Our staff in International Development at Sussex are at the cutting edge of development research and practice globally.
Find out more about the collaborations, partnerships and engagements of our faculty and how our research grapples with the most pertinent and difficult issues facing International Development practitioners today.
Publishing with a Purpose
Bristol University Press’s Business, Finance & International Development Book Series launched, with two editors from Sussex ID (Dinah Rajak, Paul Gilbert). Drawing on cross-cutting conversations in the disciplines of anthropology, critical management studies, development studies, economics, geography and socio-legal studies, this series is an arena for critical scholarly engagements.
Creative Universities
This blog is a companion to a new book project by Anke Schwittay called Creative Universities: Reimagining Education for Global Challenges and Alternative Futures. The book explores the role of creativity in university programs that focus on understanding and addressing contemporary social, economic and environmental challenges.
Sussex Development Lectures
The Sussex Development Lecture series is an opportunity to hear from leading global thinkers on development. It is jointly run by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), the School of Global Studies and the Centre for International Education based at the University of Sussex and open to students, staff and members of the general public. Watch Professor Pete Newell from our School speak as part of the 2022 Sussex Development Lecture: 'Mining minerals – uncertainties caused by global energy transitions'
ESRC Festival of Social Science
A number of the Sussex International Development faculty, including Dr Paul Gilbert and Dr Meike Fechter participated in the 2019 ESRC Festival of Social Science, which brings social science research to a wider audience. As part of the Atmospheres of Violence research project led by Dr Mary Menton, Paul Gilbert co-organized an exhibition of work by and about environmental and land defenders, in partnership with ONCA (a gallery in Brighton), Not1More and The Democracy Center, and hosted a discussion about environmental defenders and decolonial solidarity with speakers from the Phulbari Solidarity Group and Wretched of the Earth. The exhibition displayed photgraphs, films and paintings by Denilson Baniwa (Brazil), Jaider Esbell (Brazil), Philip Gain (Bangladesh), Edgar Kanaykõ Xakriabá (Brazil), Mot Kimry (Cambodia), Polen Ly (Cambodia), and Mona Simon (Cambodia).
Decolonising Development Workshop
In our teaching and practice, faculty at the Sussex Department for International Development are particularly concerned with what it means to decolonise development, to examine and undo colonial legacies that shape contemporary development, and to focus on learning from the Global South rather than assuming that exporting models from the Global North always leads to the best outcomes. In the Autumn Term of 2017, we hosted a workshop on Decolonising Development, scribed here by Raquel Duran:
Humanitarian Design Partnership with RedR
Staff at the International Development department at Sussex are involved in cutting edge research on Humanitarian Design. Dr Anke Schwittay, working in partnership with RedR, a humanitarian training organization, recently received a grant from the Humanitarian Innovation Fund to develop and fieldtest innovative impact measurement methodologies. See the project blog here, and more information on the project here. Read the final project report here.
SussexGlobal: School of Global Studies Official Blog
SussexGlobal provides a space where students, faculty, alumni and associates can share research, experiences and opinions in their own words. Our aim is to provide a permanent home for these thoughts and experiences, providing lively and on-going discussions on the most pressing global issues today.