LCN News

News about or related to Learning Cities Networks:

 

EDUMaH Symposium poster and Eventbrite info

Sep 13 2023 09:30
Sep 13 2023 14:30
Europe/London
Adam Smith Lecture Theatre, Room 1115
28 Bute Gardens
Glasgow
Scotland  Scotland

An exciting international symposium on Museum and Heritage Education Futures will take place on September 13th at the University of Glasgow. The symposium has been organised by the Education in Museum and Heritage Education Consortium, including members of the Pascal Observatory and the Harnessing Museums, Heritage and Education Learning Cities Network. The symposium event is free and will take place in-person.

NEP-SOC 2023-08-21, eight papers

In this issue we feature 8 current papers on the theme of social capital, chosen by Fabio Sabatini (Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”):

Invitation Public Lecture | Marketing Cities for Investment

Aug 21 2023 17:00
Africa/Johannesburg
*** ONLINE EVENT ***
University of Johannesburg
South Africa  South Africa

TheSchool of Economics in the College of Business and Economicsinvites you to anon-linepublic lecture.

PRESENTER
Professor Vladmir Zhechev (PhD Marketing)
Associate Professor  University of Economics Varna, Bulgaria

PIMA Climate Justice Education Teach-In Series

The world as we know it is not sustainable. To change these realities, we need to dig deep to the very roots of Western thinking – this is a big story of alternative worldmaking at every level. This includes how we live, work, produce and distribute food, water, and energy.

Putting traffic in its place: time for a new culture of transportation | Policies for Places

So the UK Prime Minister has declared he is ‘on the side of the motorist’ in the aftermath of a parliamentary byelection in which the imposition of an extended ultra-low emission zone (ULEZ) was a major issue.  Other attempts at controlling traffic movement in towns and cities in the UK through measures such as low traffic zones (LTZs) or controlled parking zones (CPZs) are also meeting opposition, and are being postponed (as in Oxford, Bristol and elsewhere) or abandoned. All this, when the social, environmental and health benefits of lower traffic seem clear, and popular support for environmental action remains firm.

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