About STERG
STERG aims to explore the attenuation between space, time and everyday life and society. Founded in rigorous theoretical explication of literature related to spatialities and temporalities, including – but not limited to - work from philosophy (Henri Lefebvre, Gaston Bachelard); human geography (David Harvey, Rob Shields) anthropology (Marc Auge, Jean Baudrillard), sociology (Pierre Bourdieu, Loic Wacquant) and cultural theory (Paul Virilio, Donna Haraway), the group elucidates a range of concepts to research in education, healthcare professions and the arts and social sciences in new and vital ways.
The cluster's avant garde methods are matched only by its position in the academy. As one of the few research groups in the world dedicated to space, time and everyday life, it draws active interest from scholars on a national and international scale and privileges informed, frank, open and supportive discourse relating to these areas of research, their methodologies and methods. It achieves this through innovative methods of discussion and discourse, bringing the concrete into conversation with the intellectual.
Its embryonic situation in parallel to its theoretical positioning lends itself ideally to areas of research which are hidden and this is reflected in its interest and membership. Drawn from leading writers in who are widely published in the emergent field of space and time and everyday life, our group supports and develops thinking, reflection and empirical research - especially from doctoral students - as to how space, time and everyday life is driven by and is driver of individual, collective and cultural responses to these dynamics throughout societies in pursuit of social democracy and justice.
Directors of STERG:
- Dr. Fadia Dakka, Senior Research Fellow in Education (CSPACE) fadia.dakka@bcu.ac.uk
- Dr. Alex Wade, Senior Research Fellow in Education (CSPACE) alex.wade@bcu.ac.uk
Areas of activity
Each year, STERG sets an overarching research theme. To enable theoretical conceptualisation, inter- and intra-disciplinary dialogue we have welcomed renowned speakers who have drawn an interdisciplinary, international audience, showing the scope of STERG in developing these emergent areas of work (details below).
To broaden these concepts into applied realms, STERG has pioneered Doctoral Roundtables and applying Space, Time and Everyday Life to Learning and Teaching, showing how the founding concepts of the cluster are central to education, health, the renewal of social democracy and its position in a fluid world where tomorrow’s places and times are very different to today’s rhythms and spaces.
2021/22 theme: Liminalities
Invited international keynote speakers:
- Arpad Szacolczai, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at University College Cork, Ireland, Inaugural Liminalities Lecture (online, 23.09.21)
- Prof. Michel Alhadeff-Jones, Executive Director, Sunkhronos Institute, Geneva, Switzerland, Interpreting crises and transformative processes as complex and rhythmic phenomena (online, 24.02.22)
2022/23 theme: Dystopias and Utopias
- Dr. Craig Hammond (LJMU), Naiara Unzurrunzaga (University of Liverpool), Layla Jenkins (LJMU, Utopia in Decolonisation, Inaugural Lecture (online 3.11.22)
2022/23 Seminar series (monthly meetings):
- PGR Group Discussion on Rhythmic Intelligence. Facilitated by Prof. Michel Alhadeff-Jones, Dr. Fadia Dakka, Dr. Gaia Del Negro (Milano Bicocca), Dr. Alex Wade, in partnership with the Temporality & Complexity Lab at Sunkhronos Institute, Geneva Switzerland, https://www.sunkhronos.org
Research students
- Gary Poynton
- David Maynard
- Steph Reynolds
- Kev Dajee
- Neil Sambrook
- Vanessa Clarke
- Sarah-Jane Crowson
- Joanne Thomas
- Sue Walker
- Helen Holder
- Rhiannon Lockley