http://cregyptology.org.uk/?page_id=3461
Current Research in Egyptology website.
About CRE
CRE Statutory Guidelines: CRE Statutory Guidelines (year ending 2016)
Current Research in Egyptology (CRE) is a postgraduate conference set up to facilitate research and promote bonds between British and international universities worldwide who are conducting research in Egyptology, Egyptian Archaeology, or any other related field of study.
The students at the University of Oxford originally established CRE in 2000. Since then, the conference has become an annual event typically hosted by major centers for Egyptological research in the UK. Hosts for the conferences have included University College London, University of Cambridge, University of Birmingham, University of Liverpool, and many others which can be seen here in the Past Conferences. CRE XV is the first CRE to be awarded jointly to two different universities, and is the first CRE for King's College London and the second time for UCL. Recently, the conferences have grown considerably. The number of delegates increases annually. Importantly for CRE, the 2010 conference saw the conference move outside of the UK for the first time and was successfully hosted by the University of Leiden in the Netherlands.
Each conference brings something new and unique to the CRE organisation, and we hope that this will continue by ensuring that the conference continues to be held annually. CRE accepts all forms of academic research about Egypt, Sudan, and the surrounding Oases ranging from Prehistory to the Islamic Period. CRE, though originally intended to be a postgraduate conference, encourages anyone with an interest in Egyptology, Egyptian Archaeology, or a simple fascination with Ancient Egypt to attend!
Each conference is associated with a publication, a selection of submitted and peer-reviewed papers which reflects the nature and diversity of the current research within Egyptology and Egyptian Archaeology. Now published by Oxbow, the publications will be on sale at the conference and online, both on this website and on the publisher's website. CRE is set up in a democratic fashion. Any university wishing to host the conference can submit a proposal and a presentation during the Annual General Meeting (AGM). The vote of the assembly will then decide the winner after the presentations are completed. A committee representing the successful university will arrange the conference of the following year, while a permanent committee provides assistance and works on the long-term issues related to the conference. In order to allow a wider involvement of students in the CRE organisation, from 2009, each member can remain in the permanent committee for a total of two years, either in one or several positions.
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