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Centre for Death & Society (CDAS) Conference 2026 programme

The full programme for the Centre for Death and Society (CDAS) 2026 Conference.


Factsheet

Welcome to the Centre for Death & Society (CDAS) Conference 2026.

This year’s theme is 'Death and Power', and we are excited to share our programme. This includes a wide range of thought-provoking papers, roundtables, three keynote talks, and a selection of interactive sessions/workshops.

As some sessions overlap, you can decide which sessions you would like to attend. The programme below is broken down by time, session type, and session title/contents to help you find the sessions you're interested in and plan which you want to attend.

The session types are:

  • Keynote talk: We’ll all be together to listen to our fantastic keynote speakers and ask questions after their presentations
  • Paper session: Cameras off, but come ready to listen and ask questions. During these sessions you'll hear about multiple papers covering a broad topic
  • Roundtable session: Cameras on and a willingness to take part in discussions
  • Workshop/interactive session: Come with your camera on, and a willingness to take part in discussions
  • Break: Take some time out to rest and reflect

Download our CDAS Conference 2026 handbook for more information about each session

Day 1: Wednesday 17 June

Time Session type Session title/contents
12.40pm to 1.30pm Keynote talk Carceral Care and the Production of Care-less Deaths: A Sociological Analysis of Prolonged Dying after Traumatic Brain Injury (Ian Stobirksi)
1.30pm to 1.40pm Break -
1.40pm to 2.40pm Paper session: Objects or subjects Religion, Power and Death (Adem Sağir); The Subversive Necropower of the Dead (Joshua Hurtado Hurtado); The Agency of Dead Bodies in Iran’s January 2026 Mass Killings: Sovereignty, Refusal, and Ritual Innovation Cancer Use Social Media to Negotiate Illness, Identity and Mortality (Hajar Ghorbani)
1.40pm to 2.40pm Paper session: Digital Artificially Alive: An Exploration of AI Resurrections and Spectral Labor Modes in a Postmortal Society (Tom Divon and Christian Pentzold); Relational Distance and AI Reanimations of the Dead in Japan: Who Can Be Reanimated? (Akiko Orita); Digital Power, Vulnerability and Resistance: How Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer Use Social Media to Negotiate Illness, Identity and Mortality (Belén Jiménez and Alejandra Castañeda Fe)
2.40pm to 3pm Break -
3pm to 4pm Roundtable What Deaths Matter in Death Studies? Global Power and Inequalities in the Study of Death (Naomi Pendle (Chair), Fisayo Ajala, Jean Beniot Falisse, Nada Afiouni, Safa Suliman and Yumna Masarwa)
3pm to 4pm Roundtable Hail the Victorious Dead: Elements of Power in Memorialisation (Robert Spinelli and Robyn Lacy (Chairs), Kaylee Alexander, Katie Clary, Carolyn Dillian, Jessica Elton, Jessica Freeman and Ciara Henderson)
3pm to 4pm Roundtable Tiredness of Life in Older Persons: The Power and Politics of Death through a Multidisciplinary Lens (John Troyer (Chair), Jana Rek-Kralova, Kenneth Chambaere, Els Van Wijngaarden)
4pm to 4.15pm Break -
4.15pm to 5.15pm Paper session: Inequalities and social justice Euthanasia and Care Ethics: A Review of the Chilean Debate From a Power Perspective (Vicente Santibáñez Aravena); When Systems Decide Who Deserves Care: Power and Death at the Margins (Courtney R. Petruik); Exploring Grief-Fuelled Activism with the Youth Coalition Combating Islamophobia (YCCI) (Lisa McLean, Maryam Al-Sabawi, Ayesha Islam)
4.15pm to 5.15pm Paper session: Violence Who May Move, Who May Die: Borders, Racial Capitalism, and Necropolitical Sovereignty (Grace McWilliam); Hunted, Haunting Bodies: Israel’s Necropolitics Against the Dead in Gaza (Rimona Afana); Death, Accountability, and Bureaucracy: Inquiry Commission as a Technology of Power in South Asia (Salman Hussain)
5.15pm to 7pm Break -
7pm to 8pm Workshop Power in Health and Care Research: A Case of Epistemic Injustice (Amanda Roberts)

Day 2: Thursday 18 June

Time Session type Session title/contents
9am to 10am Keynote talk Dying as a Martyr; Negotiating Memory, Morality and Power (Aroob Alfaki, Abdirahman Edle Ali, Yumna Masarwa, Narges Emami)
10am to 10.10am Break -
10.10am to 11.10pm Paper session: Knowledge and authority 1 Rest in Empire: Colonial Control Over Pacific Deathways (Amy Henry); The power of law: medico-legal death investigation (Imogen Jones); Empowering the grieving to establish new traditions in the landscape of East End (John Harris)
10.10am to 11.10pm Paper session: Marginalised life and death Asylum, Death and Power Carly Speed (Tony Walter); Examining The Contradictory Power Structures Surrounding Deaths in Psychiatric Detention (Carly Speed); Regulating Deaths in Detention: Vulnerability and the Atomisation of Harm (Laura Haas)
11.10am to 10.30am Break -
11.30am to 12.30pm Paper session: Knowledge and authority 2 ‘Afraid of a Hard Death’: Assisted Dying, Power, and Everyday Moral Reasoning in Mass Observation (Kathryn McEwan); The Power of Language: Exploring the Experiential Relational and Ontological Erasures of ‘Grief’ (Jane Ribbens McCarthy, Korina Giaxoglou and Lystra Hagley-Dickinson); Writing the Dead: Colonial Power and the Historical Knowledge of Death on the Eastern Cape Frontier (Lari Hallowes-Welman)
11.30am to 12.30pm Paper session: Death past and present Spectacle Without Consent: Anatomists, “Giants,” and the Continued Abuse of Power Over the Dead (Lucy Hyde); The Doctor Too Many For Death: Satirising Power at the Eighteenth-Century Deathbed (Dan O'Brien); Inequality in Life and Death for People Experiencing Homelessness (Glenys Caswell)
12.30pm to 12.45pm Break -
12.45pm to 1.30pm Roundtable discussion What does it mean to really care? An Ethical Conversation about Care (Mary Hodgson)
1.30pm to 2.50pm Paper session: Loss - human and non-human Geographies of Death During Famine (Abraham Diing Akoi and Gisma Musa); The Emergence of Ecological Grief From a Transformative Phenomenology Inquiry (Lucja Lange); What Autonomy? Power, Structure, and Agency in Assisted Dying (Christopher Lyon)
1.30pm to 2.50pm Paper session: Institutions Bureaucracy at the Bedside: Institutional Power, End-Of-Life Companionship, and the Afterlife of Aaperwork (Albert Sobilo); Conflicts of Power in Voluntarily Stopping Eating and Drinking (VSED) (Aly Dickinson and Jagna Feierabend); Counting Deaths, Producing Invisibility: Data, Medical Neglect, and Mortality in Greek Immigration Detention (Adriana Fili)
2.50pm to 3.10pm Break -
3.10pm to 4.10pm Interactive session Communications of Grief: A New Framework (Sarah Helton)
3.10pm to 4.10pm Workshop Workshop: Emotion, Power, and Creative Grief Practices in the Shadow of Non-Finite Loss (Amelia Seraphia Derr)
3.10pm to 4.10pm Roundtable Death Studies Futures: Thinking Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries (Sarah Wagner, Ruth Toulson, Sarah Richardson, Ann Neumann, Barbara J. King, Robin Reineke)
4.10pm to 4.30pm Break -
4.30pm to 5.50pm Paper session: Transitions ‘My Body, My Choice’: Direct Action in Death Care (Emma Moormann); Right to Die: Ageing, MAID, and Neoliberal Necropolitical Logics in Canada and the UK (Bethany Simmonds and Hermanpreet Singh); Advancing a Decolonial and Intersectional Framework for Understanding Contemporary Mourning and its Creative Expressions (Rayanne Haines); Power Over Death: Haitian Vodou, Zombies and the Politics of Dead Bodies (B Laboy)
4.30pm to 5.50pm Paper session: Material culture and language Who Decides Where Grief Belongs? Memorial Benches and Public Remembrance in England (Anna Malpas); Voluntary Gravedigging, Power and Agency in Rural Ireland (Ciara Henderson, Damien Brennan and Elaine Moriarty); The Ethics of the Funeral Eulogy: Lies, Omissions, and Perceived Falsehoods (Sarah Carter-Walshaw); Mobilizing Freedom: Black Funeral Directors and the Power of Professional Vehicles (Deborah Streahle)
5.50pm to 7pm Break -
7pm to 8pm Interactive session Agency and Empowerment Through Embodied Grief Companionship (Eleonora Ramsby Herrera)

Day 3: Friday 19 June

Time Session type Session title/contents
9am to 10am Paper session: Knowledge and authority Bodies as Evidence of the Future: Centenarians, Transhumanist Discourse, and the Power of Death Narratives (Chenyang Guo); I Have a Mouth, But I Won’t Eat: a Case of Voluntary Stopping of Eating and Drinking (Kieran Kejiou); Society toward Suicide: Biopower, Responsibility, and Death in Japan (Norichika Horie)
9am to 10am Paper session: Loss and its impact Deconstructing Grief across Cancer Caregiving and Bereavement: A Constructivist Grounded Theory (Ananya Bajaj); Death and Loss in Co-Housing Communities: Negotiating Freedom, Care and Conformity in a Swedish Context (Annika Jonsson and Cathrin Wasshede); The Power of Parenting a Baby Who Has Died (Helena Morais)
10am to 10.15am Break -
10.15am to 11.15am Paper session: Babies, children and young people How Child Death Can Empower Action: Data, Voice, and Prevention (April Keogh); Grieving Divergently (Erica Borgstrom); Co-Creating Death Literacy With Young People: Reflections on Power and Agency From a Participatory Research Study in Canada (Amarens Matthiesen, Ryan Kent and Nika Rovensky)
10.15am to 11.15am Paper session: Resistance and representation State at the Dock: Mobilizing Public Sentiments and Thriving Public Sphere in the Aftermath of Death (Sayendri Panchadhyayi); Framing Death as Victory: Death as the Ultimate Spectacle of Military Power (Tal Morse and Sara Kopelman); Laughing at Death: Humour, Mortality and Decolonial Power in Contemporary Visual Culture (Marko Stamenkovic)
11.15am to 11.30am Break -
11.30am to 12.40pm Roundtable Roundtable: Power, Autonomy and Incapacity: Rethinking Future Decision (Kirra Moser, Nola Ries, Victoria Shepherd)
11.30am to 12.40pm Roundtable Roundtable: The Struggle for Power over Death in Digital Afterlives (Patricia Živković, Leah Henrickson, Nevena Jevremović, Edina Harbinja)
11.30am to 12.40pm Roundtable Cursus Rerum: (Post)human Conflicting Cultures of Loss in the Anthropocene (Christopher Lyon, Sarah Bezan, Jesse Peterson, Naomi Pendle)
12.30pm to 12.40pm Break -
12.40pm to 1.30pm Keynote talk Bombs, Boats, and Bodies: The US “Department of War” in an Era of Exceptionalist, Maximalist Cruelty (Sarah Wagner)

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