A mother and daughter

A series of University and College events is taking place around this year’s International Women’s Day, on Sunday 8 March.

Family days, art exhibitions, inspiring speakers and talks will explore the experiences of women, the barriers they have faced and how these barriers have been overcome. The events will also celebrate the efforts of a new generation of women demanding the recognition they deserve.

Thursday 5 March 2020

University Information Services and Association of Project Management Women's International Women's Day Event

  • 2.30pm to 5pm
  • Norwich Auditorium, Roger Needham Building, West Cambridge Site

The University of Cambridge Information Services and Association of Project Management Women are collaborating to celebrate International Women's Day 2020.

An afternoon of diverse speakers and talks includes Professor Mateja Jamnik, Professor of Artificial Intelligence, Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge, and Specialist Adviser to the House of Lords Select Committee on AI, and Dr Antonia Sudkamper, Researcher on gender equality and diversity, Cambridge Assessment, and founder of the award-winning website Equilibrium.

The event is open to all professionals and will welcome both men and women.

University Information Services event

 

Friday 6 March

International Women's Day at Cambridge University Hospitals

  • 10am to 2pm​
  • The Hexagon, Frank Lee Centre, Addenbrooke’s Hospital

All are welcome to join a celebration of inspiring women with a day of talks, stalls and networking, including a talk and Q&A with Dr Hannah Barham-Brown, junior doctor, BMA Council member, and disability advocate, and Professor Jacqueline Dunkley-Bent OBE, Chief Midwifery Officer, NHS England, Professor of Midwifery at King's College London and London South Bank University.

Cambridge University Hospitals event

 

Saturday 7 March

Celebrating Women in Science and Conservation

  • 2pm to 4pm
  • Museum of Zoology, Discovery Space and Galleries, Downing Street

A celebration of the amazing women working to understand and better protect the world around us. Hear from the women at the forefront of zoology and conservation with a series of talks for International Women's Day.

Women in Science and Conservation event

 

Sunday 8 March

Cambridge University India Society International Women's Day talk

  • 3pm
  • The University Centre, Granta Place, Mill Lane

The Cambridge University India Society will present its annual speakers event for 2020. This year’s focus will be on women’s rights in India and the wider world. Gates PhD Scholars Saloni Atal (Christ’s College) and Sandile Mtetwa (Peterhouse) will be delivering their talk based on their respective research on women in India and Zimbabwe.

Cambridge University India Society event

 

International Women's Day by New Hall Art Collection

  • 3pm to 9.30pm
  • Murray Edwards College

The launch of the new Femfolio exhibition as well as lots more activities in celebration of International Women's Day.

The Femfolio comprises 20 works by the leading women artists who were central to the feminist art movement in the 1970s. Artists include Emma Amos, Eleanor Antin, Nancy Azara, Betsy Damon, Mary Beth Edelson, Lauren Ewing, Harmony Hammond, Joyce Kosloff, Diane Neeumaier, Faith Ringgold, Miriam Schapiro, Carolee Schneemann, Joan Semmel, Slyvia Sleigh, Joan Snyder, Nancy Spero, May Stevens, Athena Tasha, June Wayne, and Martha Wilson.

The event also includes a discussion on being a BME woman artist, led by artist Permindar Kaur, a Music and Words event led by the joint Churchill and Murray Edwards Choir, with an address by Murray Edwards Fellow Dr Lucy Delap on 'Women's Futurity', and a screening at 8pm of Frida.

New Hall Art Collection events

 

Monday 9 March

Celebrating 40 years of Women at Queens': Conference

  • 9am to 7.30pm
  • Queens’ College

This is a free one-day conference to celebrate the past 40 years of Women at Queens' and discuss ideas for the future. The final session — Dr Hannah Dawson in conversation with Olivia Laing — is open to the public.

Queens' College event

 

International Women’s Day Lecture: Gender and Climate Change

  • 12.30pm to 1.30pm
  • Lecture Room 2, 8 Mill Lane

Dr Emily Shuckburgh OBE is the Director of Cambridge Zero. She is also Reader in Environmental Data Science in the Department of Computer Science and Technology.

Dr Shuckburgh will share the extent of her work on climate change and communicating this to the public, and will discuss how gender plays a part in the bigger environmental picture.

Gender and Climate Change lecture

 

Monday 9 March to Saturday 14 March

24 Portraits: recovering and reimagining women’s labour

  • 10am to 4pm
  • Department of Pathology, Tennis Court Road

Artist Emma Copley has created an immersive, site-specific, painted portrait installation in order to celebrate and address the representation of women who currently work in all areas of the Department of Pathology.

Department of Pathology's exhibition

 

Tuesday 10 March

50 years is not long enough: with Professor Dame Athene Donald

  • 6pm to 7.15pm
  • Clare College, Memorial Court, Riley Auditorium

Why do we still have a significant gender pay gap and only 20% female professors? What can we do to speed up progress? We need to look both backwards and forwards if we are to achieve true gender equality. To mark International Women's Day, Professor Dame Athene Donald addresses these statements and discusses them in conversation with the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stephen J Toope.

Clare College event

 

What the children say: Learning the lessons about bullying

  • 12.30pm to 1.30pm
  • Sackler Lecture Theatre, Keith Peters Building, Cambridge Biomedical Campus

Dr Carrie Herbert MBE PhD, Founder and President of Red Balloon Learner Centre Group and The Mail's Inspirational Woman of the Year 2008, will be talking about Red Balloon's work to recover severely bullied self-excluding children and help them return to mainstream education. The charity was established in her house in 1996. She will talk about why she set it up, how it works and what Red Balloon has achieved in the last 23 years.

Cambridge Biomedical Campus event

IWD marked in School of Clinical Medicine Newsletter

Saturday 14 March

Darwin’s Scientific Women

  • 11am to 12.30pm and 2pm to 3.30pm
  • Cambridge University Library, Milstein Seminar Rooms, West Road

What do Charles Darwin’s letters tell us about the remarkable women who contributed to his scientific work? This workshop will explore how Darwin’s correspondence can help to build up a picture of the lives of women involved in his research and how they challenged what was expected of them. It will include a short presentation and a range of tasks and activities.

This workshop is aimed at children aged 10 to 14. Please book for the number of children aged 10 to 14 years attending. Children must be accompanied by a parent or carer but these adults do not need to book a place.

University Library's workshop

 

Wednesday 18 March

Women rising in STEM: biotech and beyond

  • 5.30pm to 8.30pm
  • Anglia Ruskin University, East Road

The Rising Network is proud to present Women Rising in STEM - Biotech and Beyond, an interactive mentoring event spotlighting on inspirational women in STEM.

Women have always played a hugely important role in the advancement of science, yet often their contribution has been hidden from history. This is now changing against a background of increased awareness of the importance of diversity and inclusion and the advent of a younger, more confident generation entering into science and demanding the recognition they deserve.

This event will see three inspirational female scientists, tell their stories about their biotech journey, including overcoming obstacles along the way, and how they have – and are – contributing to the body of scientific knowledge while enjoying rich and rewarding careers.

This event is part of the Cambridge Science Festival.

Women Rising in STEM event

 

Wednesday 18 March

Ambition without limits: Women in STEM

  • 6pm
  • Lee Hall, Wolfson College

Professor Jane Clarke, FMedSci FRS, distinguished biophysical chemist and President of Wolfson College, chairs a panel discussing women’s experience in STEM fields. She is joined by four women at various stages of their careers, both from the academy and industry. They will share what barriers they faced in their careers, how they successfully overcame them, and how they pave the way for subsequent generations of women in STEM.

Panelists:

  • Dr Susan Galbraith — Senior Vice President and Head of Research and Early Development, Oncology R&D at AstraZeneca
  • Dr Tamsin O’Connell — Reader in Isotopic Ecology, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
  • Dr Natalie Vriend — Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Research Fellow at the Cambridge Fluids Network
  • Anna Chaplin — PhD candidate in the Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge

This event is part of the Cambridge Science Festival and part of Wolfson Explores ✱BORDERS 2020.

Wolfson College event

 

I built that! A celebration of women in construction and real estate

  • 5.30pm to 6.45pm
  • Magdalene College, Cripps Court Auditorium, Chesterton Road

Construction and real estate are the reasons that the built environment exists around us. It requires a collaborative effort - from the drawing board to on-site construction. Historically, the industry has been dominated by men, yet increasingly there are examples of women in the profession, and it is time to celebrate those from the past and those in the present that have helped shape the world around us.

This event will begin with a brief history of women who have helped to design and build the Cambridge that we see today. We will then transition to the present. Five women, including an architect, developer, engineer, planner and plumber, will give a short talk about their favourite construction or real estate project - celebrating that “I built that!”. An interactive question and answer session will follow using an online-platform to encourage contribution from all of those in the audience.

This event is part of The Rising Tide: Women at Cambridge programme hosted by Cambridge University Libraries, and generously supported by Cambridge Assessment, the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, the Howard and Abby Milstein Foundation, and the Friends of Cambridge University Library.

Magdalene College event

 

Until Saturday 21 March

The Rising Tide: Women at Cambridge

  • Monday to Friday 9am to 6.30pm, Saturday 9am to 4.40pm
  • Milstein Exhibition Centre, Cambridge University Library

Curated by Dr Lucy Delap and Dr Ben Griffin, The Rising Tide focuses on the lived experiences of women at the University, the ongoing fight for equal educational rights, recognition, and inclusion in university activities, and the careers of some of the women who shaped the institution – from leading academics to extraordinary domestic staff and influential fellows’ wives.

The Rising Tide exhibition

 

Sunday 22 March

StrongWomen Science

  • 11.30pm to 12.30pm and 2.30pm to 3.30pm
  • Cambridge Junction, J2 Clifton Way

Ever wanted to know how you balance a chair on your chin, if you can juggle liquid, or how circus performers eat fire? StrongWomen Aoife (an engineer) and Maria (an environmental scientist) reveal the amazing science behind their astounding tricks.

StrongWomen Science doesn’t only illustrate scientific facts. It seeks to promote enquiry, inventiveness and accessibility in science, making it open to all, in particular young women and girls. In addition to demonstrating scientific principles in fun and accessible ways, it looks at the worth of failure and the power of teamwork, both shared by science and circus. Because when science meets circus, anything’s possible.

StrongWomen Science is a Circus250 Production www.circus250.org

This event is part of the Cambridge Science Festival.

StrongWomen event

 


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