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Wed 10 Jun, '26
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T3 WK7 - Law School Lunchtime Research Seminar - Wednesday 10 June 2026
Room S2.09 / S2.12

Guest Speaker: Christine M. Olando, Warwick Law School

Title: 'The Right to Higher Education and Certification: A Case Study of the Provision of Higher Education in Kenya in the Law Discipline'

Room S2.09 will be available from 12:00pm, with lunch served at 12:30pm, followed by the Seminar from 1:00pm to 2:00pm in Room S2.12.

Thu 11 Jun, '26
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Law, Technology, and Development Book Discussion: Unsettling Data by Dilan Dagaz
S2.09, Warwick Law School, Social Sciences Building

About the Book:

What prevents data governance law from redressing the widespread exploitation of labour and land rampant across the data economies of our digital Earth? answers this question by scrutinising the legal grammar of ‘data’ to expose the persistence of hierarchical power relations between the observer and the observed. The role of the modern legal form in fortifying and obscuring these power relations is elucidated. Proposing representationalism as the framework to map these hidden yet pervasive power relations, the book reveals how the representationalist legal form serves to delink the agency of the data subject from unjust labour and land exploitation in the digital political economy. Highlighting the importance of Indigenous/Adivasi perspectives for unsettling the philosophical core of Western(ised) data governance, Unsettling Data argues for the formal reconceptualisation of data as the entangled human and unhuman agencies implicated in its production; paving the way for a new legal grammar of data rooted in relational reciprocity.

Unsettling Data will be of interest to readers in critical legal theory, law and humanities, law and political economy, data protection, information law, AI governance, intellectual property as well as anyone seeking to understand the legal form or aesthetics of data from a critical lens.

Mon 15 Jun, '26
SAVE THE DATE: Festival of Postgraduate Research 2026
Oculus Building

The Festival is a celebration of PGRs, an opportunity for PGRs to showcase their work, engage in interactive development session, and build community. The Festival is open to the whole Warwick community.

Wed 24 Jun, '26
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T3 WK9 - Law School Lunchtime Research Seminar - Wednesday 24 June 2026
S2.09 / S2.12

Guest Speaker: James White, Warwick Law School

Title: (Work-In-Progress) 'The Truth of the Crime: From Epistemic Fallibilism to Ethical Dialogue'

Room S2.09 will be available from 12:00pm, with lunch served at 12:30pm, followed by the Seminar from 1:00pm to 2:00pm in Room S2.12.

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