Events
Faculty of Fine Arts and Music at the University of Melbourne
Featured events
Spotlight On: The lives of commoners in Pre-modern China
Join Rare East Asian Collection Curator Xiaoju Liu for a glimpse into the lives of commoners in Pre-modern China, a mostly untold and marginalised history absent from the pages of Dynastic records and historic narratives. Over the past two centuries archaeological excavations have unearthed historic documents offering new and fragmented insights into the lives of everyday people in a period marked by bureaucratic imperial rule. In this Spotlight program, Xiaoju will discuss rare collection items including two of the earliest known personal letters in Chinese history, written by two brothers fighting in the Qin unification wars, and 10th century divorce documents. Together these items, among others, illustrate and interrogate the divide between the perspectives captured by official histories and those of ordinary citizens.
Presented in partnership with the Public Gallery Association of Victoria’s Analog Art program, Archives and Special Collections’ Spotlight Series features archivists, librarians, curators, researchers, academics and artists. Each session spotlights the wonders our collections hold and creates an informal space for engaging in critical conversations, reflective discussions, slow looking, creative workshops, talks and much more.
International law, directors duties, and corporate climate accountability
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) Advisory Opinion on Climate Change, delivered last year, ruled that nations must act to combat climate change, including by regulating fossil-fuel emitting activities in their jurisdictions whether conducted by public actors or private entities like corporations. This landmark international decision has wide-ranging implications for the corporate sector in Australia and globally.
This panel session, jointly convened by the Laureate Program on Global Corporate Climate Accountability and Climate Integrity, will discuss some of the potential implications of the ICJ Advisory Opinion for companies, directors, investors and regulators, including:
What the international climate decision means for Australia
What domestic regulatory reforms could be required for Australia to meet its international obligations
The role that corporations, directors and investors could play in regulatory reform and raising ambition for limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees.