Academics, if you write something that the public can't understand you've failed. The point is to write something that even other academics can't understand
Beyond the Battlefield a CIMVHR Conversation on Military, Veteran and Family Health continues with episode 2 - Traumatic Brain Injury and Recovery: Bridging Research, Practice and Lived Experience.
In Traumatic Brain Injury and Recovery: Bridging Research, Practice and Lived Experience, we ask — what does recovery from a TBI look like?
This conversation brings together those who have experienced it and those working in the field, from research and rehabilitation to policy and care. Hosted by Dr. Nicholas Held with panellists, Capt. (Ret'd) Trevor Greene, Dr. Markus Besemann, Dr. Isabelle Boileau and Dr. Cyd Courchesne.
Listen today: https://t.co/wHY7XbPPlI
#BeyondtheBattlefield
Sibel Dinç hocamla birlikte yazdığımız makalemizi ve makalemizden hareketle Güvenlik Çalışmaları alanını konuştuk. Erman Ermihan hocam sordu, biz de cevaplamaya çalıştık. @erman1995 https://t.co/2UeKhfQgCt
Dr Carvalho & Schneider argue emerging states should stop copying major‑power militaries. Instead, they should design defence around real threats, geography and budgets – aiming to be harder to intimidate, slower to attack and tougher to destabilise.
🔗https://t.co/PECugPcg3c
#HIRING
We’re hiring a Research Fellow, Technology and National Security.
Join our Cyber & Tech team to lead research on how emerging technologies, such as AI and quantum technologies, are shaping national security, geopolitical competition and economic growth.
Apply by 10 May: https://t.co/Aa8PqYtpgd
📢📖 Join us for the launch of Walking: A sociological field guide, edited by Emma Jackson.
What does it mean to walk sociologically? Discover walking as a creative, critical and embodied research method.
📅 14 May | 🕕 6pm | 📍 LSE |🎟️ All welcome
https://t.co/vSU1iw6oqu
If we think war starts with combat,
we’ve misunderstood its beginning.
The struggle to shape the political landscape comes first.
Always free to read 👉 https://t.co/M97BZZDilh
A first for CJAS:
Today we rejected a manuscript because several of the cited sources were fictitious, suggesting they had been "found" using AI. They seemed perfectly plausible and were claimed to be in reputable journals.
This is not only lazy but unethical. Don't do it!
Dr Craig Larkin (@irisharab7) explores the complex and deeply human realities of post-war urban recovery in two iconic cities — Mosul and Damascus — where the scars of conflict are far more than physical ruins.
🔗 Read more: https://t.co/TDAsg77gSP
3-4 years postdoctoral positions in Sweden on broad areas of "environment" and "spatial planning" (urban and housing included). Deadline: March 4. https://t.co/1Kva6gYxF9 #urban#sociology
Emmanuel Macron may announce in the coming days the introduction of a voluntary military service program in France (between 10,000 and 50,000 people per year).
Mandatory military service has been suspended in France since 1997.
#France#Europe#defense
https://t.co/FqzpGnke9w
🇩🇪 BREAKING - Almost two-thirds of German citizens support the government's plans to require all men of a certain age to undergo a medical examination to determine their fitness for military service.
According to the survey results, 62 percent of respondents said they "rather" or "fully" approve of this initiative, 31 percent were "rather" or "fully" against it, and the remaining 7 percent were unsure or refused to express their opinion.
Meanwhile, plans to introduce the so-called "military duty as needed" for a certain number of young Germans have sparked mixed reactions.
According to 53 percent of those surveyed, this is "fully" or "rather" appropriate, 37 percent consider it "fully" or "rather" inappropriate, and the remaining 10 percent gave no answers.
The ruling coalition in Germany agreed last week to change the rules for military conscription.
There will be no return to mandatory military service, which was suspended in the country in 2011, but starting next year, all young German citizens will be sent questionnaires about their willingness to serve in the Bundeswehr.
Filling out these questionnaires will be mandatory for men and voluntary for women — suitable candidates will be invited to the selection procedure.
However, the possibility of mandatory service for some will return — if the required number of volunteers is not reached, the German parliament may introduce the so-called "military duty as needed," and candidates for it will be selected by lottery.
See the latest updates with us: @NSTRIKE01