This research hub promotes scholarship which explores the global history of ideas. In recent years, intellectual history and the history of political thought have increasingly taken a global turn. Concepts, ideas and ideologies which were once approached as part of the history of the West are increasingly explored from a global perspective. A growing body of research explores the movement of ideas across the world, and the ways in which ideas were reconfigured as they travelled. As ideas travelled, they offered new resources for those seeking to build a better future. But the movement of ideas also represents the dark side of globalisation, forging new forms of racism, practices of torture and recipes to subdue, oppress and exploit entire populations. We are interested in the individuals who, through their work and/or biographies, contributed to build, frame, transport and translate ideas which connected (or confronted) ideas between different civilisations. We are interested in the institutions through which ideas were transmitted, such as the League of Nations. And in the transformative events such as revolutions, wars or economic catastrophes which radically reconfigured what was thinkable. Finally, we are interested in the technologies - such as print, photography, film or the internet - which made some transfers possible and impeded others. Convenors The co-convenors of the Global History of Ideas hub are Professor Emma Hunter and Dr Jeremy Dell. Research and Publications Members of the Centre are involved in a range of projects that relate to the histories of ideas in global contexts. Emma Hunter, Recovering Liberties in Twentieth-Century Africa Once approached primarily as part of the history of the West, liberalism has recently begun to receive attention from a global perspective. Yet the history of liberalism in twentieth-century Africa remains little studied. This is perhaps not surprising. As others have argued, there is an urgent need to revisit the history of liberalism in Africa and to recognise that much of this thought takes places in vernacular languages, in unexpected idioms and in unexpected places. Emma Hunter, Daniel Branch, Gerard McCann, Ismay Milford, Anna Adima and Daniel Heathcote, Another World? East Africa and the Global 1960s This is a collaborative Leverhulme Trust-funded project involving researchers from the Universities of Edinburgh, York and Warwick which seeks to understand and explain how East Africa’s global connections systematically broke down after independence, opening up a set of new and unpredictable paths forward. The project will run from 2018 to 2022. Historicizing Consent: What did it mean to agree in the late medieval and early modern world? Does consent have a history? A growing literature recognizes the pervasive discourses around consent in different realms of late medieval and early modern life: sex, marriage, religious conversion, labor, colonization, and contract law. But no existing scholarship has yet examined the general theme of consent across all of these areas. Indeed, it has been difficult to explain the prevalence of apparently egalitarian concerns for freely given consent in this era, when a stable social hierarchy was a much- sought after ideal. This project on “Historicizing Consent” has created and maintains an international, interdisciplinary scholarly network, defining a new research agenda for historians, literary scholars, legal scholars, theologians, and scholars of gender and sexuality studies, working on Europe and the Americas. This project involves a dispersed group of scholars, many of whom have—within their discrete topics of inquiry—analysed consent as a hegemonic concept that imposed order as much as it liberated individual choice. Meanwhile, emerging critiques of the concept of consent in present-day political and legal discussions, for instance around prosecutions of sexual assault, have similarly highlighted where consent falls short of its emancipatory promise. Such critiques in turn invite scholars to denaturalize the notion of consent and investigate its multiple uses and meanings in the past. We do so by observing the past and examining its relevance to the present. The Project Team: Professor Tamar Herzog, Harvard University Dr Sonia Tycko, University of Edinburgh More information on the project. Past projects Making Ireland Modern PAIXUE This article was published on 2024-08-01