Events
Home » Events
CHART hosts both specialist and public events that promote heritage research, teaching, training, and practice. Find out more about our upcoming events.
14 November, 2024
The School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics at Swansea University invite you to a Public Lecture by Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh, Founder and Director of the Palestine Institute for Biodiversity and Sustainability, Bethlehem University
1 October, 2024
A keynote by Dr Alex Langlands at the Heritage for Resilient Communities Conference
Viljandi, Estonian Traditional Music Centre.
26 September, 2024
A talk by Alan Dix at the International Workshop on Accessibility and Multimodal Interaction Design Approaches in Museums for People with Impairments. MobileHCI, Athens, Greece.
In this talk Professor Alan Dix offers some insights, some examples and many research challenges towards the goal of enabling exceptional digital experiences for everyone
23 May, 2024
In this lecture at the University of Antwerp, Nika Balomenou considers how tourism has changed the lives of Kavos communities dramatically in a very short time, with the changes impacting interpersonal relationships with economic interactions replacing family bonds in driving these relationships
11 May, 2024
In this online talk, Hilary Orange provides a nuanced discussion on postindustrial landscape, one that moves beyond iconic ruined structures of Cornish mining sites to look instead more deeply at surface–body relations from a more-than-representational perspective.
4 June, 2024
A paper presented by Alan Dix and Liz Jones at the AVI 2024 conference, Arenzano (Genoa), Italy.
QR codes are often used in outdoor cultural heritage settings. They are an established technology but inflexible, especially if the websites to which they point change their structure, or even disappear.
16 April, 2024
Keynote by Alan Dix at the Transforming Heritage Research in a Transforming World conference, International Hellenic University (5th CAA Greece conference), Serres, Greece
14 March, 2024
For over ten years Dr Alex Langlands has been researching the historical and evidential significance of Old Sarum, one of the most enigmatic and largest historic monuments in southern Britain.