Activities
Friday, April 25 2025
Dia · Setmana
18:30
Current working conditions: how do they affect present and future pensions?
Description:
As part of the Un cafè de Dret series organised by the AmicsUAB, Montserrat Sole-Truyols, expert in international law and lecturer in the Department of Public Law and Legal History Studies at the UAB, will give a conference in which she will analyse how changes in the labour market, precariousness and new forms of employment affect present and future pensions. The event will take place on 25 April at 6:30p.m. at the Sala Sagarra of the Ateneu Barcelonès.
Place: Ateneu Barcelonès (Sala Sagarra)
Date: Friday 25, April2025 - 18:30h
Saturday, April 26, 2025
11:30
Grand final of the Neurotalent Games
Description:
Grand final of the Neurotalent Games and awards ceremony, promoted by the Rosa Maria Vivar Foundation.
The ceremony of medals and awards to the winners and finalists will include the conference “A healthy brain for life. Scientific evidence for the care of your memory" by Dr Marta Portero, from the Department of Psychobiology and Methodology of Health Science of the Faculty of Psychology, and the Institut de Neurociències of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona.
Place: Cosmocaixa Museum, Barcelona (Carrer Isaac Newton 26)
Date: Saturday 26, April2025 - 11:30h
Organiser: Rosa Maria Vivar Foundation
Monday, April 28, 2025
00:00
International conference to fight disinformation and promote intercultural dialogue
Description:
The UAB Exe Campus will host the Second Media Literacy and Global Understanding Conference (MILID & Global Understanding) on 28 and 29 April. The event will bring together over 100 international experts and representatives of 50 institutions to design a Common Action Plan that promotes media literacy, critical thinking and intercultural dialogue. Organised by the UAB and the Arab Academy, through the MIL Institute and the Communication and Education Bureau, this conference is offered under the framework of the UNESCO MILID cooperation programme and includes the support of the National Cybersecurity Institute (INCIBE).
Place: Exe Campus, UAB
Date: Monday 28, April2025 - 00:00h
End date: Tuesday 29, April2025 - 00:00h
09:30
Conference on "Art, Education and Well-being"
Description:
In a world where well-being becomes a central axis to improve the quality of life of people, the CORES in Education and Employment and Mental Health of the UAB, the Faculty of Psychology, the TECSAM Network and the FEDAC Schools, organise this conference to create the space between researchers, teachers and students to explore the interrelationship between art, education and well-being. The aim is not only to analyse the impact of art in the classroom, but also to understand how the school, as a promoter of knowledge and health, and from a social perspective, can become a key space for the well-being of people from childhood to adulthood.
The objective of the conference is threefold. For UAB students related to the subject, it will be an opportunity to become aware of how what they learn in the classroom is transferred to practice and what applications it may have in their professional future. It will also allow to deepen the role of the school and healthcare environment in the prevention of mental health problems, as seen from a prevention and health promotion perspective. For people working in the world of education, the conference aims to offer tools and perspectives on the benefits of art in education and to share initiatives that are already being carried out in this field. Finally, for all other participants, it will be a space to generate synergies and establish connections between the university, schools, and the world of research.
The day will consist of an experiences fair, a round table and micro-talks on how art can contribute to mental and emotional health, how it can favour the personal and emotional development of students, how it can promote social inclusion in the educational and community environment, and how it can question and transform power and identity dynamics from an intersectional perspective.
Place: Humanities Library (Periodicals Room)
Date: Monday 28, April2025 - 09:30h
End date: Monday 28, April2025 - 17:30h
Organiser: UAB COREs in Education and Employment and in Mental Health, the Faculty of Psychology, the TECSAM Network and the FEDAC Schools
12:00
Screening of the film "Shadow of the Vampire" by E. Elias Merhige (2000).
Description:
The Cine UAB Room will host the screening of the acclaimed film "Shadow of the Vampire" on Monday, April 28 at 12:00 PM. Directed by E. Elias Merhige, this film offers a metacinematic exercise, proposing the idea of what might have happened if the acclaimed film "Nosferatu" had been filmed with a real vampire.
Part of the "Thresholds" Film Cycle, organized by Ludovico Longhi, professor in the Department of Audiovisual Communication and Advertising.
Place: UAB Cinema, Plaça Cívica
Date: Monday 28, April2025 - 12:00h
Telephone: 935812202
E-mail: cultura.enviu@uab.cat
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
15:00
Public lecture: "The ecological efficiency of human development in 20th century socialist and capitalist economies", by Dylan Sullivan and Lea Tamberg
Description:
The REAL-Postgrowth project (Post-growth – REAL – A Post-Growth Deal) is excited to announce that our colleagues Dylan Sullivan and Lea Tamberg, both post-doctoral researchers present a talk as part of our monthly public seminar series.
Talk: "The ecological efficiency of human development in 20th century socialist and capitalist economies"
Speakers: Dylan Sullivan and Lea Tamberg.
- Date: Tuesday, 29th April 2025
- Time: 15.00-16.00 (CET)
- Venue. Online - Join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86290631896?pwd=asziByRvPebZaw53x5olgpcRHCbzaj.1
A key challenge for the 21st century is to achieve good social outcomes for all with ecologically sustainable levels of production and resource use. Existing research indicates this can be achieved by organizing production more specifically around human wellbeing, including through socialist policies such as public finance, public services, and job guarantees. We investigate this question empirically by comparing the performance of socialist and capitalist economies in the late 20th century, using the United Nations’ classification framework, across 19 human development indicators as a function of aggregate production and resource use. We find that socialist economies performed better than capitalist economies at any given level of GDP, material footprint and, less significantly, CO2 emissions per capita, for 18 of the 19 indicators covering poverty, life expectancy, child mortality, healthcare, education, essential services, income equality and gender equality, except for physical integrity rights. In other words, socialist economies were generally more efficient at converting production and resources into human development. We argue that these results indicate socialist policy may help countries to achieve good lives for all within ecological limits. However, we also point to ways that the weaknesses of 20th century socialist policy should be improved, including through stronger democratic participation and human rights protections.
Dylan Sullivan is a doctoral researcher under a cotutelle agreement between ICTA-UAB, Barcelona, and Macquarie University, Sydney. At Macquarie University, he also teaches in political science, sociology, and anthropology. Dylan has published in top journals, including World Development, New Political Economy, and World Development Perspectives. His research focuses on political economy, global inequality, poverty measurement, and the economics of socialist planning.
Lea Tamberg is a doctoral researcher at the University of Lausanne. She researches, both conceptually and empirically, the socio-economic and biophysical prerequisites of human wellbeing. Lea holds a Bachelor's degree in Applied Systems Science from the University of Osnabrück and a Master's degree in Data Science from ETH Zurich.
Place: Online
Date: Tuesday 29, April2025 - 15:00h