Happening tomorrow 👇
Join the webinar series "Voces y Trayectorias", reflecting on processes of psychiatric deinstitutionalisation (DI) in Brazil, Chile and the rest of South America.
📅28 May | 14:00 - 15:00
https://t.co/q5WElbtYLt
How have social movements reshaped Bolivia’s political landscape, and what does it mean for Indigenous rights and the recognition of Pachamama?
Join us for this JTIP seminar at King’s ⬇️
📅26 May | 18:00 to 20:00
https://t.co/GyyctAwbxM
🆕 New blog post
🔗 https://t.co/vePVW6omVZ
Bolivia’s fuel crisis isn’t about running out of gas, it’s about running out of dollars.
New Spheres of Knowledge piece by Angus McNelly explores how foreign currency shortages and global finance shape energy challenges.
Are disability statistics failing us? Inconsistent data is distorting how we understand inequality and weakening policy.
Read more 👇
🔗https://t.co/Gf74Yz8VLV
Don't forget to join award winning Channel 4 News reporter, and King's Geography alum Ayshah Tull (@AyshahTull) tonight for the King's Experts Series Webinar.
The discussion topic is Health in an Insecure World.
Register here for free: https://t.co/CY8CpONZlV
🌏 Don’t miss the 2026 Menzies Lecture at @KingsCollegeLon
Parallel Worlds: Asia in Australia’s Strategic Imaginary With Professor Michael Wesley (University of Melbourne)
📅 28 April 2026 | ⏰ 18:00–20:00
📍 Strand Campus, London
🎟️ Register now 👇 https://t.co/5OUShA9hYQ
What happens when fire reaches protected areas? New insights from Kenya’s national parks.
Read our latest substack article to find out more 👇
🔗https://t.co/6KDswy6gqG
Less than 1 week to go!
Get your tickets to our free lecture with Prof Michael Wesley Deputy Vice Chancellor and Professor of Politics at the University of Melbourne.
🔗https://t.co/cMUPA9VAFj
Four-year Research Associate post on the governance of Artificial Ice Reservoirs (AIRs) as climate adaptation in the #Himalayas.
ERC-funded AdaptAIR project @kclgeography, in partnership with @AcresofIce
👉 Apply: https://t.co/O53QBcaYv9
#ClimateResearch#WaterGovernance
NEW POD
Does the green transition have a deep‑blue problem?
Deep‑sea mining is being sold as climate progress – despite uncertain benefits and major ecological risks.
From battery myths to Pacific Island justice, we dig deeper in our latest pod
https://t.co/zCqa4ujId2
FUTURE-PROOFING THE UK
Heatwaves, mouldy homes, disrupted transport - climate impacts hit us unevenly.
So how do we adapt without leaving people behind?
Our new podcast episode dives into fairness, trust and community‑led solutions.
🎧 Listen here
https://t.co/hGNufBViNn
🎉SCHOOL OF GLOBAL AFFAIRS RANKS TOP 10 IN UK
Great to see all three of our subject areas - Geography, International Development, and Sociology - inside their respective UK Top 10s in the latest QS World University Subject Rankings.
https://t.co/VN2MfTjszk
@TopUnis
EVENT: Broken Roads, Fractured Histories, Convenient Identities
Join us on 30 March to examine the nature of identity and historical discontinuity in Patrick Leigh Fermor's travel writing 🌎✍️
@kclgeography
Register👇
https://t.co/qReM9KwzME
Research led by our Professor @PhilHubbard1 has found that the number of new-build flats which do not adhere at least 37 square metres in size for a one-bed, one-person property has more than doubled, from 4 per cent of new homes to 10 per cent.
https://t.co/V9TUJuZBG7
FREE EVENT
🇧🇷 What can Brazil’s unique approach to water and sanitation teach us about building fairer, more sustainable systems?
📅 31 March ⏰ 18:00 – 19:30
📍 Bush House, Strand Campus
🔗 https://t.co/TDVZI2Cgjt