charles Saumarez-Smith, chief executive of the Royal Academy of Arts and Sir Christopher Frayling, chair of the Arts Council England. The literature expert Swapan Chakravorty will make the case for Calcutta as the World City of Literature.
Sujata Sen, representing festival partners the British Council India, acclaimed the importance of the ‘Battle of Ideas’ to democracy and development today:
The right to probe ideas, disagree with perspectives, and dispute the ways and means of social justice and welfare are factors critical for the success of the world’s largest democracy.
The Battle of Ideas Keynote Controversies cover some of the defining issues of our times, from the meaning of Truth in debates about religion and science, to the state of capitalism at a time of crisis and uncertainty. Each session is now complemented by a Battles in Print (BiP) essay written by a member of the Battle of Ideas committee. The essays set out the context of the respective debates, but also advance arguments that will stimulate further discussion ahead of the festival itself and beyond.
Several other Battles in Print demonstrate the range of topics being debated at the Battle of Ideas, from the politics of folk music to the future of American foreign policy, and from the putative crisis of reading to Britain’s alleged addiction to booze. Many of the essays draw on ongoing debates in a variety of forums, which feed in to the festival weekend itself.
Keynote BiPs:
Slam-Dunk the Funk - Defending Progress in the Age of Environmentalism
All Battles in Print can be found here.
The Battles in Print cover an eclectic range of topics to be debated at the Battle of Ideas and beyond. From the politics of folk music to the future of American foreign policy, and from the putative crisis of reading to Britain’s alleged addiction to booze, the essays introduce the issues and provoke further reflection, drawing on ongoing debates in a variety of forums, which feed in to the festival weekend itself. Six keynote Battles in Print, to complement the festival’s Keynote Controversies, will be published next week so check back regularly.
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"Of all the political and cultural festivals, none beats the Battle of Ideas for its eclecticism and willingness to invite controversial and absorbing debate."
John Kampfner, Chief executive, Index on Censorship; former editor, New Statesman