Best Oxford College Experience for Adults at Lady Margaret Hall Summer Camps 2025

The best Oxford College Experience for Adults at Lady Margaret Hall summer camps taking place in summer 2025

PPE: Globalisation, Populism, and Identity
http://Fees
£4,060.00
http://Ages
19+
http://Location
Oxford

While the world has been moving increasingly towards greater inter-connectivity through trade, infrastructure, communications, and migration, criticism of ‘globalisation’ has been growing ever louder, with many blaming it for inequality, cultural marginalisation, and political disaffection. Through the lenses of philosophy, politics, and economics this course will explore these competing dynamics and equip you to understand some of the most significant political phenomena of our time.

Jane Austen: Literature and Legacy
http://Fees
£4,060.00
http://Ages
19+
http://Location
Oxford

Jane Austen created some of the most fondly loved characters in literature, with generations of readers fascinated by her juxtaposition of romance and reality in Regency England. Why do Austen’s novels continue to resonate so deeply across the centuries? Join this course to immerse yourself in this captivating world where love, class, and identity intersect, explore the key themes and stylistic techniques employed, and discover how Austen’s work continues to influence literature and popular culture today.

Peace and Conflict Studies
http://Fees
£4,060.00
http://Ages
19+
http://Location
Oxford

Why do countries go to war? What is the impact of conflict on a society? And how do we find the path to sustainable peace? This course offers the opportunity to explore these questions and more through an introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies, an interdisciplinary Social Science dedicated to understanding the root causes of conflict and the conditions for the promotion of peace.

The Internet and Society
http://Fees
£4,060.00
http://Ages
19+
http://Location
Oxford

Does the Internet pose a risk to Society? Is it creating a global community, or robbing us of human connection? Is it offering new frontiers in creative freedom, or destroying authenticity and diversity? And is the Internet an opportunity for civic engagement, or a cause of echo chambers and disinformation? Sociologists have been investigating these questions since the emergence of the World Wide Web in the 1990s, and in this course you will explore the history of scholarship, discover the latest research, and consider the future of the Internet’s complex role in society.

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