Globalisation and Empire: Global Governance, Colonial India and 1930s London

Location
A48, Sir Clive Grainger Building, University Park Campus
Date(s)
Wednesday 21st March 2018 (17:00-19:00)
Contact

This event is free to attend, but you must book your place/s.

Teachers bringing a school group only need to register themselves and select the number of tickets required.

Free parking will be available.

Description

Hosted by the Nottingham branch of the Geographical Association

Presented by Stephen Legg

This lecture will introduce debates about whether imperialism was the first phase of globalisation, and how empires and the League of Nations offered different models of global governance in the 1920-30s. It will give specific examples from the Round Table Conference held in London during which Indian delegates came to the city to debate India’s future as a colony of the Empire. Through this it will explore the city they came to and their effect on it, dwelling on the place-making processes by which London hosted these visitors and functioned as an effective space of global connections. The presentation will argue that studying the geographies of the past allows us to reflect in important ways on the geographies of the present.

 globalisation

Stephen Legg is Professor of Historical Geography and his research focuses on interwar India and the British Empire. 

School teachers are encouraged to bring A level students. Refreshments will be available after the lecture

 

School of Education

University of Nottingham
Jubilee Campus
Wollaton Road
Nottingham, NG8 1BB

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