Perspectives: Public support for sustainable development (rescheduled to We...
Event Information
Description
Sixty UK universities, including UCL, will be hit with eight days of strike action from Monday 25 November to Wednesday 4 December for two separate legal disputes, one on pensions and one on pay and working conditions.
In light of this Jennifer has taken the decision to postpone her inaugural lecture originally scheduled for Tuesday 3rd December 2019.
The lecture will now take place on Wednesday 13th May 2020. Tickets can be booked via:
https://public-support-for-sustainable-development.eventbrite.co.uk
Jennifer Hudson, Professor of Political Behaviour, UCL Department of Political Science, delivers her Inaugural Lecture: Perspectives: Public support for sustainable development
About the lecture
Survey research shows that donor publics are negatively disposed to foreign aid and development, but how do individuals come to form these judgements, and what type of reasoning do they draw on? Do citizens rely on judgements of the cost and benefits of aid, or on moral sentiments? Or, is it simply a matter of trust? This lecture presents the drivers of individual-level support for aid across four Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donor countries. Understanding public attitudes are increasingly important in an era of political challenges to aid budgets, and for policymakers and NGOs who work to build public engagement with development.
About the speaker
Jennifer Hudson joined UCL’s Department of Political Science in 2003. She has published on a wide range of topics analyzing elite and mass political behavior with funding from the ESRC, Danish Council for Independent Research, Nuffield Foundation and Leverhulme Trust. Jennifer is the Director of the Development Engagement Lab (Gates Foundation), a multi-country research programme analysing public support for development and aid, working in partnership with over 30 international development NGOs and government ministries.
Picture:
A Rohingya woman pictured at a World Food Programme food distribution supported by UK aid in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, October 2017
Inaugural Lecture Series 2019/20
This lecture is part of the 2019/20 series for UCL's Faculty of Arts & Humanities and Faculty of Social & Historical Sciences. The series provides an opportunity to recognise and celebrate the achievements of our professors who are undertaking research and scholarship of international significance, and offers an insight into the strength and vitality of the arts, humanities and social sciences at UCL.
All our lectures are free to attend and open to all. You don't have to be a UCL staff member or student to come along.
Lectures begin at 18:30 and are typically one hour long. A drinks reception will follow, to which everyone is welcome to join.
We look forward to meeting you at one of our events.
For information on other upcoming lectures please visit: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/social-historical-sciences/news-events/inaugural-lectures
Access profile
We aim to make our events as inclusive as possible so if you have any accessibility requirements please let us know in advance so we can try to make reasonable adjustments and ensure the appropriate measures are taken.
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The Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre is located on the second floor of the south junction of the UCL Wilkins Building.
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There is step free access into the lecture theatre.
- There is staggered seating within the lecture theatre.
- The steps to the staggered seating do not have handrails.
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This lecture theatre does not have a hearing assistance system.
- There are accessible toilet facilities within this venue.
View the full access guide on the AccessAble website.
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