June has been a busy month with CBRL staff attending workshops, conferences and running events.
We love keeping in touch with CBRL alumni and were thrilled to attend the launch event of a project developed by Dr Noam Leshem (Durham University), former CBRL Pilot Study awardee, entitled "
Portraits from No Man's Land" which took place earlier this month in partnership with Google Arts & Culture at the Royal Geographical Society. Look out for a future blog post from Noam to learn more about his research.
Last week CBRL's Amman Director, Dr Carol Palmer took part in the first partner workshop of this AHRC funded project took place in Jordan. Led by Dr Gehan Selim (University of Leeds) from the UK and Dr Monther Jamhawi (JUST) from Jordan. This project will analyse the important site of Umm Qais using an interdisciplinary approach combining architecture, urban planning and memory studies.
Read more.
We are thrilled to share the news that Levant, CBRL’s long-established journal on ancient Levantine studies, has been ranked 33rd out of 300 journals listed under the archaeology subject category in the prestigious SCImago Journal Rank for 2018. Read more.
Nahrein Network Visiting Scholarship Scheme: call now open
The call for applications from scholars, cultural heritage professionals and NGO workers who are resident in Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey and Iran to visit the UK for training and research is now open.
More details here.
New publications from CBRL Kenyon Institute Director, Dr Mandy Turner
CBRL centennial award holder Dr Steven Wagner (Brunel University London) unravels the fascinating story of the lost archives of the controversial life of Hajj Amin al-Husayni, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in the 1940s. Read more.
2017 CBRL Pilot Study awardee Dr Katarina Lenner (University of Bath) describes her fieldwork in Jordan that looked at the politics of migration with regard to the changing features of the German refugee policy and its impact on Syrian refugees in Jordan.
Read more.
Tune into archived CBRL Podcasts and lectures
Tracing the alternative music scene in post-Oslo Palestine