All Eventsdiscussions+workshopsexhibitionsfilmhumourtalkstheatre+dramaAll Events discussions+workshops exhibitions film humour talks theatre+drama Never the same‘Never the Same’ is an online and a site-specific project with the families and relatives of those who were killed and injured in the McGurk’s Bar bombing of 1971. 22nd-28th March-Let’s Get MedievalParallels Between Medieval and Modern Culture: an interactive digital project compiled by Queen’s University Belfast students. 22nd-28th March–Napoleon’s Nose during the pandemicA photographic installation by artist Shiro Masuyama. 22nd-28th Marchall dayThe Year That Never WasA glimpse into the 2020 that might have been but never was: an exhibition which the public can interact with virtually through Zoom and social media. 22nd-28th March11am-4pmA Quarrel with MyselfA bold experiment in broadcasting is coming… 22nd-26th March9.30pmA HOUSE DIVIDEDA rare chance to see John T. Davis’ thoughtful and revealing 2003 documentary. 23rd-28th Marchfrom 7.00pmLimin-AlleyExplore alleys. Discover art. 25th-27th March12.00pm-5.00pmLaunch of the Belfast Alley Map with 9ft in CommonJoin 9ft in Common for this talk as they launch the emergent Belfast Alley Map. 25th March8.00pmStorytelling in Museums and Heritage SitesHow can personal stories engage with people emotionally across time and space and across different cultures? 26th March10.30amRestorative Justice in a world of inequality and injusticeDiscussing and debating the value of restorative justice interventions within the context of entrenched and deepening social and economic inequality in society. 26th March12.00pmDemocracy at the CrossroadsGoing Digital or Going Extinct. With Dr. Roslyn Fuller. 26th March12.00pmAdam Ramsay: Is it time to break up the UK?Adam Ramsay argues that we must leave the elitist, absurd UK state behind for good. 26th March1.00pmBuilding Democracy Back BetterThis panel and participative discussion will explore how a Build Back Better Citizens’ Assembly could help NI’s recovery and give the audience a chance to have their say. 26th March2.00pmSystem Innovation: Why now, why you?Laying out a framework for system innovation which will explain why it is needed so urgently. 26th March3.00pmDeliberative mini-publics and the political imaginationProfessor John Garry and Dr Jamie Pow discuss the potential role of deliberative mini-publics (citizens’ assemblies) in Northern Ireland. 26th March5.00pmAlan Whysall: BORDER POLL OR BUST?Alan Whysall, former Northern Ireland office civil servant, discusses the operation of border polls. 26th March6.00pmEyes on ExtractivesProtecting Land, Protecting Life – a discussion centering on the impacts to the environment posed by the extractive industry. 26th March6.00pmHikikomori: The Locked GenerationHikikomori: The Locked Generation looks at young people who feel compelled to live a reclusive way of life. 26th Marchfrom 7.00pmRoman Krznaric: CAN WE REDESIGN DEMOCRACY FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS?With Roman Krznaric, a public philosopher who writes about the power of ideas to change society. 26th March7.30pmRace relations in Northern IrelandPast, present and future: an interactive event discussing the issues raised in the Migrant and Minority Ethnic Council’s recent film. 26th March7.30pmHappy Birthday Northern Ireland!The Long And The Short Of The Creation Of Northern Ireland, with Dr David Hume and Tim McGarry. 26th March8.00pmThe Political Power Of A Film That Might Have BeenAuthors Noel McLaughlin and Joanna Braniff examine the ‘lost’ debut film made for the Rolling Stones in Belfast and Dublin in 1965. 26th March8.30pmGundaExperiential cinema in its purest form, Gunda chronicles the unfiltered lives of a mother pig, a flock of chickens, and a herd of cows with masterful intimacy. 28th Marchfrom 7.00pm