[UCC] Masters of Social Science (Social Policy)-Evening Programme

Masters of Social Science (Social Policy)-Evening Programme

School of Applied Social Studies

University College Cork

 

Applications are now invited for the newly reconfigured Masters in Social Policy programme. This is a full-time, one-year course which provides students with an opportunity to engage critically in social policy analysis of contemporary issues confronting Ireland, Europe and the wider world. This is particularly relevant in the context of the current economic crisis. As recently highlighted by the President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins, it is time for Irish universities to offer an intellectual response to the current crisis:

‘The economic crisis is not abstract in its form, or its consequences, as expectations are shattered, exclusions from real citizenship created, through poverty, unemployment and all of the insecurity that flows from fear of losing one’s home, loss of loved ones to unanticipated emigration and a bewildering confusion as to self-worth… Intellectuals are challenged to a moral choice, to drift into, to be part of, a consensus that accepts a failed paradigm of life and economy, or to offer, or seek to recover, the possibility of alternative futures… Universities have a great challenge in the questions that are posed now, questions that are beyond ones of narrow utility’ (The Irish Times, 26/01/12).

 

The M.Soc.Sc. (Social Policy) equips students with the theoretical and practical skills to engage in critical social research and policy analysis. As part of this course, students can now specialize in a particular social policy area of their choice. The specialist pathways include:

 

  • ·         Mental Health and Disability: This module aims to provide a critical understanding of key perspectives in the areas of mental health and disability, and their implications for policy, research and practice. Particular consideration will be given to innovative approaches grounded in the principles of human rights and citizenship.

 

  • ·         Children and Young People: Children and Young People: This specialist pathway encourages critical reflection on policy in relation to children and young people and facilitates research relevant to student’s own interests. Topics covered include: children and young people in society; children’s rights, participation and democratic engagement; and theorising and researching childhood & youth.

 

  • ·         Critical Social Policy: This pathway provides students with advanced knowledge in critical social policy theory and skills to engage in the analysis of key contemporary social policy issues.  As part of this course, students will theorize and critically examine key current social policy developments, and consider the implications of recent trends for social policy and welfare states.

 

  • ·         Conflict, Transformation and Peace Building: This specialist pathway aims to explore the causes and dynamics of conflict in society and grass-roots and governmental approaches to conflict transformation and peace-building internationally. Conflict in Ireland and the peace process in the North will act as a focus.  However, the course will also explore peace-building interventions globally and the concepts of ‘dealing with the past’, ‘transitional justice’ and ‘nation-building’ in post-conflict societies.

 

Programme requirements

The students take taught modules to the value of 50 credits. Core modules include ‘Contemporary Social Policy Issues’ (15 credits) and ‘Social research: methodology and ethics’ (15 credits). Elective modules include ‘Mental health and disability’, ‘Children and young people’, ‘Critical social policy’ and  ‘Conflict transformation and peace building. In addition, students must submit a 25,000 word dissertation.

 

Structure of the year

Lectures will take place on Tuesday & Wednesdays 5.30-7.30 pm. The core modules ‘Contemporary Social Policy Issues’ and ‘Social Research: Methodology and Ethics’ take place on Term 1, while the specialist modules take place on Term 2.

 

You will love this programme, if

o    You are curious about how society is organized and how this impacts on people’s lives.

o    You are interested in current debates in Irish social policy and the politics that surround contemporary societal change.

o    You are passionate about social justice and committed to human rights.

o    You are interested in linking practice with theoretical and conceptual debates.

o    You are interested in engaging in primary research and becoming an autonomous researcher.

o    You want to take part in evaluating policy and having an impact on policy agendas.

o    You are interested in forms of learning that encourage participative and collaborative processes.

 

Entry Requirements

Applicants should normally have taken social policy as a subject at undergraduate level and have a degree at Second Class Honours level or equivalent. Applicants with other relevant degrees (e.g. Sociology, Social Work, Politics and Government, Social Care, Early Childhood Studies, Public Health) and/or relevant experience (e.g. community activism, youth work, trade union activism) will also be considered.

 

Contact Details

For further information on the course, please contact Ms. Eluska Fernandez by phoning +353 21 4903765 or by emailing e.fernandez@ucc.ie.

[Cork IPSC] Commemorating Al-Nakba: Celebrating Palestine.

Dear friends, please come and join us in


Commemorating Al-Nakba: Celebrating Palestine. Thursday, 17th May. Doors open at 8pm.Pavilion, Carey’s Lane, Cork.Admission: 8 euros/5 euros concession Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign
FOR BOOKING: palestinecork@gmail.com or tickets available from the venue and on door.Please Like the following page for information about the whole tour plus updates:https://www.facebook.com/alnakbatourirelandA major tour of Palestinian and Arab artists, will take place in Ireland between the 17th and 20th May, featuring cultural concerts in Cork, Dublin, Belfast and Derry. Billed as “Commemorating Al Nakba; Celebrating Palestine”, the tour will feature two renowned Palestinians, poet Rafeef Ziadah and singer Terez Sliman. Also joining them will be acclaimed Lebanese-Australian singer-songwriter Phil Mansour. The tour will take place during what Palestinians call Nakba Week, which marks the 64th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba (‘Catastrophe’) which, saw the expulsion of over 700,000 Palestinians, forcibly uprooted from their homeland in order to facilitate the foundation of the State of Israel.


Poet Rafeef Ziadah, one of those on the bill, expressed her excitement: “This tour will be both a commemoration of the catastrophe that befell us Palestinians in 1948 and a celebration of the culture, creativity and continued resistance of the Palestinian people today; whether they reside in the 1967 or 1948 occupied territories, in refugee camps, or in the global diaspora. We are very excited about this tour and look forward to sharing our culture with Irish audiences.”

Ken Loach has said: “Rafeef’s poetry demands to be heard. She is powerful, emotional, political. Please read her work and see her perform. You cannot then be indifferent to the Palestinian cause.” Rafeef’s latest poetry performance in London went viral with more than half million views in two months (www.youtube.com/watch?v=aKucPh9xHtM). Also, on tour is Phil Monsour Lebanese-Australian singer/composer. Phil will be launching his new CD titled Ghosts of Deir Yassin with a video filmed in Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon and Jordan. Finally, Terez Sliman is a Palestinian singer from 48Palestine, her beautiful voice introduces traditional Palestinian songs about Al-Nakba, exile and return (www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYsWl_5dx1I&feature=related). 

 

Hope to see you all there. Thanking you.Cork IPSC

[Solidarity Books] May Film Schedule

Thursday 10th May  This Land Speaks Arabic   director Maryse Gargour
Palestine  2007

Presented by Ireland Palestine Solidarity Group this film provides a
rarely heard perspective on the creation of the state of Israel and
the disaster that resulted for the Palestinian people.
This showing is to mark the 1948 Nakbah as commemorated by
Palestinians and is the first of a Summer season of films to be shown
in various venues by IPSC
Thursday 17th May    Jana Sanskriti and  D.I.Y. Or Die

As part of the city wide DIY Festival we are showing a double bill
Jana Sanskriti (peoples culture ) tells the story of the largest and
longest lasting Forum Theatre centre ‘Jana Sanskriti’ in West Bengal
India which provides inspiration and facility for Forum Theatre to be
practiced.  Instigated by Agusto Boal who pioneered  ’Theatre of the
Opressed’  as a dynamic tool for personal liberation and political
change.
D.I.Y or Die – How to Survive as an Independent Artist 2002 director
Michael W.Dean. This documentary celebrates artists who define the DIY ethos.

Thursday 24th May  The Green Wave  director Ali Samadi 2010

The Green Wave is a touching documentary which shows the dramatic
events of the Green Revolution in Iran in 2009. The film uses a
collage of footage taken from mobile phones and cameras carried by
people involved in the street protests along with face book and
Twitter entries, You tube clips, blog material and animation and is a
memorial to all those who died during the extreme suppression carried
out by government militias.

Thursday 31st May To be announced !

#Fornicationtax

“I welcome the opportunity to speak on what is a very sensitive issue, particularly for women because women do not own their own personal physical integrity and sexuality in the same manner that men do. Therefore, it is an issue that has to be handled with care. I see the introduction of this Bill not only as premature but, unfortunately, as serving not to enhance any debate but just to rehash traditional entrenchment of positions. Given the country has been dogged by this issue for decades, waiting until the expert group reports back would have been more helpful and would allow dialogue across the board, not just among politicians in this Chamber. It is a tough issue. When one thinks about it, one immediately thinks about the people affected, in particular the 4,500 women who feel they have to travel to the UK to undergo termination procedures. These are the people we represent, so it is not a case of “them and us”. As legislators in Parliament, we try to think of all our citizens and take everything into account as we make laws and decisions on behalf of the nation. We are moving and have moved away from an Ireland where morality was shoved down people’s throats. The question is whether responsibility for people’s moral conduct falls on the shoulders of Government or whether we go down the road of talking about the personal responsibility of the individuals involved. We have heard strong arguments why there might or should be abortion in circumstances beyond the X case, including cases of diagnosed problems with the foetus, which could see the baby die shortly after birth or during the pregnancy. There is no point in repeating the details of those sad cases. They were personal experiences and they cannot be used entirely as a basis to change what amounts to the fundamental principles of a country. Legislating purely on the back of hard cases does not necessarily make for good and proper laws. I will be voting against the Bill, which I believe is untimely. However, it does open a debate and I welcome that aspect. There are some questions I would raise during the debate.

 

The major objection to abortion in Ireland is religious but the rest of the Western world has no objections in this way. In the book Free and Female, dating from some decades back, Ms Barbara Seaman put abortion as part of the lifelong struggle of women for effective contraception and to be able to take control of their own bodily integrity. That is both liberal and feminist. When we legislate, we do it with an all-inclusive paradigm for our society. In short, it is not for the majority alone. I am against abortion in any form. The grace of God is so liberating and provides so many options to get the best out of life despite our fallen nature, and we all have that. Having said that, it is an ideal to aim for. In an ideal world, there would be no unwanted pregnancies and no unwanted babies. However, we are far from living in an ideal world. An honest and a scriptural view is that things are getting harder for people, so what then for the weak in our society? The western or First World is championing a freer and more autonomous society. The freer and more autonomous people become, the more responsibility they assume for their lives. They exercise that freedom by rejecting authority that seeks to nanny them. Therefore, the dialogue we have has to be, first and foremost, about taking responsibility, particularly for women because, in fact, they are left carrying the baby or not. In the first instance, there is a need for dialogue about not getting to the situation where abortion is contemplated. In fairness, in this day and age, nobody should be having unsafe sex, with AIDS and all the sexually transmitted diseases we know about. That has to be questioned as well. How well and how much are we respecting our own lives and our own bodies in the process?

 

There was certainly a time when much was prohibited on moral, religious and “the good of all” grounds. To cite an example, contraception was limited to married couples on a doctor’s say in the Ireland of not too long ago, but that is no longer the case. It is hard to believe that not so long ago, notwithstanding our knowledge of the rise of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, it was illegal to sell condoms from a vending machine to encourage safe sex, but we changed the law in that area also. What changed in our society that allowed us to get to that point where we would change the law? Moreover, how destructive was that change, if at all, given these were foundations of our religious beliefs in the past? Homosexuality is yet another example of this. Perhaps the Irish, like the rest of the world, are maturing to the point that they can be trusted with freedom of choice. In fact, although divorce became legal, marriage still remains very popular in Ireland and throughout the world, including the USA. It could be argued that when people are free to abort, they will fight harder to keep their unborn babies by choice and they will value their pregnancies. For those who do not, and I believe them a minority, they will be free to choose what to do with no legal pressure. In other words, any legislation will not make a good Catholic choose abortion against her conscience. Abortion as murder, and therefore sin, which is the religious argument, is no more sinful from a scriptural point of view than all other sins we do not legislate against, such as greed, hate and fornication, the latter – fornication – being probably the single most likely cause of unwanted pregnancies in this country. At the end of the day, however, it is the nature of religion to fuss over appearances above the truth and the inner state of the person.”

Deputy Michelle Mulherin of #fornicationtax fame – this is her speech in full. Reading it back you might actually think she was in favour of access to safe and legal abortion on the premise that the government shouldn’t legislate against sins. However her heavy religious rhetoric has masked everything and made her the centre of many a twitter joke.

Speech is in relation to #actiononx debate in Dail Eireann which took place on 18th & 19th April 2012.

 

[IFN] Feminist Activism in Ireland: Past, Present and Future

Dear supporter,

The IFN invites you to an all-day event on the theme ‘Feminist Activism in Ireland: Past, Present and Future’ to be held on Saturday, May 19th, in the Sean O’Casey Community Centre, Dublin 3.

Join us for discussions on successive feminist ‘waves’ in Ireland, and what they contributed and continue to contribute to gender equality in this country. We will hear from prominent feminist activists and scholars, such as Dr. Mary McAuliffe from the Women’s History Association of Ireland, and Dr. Margaret Ward, expert on the Irish suffrage movement.

The conference aims to create a dialogue between the different generations of feminists, and will place current campaigns in the context of the movement as a whole. While showcasing new, recently established feminist organisations, such as Cork Feminista, the conference will also assess the continuity of feminist activism over the decades. We hope that such a holistic reading of feminist activism in Ireland will prove fruitful for the future progression of the movement.

Further details on our website:

We hope to see you there!
The Co-ordinators, Irish Feminist Network

[FEMINIST OPEN FORUM] Let’s Get Fiscal: Women’s Perspectives on the Austerity Treaty

FEMINIST OPEN FORUM
Let’s Get Fiscal: Women’s perspectives on the Austerity Treaty

Thursday, April 26,
7pm until 9pm

Central Hotel, Exchequer St, Dublin

Speakers include:

  • Mary Lou McDonald, TD, Sinn Fein’s deputy leader, will discuss the politics behind the treaty and why institutionalising austerity is bad for citizens, communities and women.
  • Dr Niamh Gaynor, DCU, will explain what austerity policies involve in general with a specific focus on their impact on women in African countries. Niamh will also draw parallels with women in Ireland.
  • Sinead Pentony, head of policy, TASC, will deconstruct the treaty itself, explain how it differs from Nice, Lisbon and other EU treaties and analyse its effects on the most marginalised in our society.
  • Clare Daly, TD, ULA, will examine the outcome of four years of austerity and explain why she is calling for a No vote in the forthcoming referendum.

[TCD] Migrant activism: Seminar and Book Launch

 

 

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY

SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES AND PHILOSOPHY

TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN

 

You are cordially invited to:

Integration from below – half day seminar and book launch of Migrant Activism and Integration from Below in Ireland (edited by Ronit Lentin and Elena Moreo, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)

Based on the Migrant Networks project, Trinity Immigration Initiative

 

 

  • Venue: Seminar room,Institute ofInternational Integration Studies, 6th floor,ArtsBuilding, Trinity College Dublin

 

  • Date/time:  Friday 4 May 2012 10.00 – 15.00

 

Programme:

10.00 Registration

Welcome: Prof James Wickham, Head ofSchool ofSocial Sciences and Philosophy, TCD

Chair: Ronit Lentin, Department of Sociology, TCD

 

10.30 Liz Fekete, Instituteof Race Relations, London: ‘The threat to integration: Racism, authoritarianism and the far-Right in Europe’.

11.15 Mark Maguire, Dept of Anthropology, NUI Maynooth: ‘Suspect Identities: Integration and security from below’.

11.45 Elena Moreo, IIIS, TCD: ‘On visibility and invisibility: Migrant practices between regimes of representation and self-determination’

12.15 David Landy, Department of Sociology, TCD: ‘How do you negotiate power? A social movement perspective for migrant associations’
12.45 Discussion

13.15 Lunch

14.15 Book launch: Gavan Titley, Centre for Media Studies, NUI Maynooth

Admission is free but reservation is required.  Please RSVP by Friday 20 April, to Elena Moreo, moreoe@tcd.ie

Second Annual Countess Markievicz School

‘By her life within the home, woman gives to the State a support without which the common good cannot be achieved’
(Article 41.2 Bunreacht na hÉireann)
The second annual Countess Markievicz School takes place in the Teachers’ Club, Parnell Square, Dublin on Saturday May 12th 2012. It will explore the status of women in Ireland relating to the 1937 Constitution and its legacy. Alongside this year’s Markievicz lecture on First Wave Feminism, the topics for discussion include:
Women & the Constitution
Women & Care
Women’s Voices in the Community
Speakers include: Catherine McGuinness, former Supreme Court Judge, Prof. Kathleen Lynch, Equality Studies, UCD & Senator Katherine Zappone
Booking is now open but places are limited so early booking is highly recommended
For a full list of speakers & booking details please visit our site countessmarkievicz.wordpress.com
Kind regards,
Niamh
Committee PRO
Follow us on Twitter @CountessMarkiev
The Countess Markievicz School was established in 2011 as a forum on Women in Ireland by graduates of Equality Studies in the School of Social Justice, UCD

[Longford Women's Link] Women Succeeding in Local Government: Turning Inspiration into Action

Longford Women’s Link

 

invites you to

Women Succeeding in Local Government: Turning Inspiration into Action

Date : Monday, April 30th 2012
Time : 9:45 am to 3:45 pm, registration from 9:00am
Venue : Longford Women’s Link, Willow House, Ardnacassa Avenue, Longford

Lunch will be provided on the day

Conference note
The aim of this event is simple, to use the experience, information and resources we have to inspire women to act.

The morning session focuses on INSPIRING attendees through our two ‘inspiration’ panels of invited speakers. The first panel consists of women who are successfully working within local government, reflecting on their experiences as women who have successfully established a career in this area. A second panel consisting of organisations and agencies, which exist to support women into political life at a local level, will discuss what they do to help women move into this space. The afternoon session encourages ACTION and examines ways in which we can act to encourage and support more women in local political life.

The opening address will be provided by Marian Harkin, MEP Ireland North and West.

The organisations featured at this event include the Women’s Manifesto Project, Women for Election, 50:50 Group and Labour Women.

Who should attend?
Individuals and organisations who are interested in women’s representation and women’s role in local government; those who are already working within local political party structures, members of political parties or elected representatives; women who may be interested in running for local office, journalists (freelance or working for local media) with an interest in the area and/or academics who are carrying out research on this issue.

RSVP 
To: manifesto@longfordwomenslink.org
By: 5pm on Wednesday, April 18th 2012
Please note attendance at this event will be limited in order to allow attendees ample opportunity to address panel members, ask questions and to network. Please register early to avoid disappointment.

What makes you not a Feminist?

What makes you not a Feminist? Is a four part series starting on the 22nd of March and is broadcast every Thursday @ 1:30 (just after The Priest’s Housekeeper).
The series highlights some of the reasons why so many women and men support women’s equality, but are unwilling to call themselves feminists. It explores the current debates on women’s equality through interviews with academics, activists, and women and men from different generations.
The series traces the history of Irish women’s resistance, and asks, has true gender equality been achieved in Irish society? Importantly, it introduce male voices to the debate, and examine the relevance of feminism to Irish men’s lives.
This series is presented by Nilmini fernando and produced by Kieran Hurley for UCC98.3FM.

Thursday 22 – 12 April 1:30

UCC 98.3FM
Áras na Mac Léinn
Student Centre
UCC
Cork
P. 021-4902170