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Lesego Serolong-Holzapfel

Personal author: Serolong-Holzapfel, Lesego

Msc Social Policy and Development 2013-2014. Photo taken at the LSE. Im an entrepreneur from South Africa.

Louis Reitmann

Personal author: Reitmann, Louis

25 November 2018, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Great Park The study retreat at Cumberland Lodge is my most cherished memory from my time at LSE. Never before did I have the chance to ponder, debate, and appreciate International Relations so intimately with such outstanding, bright minds from around the globe. It was an experience that connected me deeply with my discipline and that created friendships lasting until today. And meeting HM The Queen, who in her lifetime has witnessed and shaped global events as only a few people in history, was a brilliant conclusion to a weekend I will never forget.

Malavika Venkatraman

Personal author: Venkatraman, Malavika

My first day in school after self isolation!

Petros Kusmu

Personal author: Kusmu, Petros

Three photos. Two from June 2015 celebrating the last day of exams with my colleagues in the MSc IPE program (one in front of the Old Building and Lincoln's Inn Fields). Another from Dec 2015, again in front of the Old Building, celebrating our last day together after our graduation ceremony. Looking at these photos completely floods me with happiness, nostalgia and a yearning to go back in time. My time at LSE was remarkable.

Petros Kusmu

Personal author: Kusmu, Petros

Three photos. Two from June 2015 celebrating the last day of exams with my colleagues in the MSc IPE program (one in front of the Old Building and Lincoln's Inn Fields). Another from Dec 2015, again in front of the Old Building, celebrating our last day together after our graduation ceremony. Looking at these photos completely floods me with happiness, nostalgia and a yearning to go back in time. My time at LSE was remarkable.

Ronica Singh

Personal author: Singh, Ronica

The left half of the picture is of my graduation ceremony on 19th December 2012 (MSc. Management, Information Systems and Innovation, with Distinction) and the right half is of my younger sister on her graduation on 18th December 2018 (MSc. Human Resources and Organisation, with Distinction) both clicked on campus.

Sanjana Ahuja

Personal author: Ahuja, Sanjana

In 2017, I moved to London to pursue my lifelong dream of studying at the LSE. I had applied to no other school and gave myself no option to fall back on, as there was no other school where I truly believed I could prosper and grow. The exceptional academic and administrative staff along with the vibrant student body made me feel right at home and I graduated from the institute in 2018, with a new confidence and outlook towards the world. I'm privileged to forever be, a #PartOfLSE

Sara Coole Panza

Personal author: Panza, Sara Coole

I met my husband at the LSE. I attended from 1990-1993. Here are photos of fun times at the end of year party in the garden at Passfield.

Sebastian Diessner

Personal author: Diessner, Sebastian

Description not submitted by sender

Taiyi Chen

Personal author: Chen, Taiyi

Description not submitted by sender

William Stein

Personal author: Stein, William

The second Geography and Environment Winter Ball - 26/1/19

Interview with Eva-Maria Asari

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Eva-Maria Asari, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Tom Sturdy
Date of interview: 10/07/2015
Duration of interview: 00:12:50
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: alumni, 2005 MSc Nationalism and Ethnicity, 2012 PhD

Interview with Eileen Barker

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Eileen Barker, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 24/07/2015
Duration of interview: 00:46:48
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1967-70 BSc Sociology, PhD Sociology. 1970 Professor, Department of Sociology, Emeritus Professor of Sociology with special reference to the study of Religion

Interview with Norman Biggs

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Norman Biggs, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 19/08/2015
Duration of interview: 00:45:41
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1988-2006 Professor of Mathematics. 2006 Emeritus Professor of Mathematics`

Interview with Jeffrey Golden

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Jeffrey Golden, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 11/07/2015
Duration of interview: 00:23:46
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1971 General Course, 1975 PhD International Relations; 2010-2013 Visiting Professor, Department of Law; Governor; 2014 Honorary Fellow

Interview with Richard Layard

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Richard Layard, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 31/07/2015
Duration of interview: 00:38:55
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1965-67 MSc Econ. 1964 Higher Education Research Unit, Centre for Labour Economics, Centre for Economic Performance. 1999 Emeritus Professor Economics. 2000 Honorary Fellow. 2003 Director, Wellbeing Programme, Centre for Economic Performance

Interview with Julian Le Grand

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Julian Le Grand, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 26/08/2015
Duration of interview: 00:33:31
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: joined in 1978. 1985-87 Director of Welfare State Programme, STICERD. 1993 Richard Titmuss Professor of Social Policy

Interview with Jim Thomas

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Jim Thomas, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 03/07/2015
Duration of interview: 01:04:06
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1960 BSc Econ; 1960-2002, Department of Economics

Interview with Simeon Underwood

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Simeon Underwood, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Clara Cook
Date of interview: 10/06/2015
Duration of interview: 00:43:47
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 2004-2015, Academic Registrar

Interview with Brian Van Arkadie

This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Brian Van Arkadie, along with a summary of the recording.
Interviewer: Tom Sturdy
Date of interview: 10/07/2015
Duration of interview: 00:29:59
Relationship of interviewee with LSE: 1955 BSc Econ, 1956 PG

Lunchtime at Red Lion Square

Submitted by: Avanes Khachaturov
Date: 17 March 2021
Location: Red Lion Square, London

With physical lectures being cancelled and all classes moving online by December 2020, I found that I had much more time to explore lunch options around campus. Before, my typical day involved rushing from one lecture hall or classroom to another, with studying in the Library in between, and hence I was limited by how far from campus I could venture out.

Most of the fast causal restaurants dotting Kingsway that specialized in providing food were closed the previous year, with primarily coffee chains remaining open for take away, offering only small sandwiches and toasties as lunch options. On the other hand, Lamb's Conduit Passage and Red Lion Street, which runs parallel to Red Lion Square, offered many small and cheap eateries of various cuisines, from Korean to Malaysian to British classics, which I only found the time to try out now that all of my studies were online and not tied to campus.

The picture taken was during one such lunch time, a relatively warm day for the weather that month, with the benches lining the park offering excellent places to sit back, enjoy a warm meal, and either listen to music or a podcast, or to just take in the sounds around you.

London's Gunnersbury

Submitted by: Grammateia Kotsialou
Date: May 2020
Location: Gunnersbury Park, London

The lockdown period awakened a creative part of me, a passion for photography. During a lockdown 'exercise' walk with my husband, I saw this spot and tried to capture as much as possible of this beauty.

CV19 A Film by the Department of Government

Submitted by: Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey
Date: May-August 2020

During Britain's first Covid lockdown in spring/early summer 2020, the Government Department launched a project to communicate some of the research that we were conducting on responses to Covid by various countries. Even as we were all working from home, we put together this film, which explores the emergency powers that governments were using to control the spread of coronavirus, and how the relationship between the people and their governments had fundamentally changed.

"CV-19: A Film by the Department of Government" highlights research being carried out into the impact and consequences of these changing relationships. The film explores the threat to liberal democratic norms, public support for an authoritarian government response, how governments are being held accountable, what the effects are on public transport and a new digital frontier for political campaigning.

As a measure of the interest in this film, the contributors held a roundtable discussion (over Zoom) in November 2020, and this is also available online. More broadly, the film has achieved remarkable success in film festival competitions. As of July 2021, and from international film festivals in 13 countries, the film has received 16 top awards (Best Short Documentary, Best Health Film, Best Edited Film, Best Web an New Media, etc), as well as 3 finalist positions, 2 semi-finalist positions, 13 official selections and 2 honorable mentions.

Political Science at the LSE: A History of the Department of Government, from the Webbs to Covid

Submitted by: Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey
Date: Autumn 2019-January 2021

This book began in autumn 2019, and continued throughout the Covid pandemic. It is being published by Ubiquity Press, as an open-source book, with a publication date of about 1st October 2021. It was meant to be part of the School's 125th anniversary celebration and is the first ever history of the LSE Government Department.

The contributors include students at all levels (undergraduate, masters, doctoral), working together with Gordon Bannerman (a British historian who previously studied at LSE) and Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey as Head of the Department. Moreover, we wanted to ensure that different perspectives were heard and so along with archival research, we included dozens of interviews with current and former academics, PSS staff, students and alumni. We wanted the history to have many voices, and I think that we have achieved that.

Completing this during Covid posed many challenges. First, we had only two months to conduct the in-person archival work in the library before the first lockdown hit. This posed a major challenge as it made access to the historical archives impossible. Fortunately, the research that had been done, together with on-line research, allowed us to move forward.

A second challenge was that we were all working from various parts of the worldCanada, Kenya, Lebanon, Poland, and different parts of the UK! So, just keeping the focus and momentum going as the pandemic raged throughout the world was quite the task. Somehow, each of us managed to bring our contributions to the volume at different times, as we were each facing our own Covid-related disruptions along the way.

A third challenge was obtaining the interviews as the turmoil of Covid took hold. Here, Skype, Zoom and phone calls made the interviews possible, and in some cases, were more convenient than in-person interviews. The real difficulty was that in spring of 2020, many interviewees were difficult to contact, given the on-going turmoil in everyones lives. But the fact that so many interviewees were willing to take the time for us is a real testament to the strength of feeling that many have towards the Department and the School more generally.

The book itself traces the emergence and evolution of the LSE Government Department from 1895 to 2020, focusing on the personalities that guided the development of the Department, the social and political contexts the Department existed within, its research agenda and course structure, and the location of the Department in British politics. It also charts the evolution of the discipline of political science in Britain itself. The volume is divided chronologically into four chapters, each covering roughly similar time periods in the Departments history and focuses on the events that shaped it: personalities, events, and location. Key themes are the development of political science in Britain, the impact of location on the LSE Government Department, the professionalisation of academia in Britain, and the microcosm the Department presents of British political life during each time period. The conflicts between progressive and conservative forces are a recurring theme which helps link the internal dynamics of the Department with the wider social and political contexts that occurred from the beginning of the School to its 125th anniversary.

Surrounded by the Himalayas

Submitted by: Megha Chand
Date: May 2020
Location: At home in Kathmandu, Nepal

The Himalayas have been a significant part of my parents lives. They are not mountain climbers or geologists; they were simply lucky enough to have seen the mountains in all their glory without even leaving Kathmandu. Before the early 2000s, any person in Kathmandu could peep out their window and see the Himalayan mountains: snow-peaked and awe-inspiring. However, in my lifetime, I do not remember ever witnessing such magnificence from my home - the mountains were never visible as they were constantly shrouded in smog.

Then, in May 2020, Nepal went into lockdown. My parents and I were unable to meet my grandparents, who required our support. We were all reckoning with the pandemic's impact on Nepal and the wider world.

Yet, as the pollution levels drastically decreased, I was finally able to experience the beauty etched into the minds of my parents. The mountains surrounded me with all their splendor. Needless to say, a photo cannot capture the grandeur of the Himalayas. However, this photo serves as a reminder of their beauty, which inspired me in times of adversity.

I Love You Forever

Submitted by: Qiuyan Chen
Date: 14 March 2021
Location: Gay village, Manchester

To celebrate my birthday, we went to Manchester during the pandemic. The first thing we did was to take photos in the gay village. There were so many rainbows, loved it! There were very few people and the shops weren't open. But as long as I can be with my girlfriend, I am the happiest person!

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