Events from the 21 July 2023 Reset
This online training course provides a simple, contextual overview of international boundaries and the practical measures that can be taken to resolve international boundary disputes. Through a series of short online lectures and a final practical exercise, the course explores the relevance of borders and looks at land and maritime boundary disputes, before covering methods available for dispute resolution.
01 January 2021 - 31 December 2025
12:00 AM - 11:59 PM
Online workshop
"Where Are We Now?" is an art exhibition exploring the present and future of Modern Languages and Cultures at a local and global level.
01 June 2023 - 31 December 2023
Ground floor, Elvet Riverside, 83 New Elvet, Durham DH1 3AQ
This moving exhibition, produced in collaboration with the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, highlights the devastation wreaked by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
07 June 2023 - 10 September 2023
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Oriental Museum, Elvet Hill, Durham, DH1 3TH
This week-long summer school organised by Durham Law School covers a range of topical issues linked to international law, corruption, war crimes and social inequalities.
17 July 2023 - 21 July 2023
Hogan Lovells Lecture Theatre, Palatine Centre
As part of a large-scale twinning initiative, supported by Universities UK (UUK) and the Ukrainian Ministry of Education, we are twinned with Zaporizhzhia National University (ZNU).
17 July 2023 - 22 July 2023
1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
Online
Registration is now open for this two-day conference to be held 20-21 July 2023 at Collingwood College. All are also welcome to attend the book launch for Henry Miller’s A Nation of Petitioners: Petitions and Petitioning in the United Kingdom, 1780-1918 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023). It will take place on Wednesday, 19 July 2023, 4-5pm, PG.21 (Palace Green 21). Contact: henry.j.miller@durham.ac.uk
20 July 2023 - 21 July 2023
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Collingwood College Penthouse Conference Suite, Durham University
While the politics of memory and the way through which some versions and interpretations of history become prioritised in official political discourses have engaged a broad range of actors in the past, it is in the most traumatic moments of history such as today in Ukraine that they are particularly in flux, with old sites of memory acquiring new layers of meaning and new ones emerging from the sites of war and destruction.
21 July 2023
10:10 AM - 11:10 AM
4:30 PM - 6:00 PM
Join Durham University Council Member, Professor Denise Lievesley CBE, CStat, FAcSS, and fellow alumni and friends for an intimate informal evening event in Ottawa, Canada.
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
The Lieutenant‘s Pump, 361 Elgin St, Ottawa, ON K2P 1M9, Canada