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Total Results: 13331
# | Episode Title | Description | People | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
11601 | In At The Deep End | Alex Gunz (1994, PPE) on his novel, In At The Deep End | Alex Gunz | 02 Oct 2020 | |
11602 | Exiles From Paris | Brigitte Adès (1982) on her novel, Exiles From Paris | Brigitte Ades | 01 Oct 2020 | |
11603 | The Cry of the Lake | Charlie Tyler (1993) on her debut novel, The Cry of the Lake | Charlie Tyler | 30 Sep 2020 | |
11604 | Introducing CBT for low mood and depression 2: six troublesome thoughts and how to respond | This second CBT podcast focuses on the "C" of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), looking at ways in which low mood and depression can affect your thinking and introducing the key cognitive techniques of thought monitoring and thought challenging. | Jonathan Totman, Oxford University Counselling Service | 15 Oct 2020 | |
11605 | Introducing CBT for low mood and depression 1: doing more of what matters to you | This first episode on CBT looks at some of the ways in which low mood and depression can manifest in students, and introduces a central cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) strategy known as "behavioural activation". | Jonathan Totman, Oxford University Counselling Service | 15 Oct 2020 | |
11606 | Sandy Kedar: Emptied Lands - A Legal Geography of Bedouin Rights in the Negev. | Prof. Sandy Kedar (Haifa) discusses his co-authored book on the legal rights of the Bedouin in the Negev. | Sandy Kedar | 14 Oct 2020 | |
11607 | The Terra Lectures in American Art Part 1: Regarding the Portrait: The Primers | Professor Amy M. Mooney, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art Hosted by TORCH. Moderator; Alastair Wright: Alastair Wright is Head of the History of Art Department and Tutorial Fellow in Art History at St John’s College, Oxford. | Amy M. Mooney | 16 Oct 2020 | |
11608 | The Terra Lectures in American Art Part 3: Regarding the Portrait: The Progressives | Professor Amy M. Mooney, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art Hosted by TORCH. Moderator: Melanie Chambliss, Assistant Professor in the Humanities, History, and Social Sciences Department at Columbia College Chicago. | Amy M. Mooney | 16 Oct 2020 | |
11609 | The Terra Lectures in American Art Part 2: Regarding the Portrait: The Photographers | Professor Amy M. Mooney, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art. Hosted by TORCH. Moderator: Professor Deborah Willis, Department of Photography and Imaging at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. | Amy M. Mooney | 16 Oct 2020 | |
11610 | The Terra Lectures in American Art Part 4: Regarding the Portrait: The Pragmatists | Professor Amy M. Mooney, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art Hosted by TORCH. | Amy M. Mooney | 16 Oct 2020 | |
11611 | How Much Does The Planet Matter? | OSEF 2020 Food and Environment Panel | Emilie Vanpoperinghe, Benjamina Bollag, Daniel Holod | 20 Jul 2020 | |
11612 | Refugee Entrepreneurship: Today’s Camps Tomorrow’s Cities | OSEF 2020 Refugee Entrepreneurship Panel. Sandra Raad, Global Lead for Empact, WFP Innovation Accelerator Joelle Hangi, CEO, Refugee Arts and Authors Myrna Atalla, Executive Director, Alfanar Venture Philanthropy Organisation Moderated by Tsechu Dolma, MB | Sandra Raad, Joelle Hangi, Myrna Atalla, Tsechu Dolma | 23 Jun 2020 | |
11613 | Space: The Final Frontier? | OSEF 2020 Space Panel. Lisa Lang, Founder & CEO, The Powerhouse Group Cyril Kubr, Co-managing Director, European Space Agency Switzerland Rafael Jorda Siquier, Founder & CEO, OpenCosmos Moderated by Thomas Schmitz, MBA candidate | Lisa Lang, Cyril Kubr, Rafael Jorda Siquier, Thomas Schmitz | 23 Jun 2020 | |
11614 | To the Volcano and Other Stories | Elleke Boehmer (University of Oxford) in conversation with Wale Adebanwi (University of Oxford) | Wale Adebanwi, Elleke Boehmer | 16 Oct 2020 | |
11615 | Forum Opening And Morning Keynote - Anousheh Ansari | Introduction to OSEF by Libby Wood and Dean Peter Tufano, Saïd Business School. Followed by Morning Keynote - Anousheh Ansari | Anousheh Ansari, Dean Peter Tufano | 23 Jun 2020 | |
11616 | Live Event: Imagined Journeys: Pilgrimage, Diplomacy, and Colonialism in Medieval Europe | TORCH Goes Digital! presents a series of weekly live events Big Tent - Live Events!. Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Marion Turner, Matthew Kneale | 21 Oct 2020 | |
11617 | The First Tibetan Block Print: The Khara-Khoto Collection of Precious Dhāraṇīs with the Emperor's Postscript | Alla Sizova discusses the role of translation activities in the spread of Buddhism in the 12th century and outlines the extent of Tibetan influence on the Tangut culture. | Alla A. Sizova | 15 Oct 2020 | |
11618 | Live Event: White Rose - Voices of the German Resistance | TORCH Goes Digital! presents a series of weekly live events Big Tent - Live Events! Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Alex Lloyd, John Herring | 19 Oct 2020 | |
11619 | Episode 2 - Afrofuturism: For who? | Mohale Mashigo describes her relationship with time, imagining a future inflected by apartheid, and her controversial Afrofuturism essay. | Mohale Mashigo, The Yearning, afrofuturism, apartheid, South Africa, science fiction, speculative fiction, fantasy, representation, narrative futures, futures thinking network | 22 Oct 2020 | |
11620 | The Dictatorship Syndrome | Alaa Al Aswany, author of The Dictatorship Syndrome (2019), gives a talk for the Middle East Centre seminar series. Chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan (St Antony's College, Oxford) | Alaa Al Aswany, Eugene Rogan | 23 Oct 2020 | |
11621 | Our Own Way in This Part of the World: Biography of an African Community, Culture, and Nation | For this seminar today we hosted Kwasi Konadu (Colgate University). Professor Konadu, Colgate University, spoke about his book, Our Own Way in This Part of the World: Biography of an African Community, Culture, and Nation. | Kwasi Konadu | 23 Oct 2020 | |
11622 | Transnational Francoism | Bàrbara Molas discusses Transnational Francoism: The British and The Canadian Friends of National Spain as part of the TORCH Network Conversations in Identity, Ethnicity and Nationhood. Bàrbara Molas is a PHD Candidate in History at York University | Bàrbara Molas | 23 Oct 2020 | |
11623 | Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Yair Wallach, (SOAS): Language of Revival or Conquest? Hebrew in the Streets of early 20th century Jerusalem | Yair Wallach discusses his book A City in Fragments: Urban Text in Modern Jerusalem (Stanford University Press, 2020). | Yair Wallach | 22 Oct 2020 | |
11624 | Hadeel Abu Hussein (Oxford): Palestinian Arab Citizens in Israel, Equality Struggle | Hadeel Abu Hussein discusses the historical stages of the Palestinian Arab citizens in Israel with respect to their political formation and social experience as individuals and a collective starting from 1948, until nowadays. | Hadeel Abu Hussein | 27 Oct 2020 | |
11625 | The Helen Muspratt Archive | Jessica Sutcliffe, the daughter of photographer, Helen Muspratt, give a short talk on her mother's life and career. | Jessica Sutcliffe | 26 Oct 2020 | |
11626 | Creating History and Building Legacy (Illuminations, The Other Observers, Warworks, Signals Festival) | Val Williams gives a short talk on what it is like for early women photographers in a very male dominated industry | Val Williams | 26 Oct 2020 | |
11627 | Who are most vulnerable to misinformation about the pandemic | Federica Cherubini speaks with Rasmus Nielsen and Richard Fletcher, two of the authors of a recent report about the coronavirus communication crisis in the UK. | Frederica Cherubini, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Richard Fletcher | 27 Oct 2020 | |
11628 | Episode 3 - People like me: Speculation in Pakistan | Sami Shah ranges over his radio, comedy and burgeoning literary career, and describes how he has to write himself into the speculative fiction space. | Sami Shah, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 23 Oct 2020 | |
11629 | Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Henry Segerman - Artistic Mathematics: truth and beauty | Mathematicians get up to all sorts. Geometers and Topologists in particular occupy a world of inconceivable shapes, concepts and dimensions. But how do you visualise such ideas? Sure, there's computer graphics, but what about over here, in the real world? | Henry Segerman | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11630 | Mathematics Public Lecture: How Learning Ten Equations Can Improve Your Life - David Sumpter | Mathematics has a lot going for it, but David Sumpter argues that it can not only provide you with endless YouTube recommendations, and even make you rich, but it can make you a better person. | David Sumpter | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11631 | Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: How to Make the World Add Up - Tim Harford | You have to sympathise with statistics. Misunderstood and misused when all they want to do is accumulate. What they need is a little human understanding. Tim Harford's Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture does just that. | Tim Harford | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11632 | Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Can maths tell us how to win at Fantasy Football? - Joshua Bull | Oxford Mathematician Josh Bull won the 2019-2020 Premier League Fantasy Football competition from nearly 8 million entrants. So how did he do it? Did he by any chance use mathematics? | Joshua Bull | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11633 | OxPeace 2020: Take-aways from the ‘Women, Peace and Security’ Conference | Frances Guy and Liz Carmichael sum up the 2020 Oxpeace Conference. | Frances Guy, Liz Carmichael | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11634 | OxPeace 2020: Combating Sexual and Gender-based Violence | Dr Henri Myrttinen, Gender Associations, gives a talk for the 2020 Oxpeace Conference | Henri Myrttinen | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11635 | Orientalism and the Language of the Middle East | Lillie Sullivan, Piotr Schulkes, and Hajar Meddah discuss what the Middle East as a region is and how it is portrayed in academia and the media. | Piotr Schulkes, Hajar Meddah, Lillie Sullivan | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11636 | How do species postpone or even escape from senescence? | Dr Rob Salguero-Gomez, Associate Professor in Ecology, Department of Zoology, gives a talk on lessons for a longer, better human life for the EBHC podcast series. | Rob Salguero-Gomez | 02 Nov 2020 | |
11637 | Episode 4: Short stories are short: Edit for meaning | Mahvesh Murad discusses the work of curating and editing anthologies of speculative short fiction, ethically, refusing the word 'diversity' for doing too little, too late. | Mahvesh Murad, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11638 | Book at Lunchtime: Commemorative Modernisms: Women Writers, Death and the First World War | Join us for an online TORCH Book at Lunchtime webinar on Commemorative Modernisms: Women Writers, Death and the First World War written by Dr Alice Kelly. | Alice Kelly, Michael Whitworth, Laura Rattray, Jay Winter | 03 Nov 2020 | |
11639 | Activism and Ecopoetry with Homero Aridjis | On this episode, Sofia and Julia talk to Mexican ecopoet, activist, and ex-diplomat, Homero Aridjis! | Homero Aridjis, Sofia Castello y Tickell, Julia Migne | 03 Nov 2020 | |
11640 | Authoritarian or Revolutionary? Reflections on the Nature of the State in the Islamic Republic of Iran | Maryam Alemzadeh (Princeton) Siavush Randjbar-Daemi (St Andrews), author of The Quest for Authority in Iran: a history of the presidency from revolution to Rouhani (2017), give a talk for the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series. | Maryam Alemzadeh, Siavush Randjbar-Daemi | 04 Nov 2020 | |
11641 | Humanities Cultural Programme Live Event: Katie Mitchell in conversation with Ben Whishaw | Big Tent - Live Events! Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. 'Liveness'. | Ben Whishaw, Katie Mitchell, Wes Williams | 04 Nov 2020 | |
11642 | Live Event: Tragedy and Plague - In Conversation with Professor Oliver Taplin and Fiona Shaw CBE | TORCH Goes Digital! presents a series of weekly live events Big Tent - Live Events! Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. Drama Week | Oliver Taplin, Fiona Shaw | 04 Nov 2020 | |
11643 | Exploring the fundamentals of leadership with Professor Carl Heneghan - Part One | Professor Kamal Mahtani interviews Professor Carl Heneghan, exploring his leadership; how it all started, the challenges he has faced, emotional intelligence, the importance of clear communication and being a tortoise rather than a hare as a leader. | Carl Heneghan, Kamal Mahtani | 04 Nov 2020 | |
11644 | Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Semina: Danielle Drori (Oxford): Yosef Klausner in Translation: Zionism and Christianity | The second seminar in the Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalism Sereis. Danielle Drori discusses Zionism and translation, with a focus on Klausner's Life of Jesus | Danielle Drori | 03 Nov 2020 | |
11645 | Domestic audience costs and foreign policy making in India: recent shifts in the BJP's strategy | Unlike ever before in India’s history, domestic political calculations and audience costs dictate the shaping of the country’s foreign and security policy. | Happymon Jacob | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11646 | Recipes for transforming food production and beyond | Paul Clarke, Ocado's Chief Technology Officer, will focus on the disruptive ingredients and recipes at the heart of Ocado's ongoing journey of self-disruption and reinvention. | Paul Clarke | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11647 | What is life? | For this year's James Martin Memorial Lecture, Sir Paul Nurse will consider some of the fundamental ideas of biology with the aim of identifying principles that define living organisms. | Paul Nurse | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11648 | Pandemic as event: thinking modern Indian society through a crisis | Conjunctures and crises reveal the fault lines of a society. Covid 19 and the resultant lockdown in India have brought back memories of the devastation wrought by the flu epidemic of 1918 and the political crackdown by the colonial government. | Dilip Menon | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11649 | Privacy Is Power | Part of the Colloquium on AI Ethics series presented by the Institute of Ethics in AI. This event is also part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Carissa Véliz, Sir Michael Tugendhat, Stephanie Hare, John Tasioulas | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11650 | Algorithms Eliminate Noise (and That Is Very Good) | Part of the Colloquium on AI Ethics series presented by the Institute of Ethics in AI. This event is also part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | John Tasioulas, Ruth Chang, Sir Nigel Shadbolt, Cass Sunstein | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11651 | Ethics in AI Education | This event is also part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Peter Millican, Milo Phillips-Brown, Max Van Kleek, Helena Webb | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11652 | Challenging the Limited View - The Case of the Women in Mosques Movement | Part of the Middle East Centre Women's Rights Research Seminars. With Dr Mine Yildirim Chair: Dr Nazila Ghanea (Department for Continuing Education,University of Oxford). | Mine Yildirim, Nazila Ghanea | 06 Nov 2020 | |
11653 | Humanity, Inclusive Positivism and the Law of Armed Conflict | Humanitarian personnel from time to time find themselves transporting desperate civilian residents forced out of besieged areas into long-term or even permanent displacement | Nobuo Hayashi | 06 Nov 2020 | |
11654 | Creative Commons | Looking back; Moving Forwards: The History of Black Lives Matter | Wolfson College marks Black History Month 2020 with an engaging discussion with Britain's foremost experts on the history of black lives and communities in Britain. | Olivette Otele, Hakim Adi | 05 Nov 2020 |
11655 | Creative Commons | Somali Kinship and Bureaucratic Governance at Dagahaley Refugee Camp in Kenya | For this seminar we hosted Fred Ikanda from Maseno University. Professor Ikanda's spoke about his research and fieldwork experiences with the Dagahaley Refugee Camp. | Fred Ikanda | 05 Nov 2020 |
11656 | How the BBC addresses the challenge of disinformation worldwide | Rebecca Skippage, leader of the BBC’s Disinformation Team, discusses it's efforts to address mis/disinformation, its decisions about weighing in on misleading or false information and the disinformation unit’s relations with the rest of the BBC | Meera Selva, Rebecca Skippage | 09 Nov 2020 | |
11657 | Book at Lunchtime: Iconoclasm as Child's Play | Dr Joseph Moshenska, Associate Professor and Tutorial Fellow at University College, discusses his new book, Iconoclasm as Child's Play. | Joseph Moshenska, Lorna Hutson, Alexandra Walsham, Kenneth Gross, Matthew Bevis, Wes Williams | 09 Nov 2020 | |
11658 | Globalisation in the post-COVID world | Professor Beata Javorcik, Chief Economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, discusses the recent developments in international trade and the link between trade finance and resilience of trade flows ready for a post-COVID world | Beata Javorcik, Cameron Hepburn | 06 Nov 2020 | |
11659 | Lie machines: misinformation in a Post-COVID world | Phil Howard, author of Lie Machines and Nicola Aitken, Policy Manager at Full Fact, discuss the implications of fake news and misinformation. | Phil Howard, Nicola Aitken | 06 Nov 2020 | |
11660 | John Ledingham | Peggy Frith interviews John Ledingham, professor of Clinical Medicine and former Director of Clinical Studies, 23 April 2012. | Peggy Frith, John Ledingham, Rosie Fitzherbert Jones | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11661 | Voluntary medical male circumcision for HIV prevention in Kenya: Anthropology and ethics in the pursuit of public health | This UBVO seminar was presented by Adam Gilbertson (University of North Carolina) on 12 November 2020 | Adam Gilbertson | 22 Oct 2021 | |
11662 | 1. Who Are Young Europeans | The Europe’s Stories Podcast | Today, Ana and Lucas speak with Dan Snow and Maeve Moynihan about who young Europeans are. | Maeve Moynihan, Dan Snow, Ana Martins, Lucas Tse | 07 Sep 2021 | |
11663 | Episode 5 - Kitschies, indies, and ads: Juggling narrative forms | Jared Shurin explores his wide-ranging interests from anthologising speculative shorts to the Kitschies Awards to ethical advertising for revisioning global narratives. | Jaren Shurin, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 12 Nov 2020 | |
11664 | Episode 6: Oxford Spanish Literature Podcast | In episode six, we speak to Jonathan Thacker (King Alfonso XIII Professor of Spanish Studies) about the two short stories Novela del casamiento engañoso and El coloquio de los perros, by Miguel de Cervantes. | Jonathan Thacker | 10 Nov 2020 | |
11665 | Book at Lunchtime: Ravenna: Capital of Empire, Crucible of Europe | TORCH Book at Lunchtime webinar on Ravenna: Capital of Empire, Crucible of Europe written by Professor Judith Herrin. Date: 4 November 2020. | Judith Herri, Peter Frankopan, Dame Averil Cameron, Conrad Leyser | 10 Nov 2020 | |
11666 | Human Remains in Tibetan Material Religion: An object centered approach | Ayesha Fuentes shares a unique and interdisciplinary insight into art conservation of human remains in Tibetan material religion | Ayesha Fuentes | 29 Oct 2020 | |
11667 | Sacred Trash, Trash Talks, And Personhood | Bo Wang discussing the practice of depositing garments as offerings to sacred mountains in Eastern Tibet | Bo Wang | 29 Oct 2020 | |
11668 | Illiberal Liberals and the Future of Dictatorship in Egypt | Dalia Fahmy (Long Island University) editor of Egypt and the Contradictions of Liberalism: Illiberal Intelligentsia and the Future of Egyptian Democracy (2017), gives a talk for the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series. | Dalia Fahmy, Daanish Faruqi, Usaama al-Azami | 10 Nov 2020 | |
11669 | Overcoming Sleep Problems | What sleep is for, how does it work and how can we deal with tricky sleep problems? This is the second talk in the Department of Experimental Psychology’s Our Mental Wellness series. | Colin Espie, Felicity Waite, Dimitri Gavriloff, Catharine Creswell | 10 Nov 2020 | |
11670 | Of parasites, dinosaurs, and other model animals | Elaine Charwat has been on a journey into the attic storerooms behind the scenes of the Museum to discover 19th-century wax models of parasites. | Elaine Charwat, Mark Carnall, Péter Molnár | 11 Nov 2020 | |
11671 | Global histories of hierarachy? Reflections from India on Caste, race and the Black Lives Matter movement | Nayanika Mathur (Oxford) and Rosalind O'Hanlon (Oxford) give a talk for the Modern South Asian Studies seminars on the Black Lives Matter movement. | Nayanika Mathur, Rosalind O'Hanlon | 11 Nov 2020 | |
11672 | Nahshon Perez (Bar-Ilan) and Yuval Jobani (Tel Aviv): Governing the Sacred: Political Toleration in Five Contested Sacred Sites | Nachshon Perez discusses Perez and Jobani's co-authored book on the politics of contested sacred sites | Nachshon Perez | 10 Nov 2020 | |
11673 | Rajput loyalties in the Mughal age | Cynthia Talbot (Texas at Austin) gives a talk for the Asian Studies Centre seminar series on Mughal India and the Rajput. | Cynthia Talbot | 12 Nov 2020 | |
11674 | How 2020 is changing newsrooms around the world | Rasmus Nielsen speaks to Federica Cherubini about her report looking at the central challenges facing news organisations in 2020 according to a survey of 136 newsroom leaders from around the world | Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Frederica Cherubini | 09 Nov 2020 | |
11675 | Creative Commons | Black History Month: Exploring the Data Visualizations of W.E.B. Du Bois | Jason Forrest, Director of Interactive Data Visualization, COVID Response Centre, McKinsey and Co, New York, gives the Department of Statistics Black History Month lecture, with a talk on the work of African-American scholar and activist W.E.B. Du Bois. | Jason Forrest | 23 Oct 2020 |
11676 | Creative Commons | A Walk around C. S. Lewis's Oxford | A biographical tour of C. S. Lewis's Oxford | Simon Horobin | 23 Jul 2021 |
11677 | Write or be Written Off: the work of Jo Spence (1934-1992) as photography 'theory' | Patrizia Di Bello discusses the work of Jo Spence as a writer, organiser and photographer | Patrizia Di Bello | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11678 | The Isabel Project: Uncomvering 19th Century Institutional Photographers, One Woman at a Time | Erika Lederman talks about her practice and the work of the V & A museum's first in house photographer, Isabel Cowper. | Erika Lederman | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11679 | Fast Forward: Women in Photography | Anna Fox gives an overview of Fast Forward - a research project designed to promote and engage with women in photography across the globe. | Anna Fox | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11680 | After the lockdown: macroeconomic adjustment to the Covid-19 pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa | In this talk, Professor Chris Adam, Professor of Development Economics looks beyond the public health aspects of the pandemic to examine the medium-term macroeconomic adjustment challenge confronting domestic policy-makers and international donors. | Chris Adam, Cameron Hepburn | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11681 | Global macroeconomic cooperation in response to the Covid-19 pandemic | Professor David Vines, Professor of Economics at INET Oxford, discusses the need for international cooperation to support emerging economies after the covid-19 crisis. | David Vines, Cameron Hepburn | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11682 | How to engage with your audience: why public editors still matter | Kathy English, former public editor of the Toronto Star, discusses what public editors do, their role in ensuring accountability to readers, and how reader engagement via public editors has changed over the years. | Meera Selva, Kathy English | 09 Nov 2020 | |
11683 | Panel Discussion 4: Working to Establish Tomorrow's Names | Taous Dahmani chairs a discussion with Fiona Rogers, Max Houghton and Anna Fox | Taous Dahmani, Fiona Rogers, Max Houghton, Anna Fox | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11684 | Panel Discussion 3: Feminist Multi-taskers: Being a Photographer, a Writer and a Curator | Taous Dahmini chairs a discussion with Patrizia Di Bello and Deborah Cherry | Taous Dahmani, Patrizia Di Bello, Deborah Cherry | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11685 | Panel Discussion 2: Unveiling the Archive, Revealing Photographers | Taous Dahmini chairs a discussion with Erika Lederman and Jessica Sutcliffe | Taous Dahmani, Jessica Sutcliffe, Erika Lederman | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11686 | Panel Discussion 1: Historiography's Origin Stories | Taous Dahmani chairs a discussion with Val Williams | Taous Dahmani, Val Willams | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11687 | The New Populist nationalism in Saudi Arabia | Madawi Al-Rasheed (KCL and LSE), author of Salman’s Legacy: The Dilemmas of a New Era in Saudi Arabia (2018) and Ben Hubbard (The New York Times), author of MBS: The Rise to Power of MBS (2020) give a talk for the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series. | Madawi al-Rasheed, Ben Hubbard | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11688 | The Trajectory of the Tunisian Revolution: between Continuities and Disjunctures | Professor Sami Zemni (Ghent) gives a talk on the Tunisian Revolution on its 10 year anniversary. Part of the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series, chaired by Dr Michael Willis (St Anthony's College). | Sami Zemni | 18 Nov 2020 | |
11689 | Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Yuval Evri (KCL) - The Return to Al-Andalus: Disputes Over Sephardic Culture and Identity Between Arabic and Hebrew | Yuval Evri discusses his new book, The Return to Al-Andalus, Disputes Over Sephardic Culture and Identity Between Arabic and Hebrew | Yuval Evri | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11690 | Resetting our relationship with nature in a post-COVID world | Professor E.J. Milner-Gulland and Professor Sir Charles Godfray discuss our relationship with nature, how it relates to the Covid-19 pandemic, and what we need to do differently in the future. | E.J. Milner-Gulland, Charles Godfray | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11691 | Supply and demand shocks in the COVID-19 pandemic: an industry and occupation perspective | In this recorded talk, Professor Doyne Farmer and Maria del Rio-Chanona talk about their new paper on supply and demand shocks, and the impacts on society, resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic | Doyne Farmer, Maria del Rio-Chanona, Ian Goldin | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11692 | Buddhism and the Rise of ‘the Tibetans’ (bod pa): Religion, Myth and the Promotion of Ethnicity in the Pre-modern Period | Apropos 'the Tibetans': Reinier Langelaar's talk focuses on the mythical origins and the promotion of ethnicity in historical Tibet | Reinier Langelaar | 05 Nov 2020 | |
11693 | Episode 6 - Climate fiction: Content dictates form | EJ Swift describes her deep time speculative approach to climate fiction and the effect of content on form in speculative nested or fragmented narratives. | EJ Swift, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 19 Nov 2020 | |
11694 | Avi Shlaim on Revisionist History and Israel | Piotr Schulkes and Avi Shlaim, Fellow of the British Academy, sit down to discuss Israel’s New Historians; who they are, what they believe, and the popular reception to it. | Avi Shlaim, Piotr Schulkes | 20 Nov 2020 | |
11695 | Anna Atkins: Botanical Illustration and Photographic Innovation | This event is supported by TORCH as part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones of the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Geoffrey Batchen, Lena Fritsch | 20 Nov 2020 | |
11696 | Talking Afropean | Talking Afropean: Johny Pitts in conversation with Elleke Boehmer and Simukai Chigudu about his award-winning book. | Johny Pitts, Elleke Boehmer, Simukai Chigudu | 20 Nov 2020 | |
11697 | Presidential Campaigns stops in Ghana | For this seminar we hosted George Bob-Milliar (Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology). Professor Bob-Milliar's lecture is titled Presidential Campaigns stops in Ghana. | George Bob-Milliar | 19 Nov 2020 | |
11698 | Episode 7 - National myth: Rewriting America and China | Ken Liu discusses the power of myth in the construction of national narratives and the revisionist work that epic fantasy can do to rewrite them, drawing on the weight of time as omnipresent to narrative intent. | Ken Liu, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 23 Nov 2020 | |
11699 | Creative Commons | Affect, Value and Problems Assessing Decision-Making Capacity | MT20 New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar with Assoc. Professor Jennifer Hawkins | Jennifer Hawkins | 23 Nov 2020 |
11700 | 2020 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (3/3): The case for an unfunded pay as you go (PAYG) pension | Professor Michael Otsuka (London School of Economics) delivers the final of three public lectures in the series 'How to pool risks across generations: the case for collective pensions' | Michael Otsuka | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11701 | 2020 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (2/3): The case for collective defined contribution (CDC) | Professor Michael Otsuka (London School of Economics) delivers the second of three public lectures in the series 'How to pool risks across generations: the case for collective pensions' | Michael Otsuka | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11702 | 2020 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (1/3): The case for a funded pension with a defined benefit (DB) | Professor Michael Otsuka (London School of Economics) delivers the first of three public lectures in the series 'How to pool risks across generations: the case for collective pensions' | Michael Otsuka | 17 Nov 2020 | |
11703 | Marine conservation with Angelique Songco | Sofia and Julia talk to Filipina marine conservationist and diver, Angelique Songco! They end season 1 by discussing the evolution of Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park, the importance of working with different stakeholders to achieve conservation success. | Angelique Songco, Sofia Castello y Tickell, Julia Migne | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11704 | ‘God Does not Discriminate’: Inclusive Mosques Politics in France and the United Kingdom | Benjamin Dubrulle (Maison Française d'Oxford), gives a seminar for the MEC Women's Rights Research Seminars. Chaired by Dr Soraya Tremayne (School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, University of Oxford) on 18th November 2020. | Benjamin Dubrulle | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11705 | Managing Depression and Low Mood | Sadness and low mood are normal parts of human experience. But what happens when they become more pervasive and disabling? | Willem Kuyken, Catherine Harmer, Andrea Cipriani. | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11706 | Creative Commons | Apocalymbo: Trickster Politics in the Age of the Pandemic (and Other Crises) | Walter Armbrust (St Antony’s College, Oxford), author of Martyrs and Tricksters: An Ethnography of the Egyptian Revolution (2019), gives a talk for the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series on 20th November 2020. | Walter Armbrust, Michael Willis | 25 Nov 2020 |
11707 | Peter Bergamin (Oxford): Guns and Moses: Jewish anti-British Resistance during the Mandate for Palestine | Peter Bergamin presents some findings and conclusions from his recent research on the British Mandate for Palestine, focusin on the phenomena of Jewish illegal immigration and anti-British terrorism, and their role in Britain’s eventual abandonment of the | Peter Bergamin | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11708 | Verse and Prose in Fantasy Literature | An analysis of two forms that dominate fantasy literature. | Katherine Olley | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11709 | Guy Gavriel Kay | A short introduction to the writer Guy Gavriel Kay. | Katherine Olley | 24 Nov 2020 | |
11710 | Creative Commons | Jeko Khere So Khaye (He who tills has the right to eat); 'development' and the politics of agrarian reform in late 1940s and early 1950s in Sindh | Sarah Ansari (Royal Holloway) gives a talk for the Asian Studies Centre seminar series. | Sarah Ansari | 26 Nov 2020 |
11711 | Exploring the fundamentals of leadership with Professor Carl Heneghan - Part Two | Professor Kamal Mahtani continues his interview with Professor Carl Heneghan, discussing where your motivation as a leader comes from, succession planning, seeking mentoring, how leaders can engage with the wider world. | Kamal Mahtani, Carl Heneghan | 25 Nov 2020 | |
11712 | Looking back on 4 years in data science | Jonny Brooks-Bartlett, Senior machine learning engineer at Spotify, gives a talk on his experiences as a data scientist and as machine learning engineer in top rated companies around the world. | Jonny Brooks-Bartlett | 28 Nov 2020 | |
11713 | Culture of Emotions: Uses and Interpretations of Musical Heritage in the Tibetan Refugee Community of Dharamsala | Chloé Lukasiewicz talk on the significance of music in the Tibetan refugee community in Dharamsala, India | Chloé Lukasiewicz | 19 Nov 2020 | |
11714 | The impact of COVID-19 on daily news podcasts | Author of a new report into the trends around news podcasts during the COVID-19 pandemic Nic Newman discusses his findings. How successful are these podcasts? What different formats exist? What do news outlets need to consider? | Frederica Cherubini, Nic Newman | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11715 | Liz Woolley on 'Lord Nuffield and the city of Oxford' | Local historian, Liz Wooley, takes a closer look at the role Lord Nuffield played in changing the city of Oxford's physical and social landscape. | Liz Wooley | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11716 | Dr Dexnell Peters on 'Politician Scholar: Dr Eric Williams' | Dr Dexnell Peters, Bennett Boskey Fellow in Atlantic History at Exeter College, reflects on the life and enduring legacy of eminent historian, Dr Eric Williams. | Dexnell Peters | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11717 | Dr Ben Grant on 'Richard Francis Burton | Dr Ben Grant, departmental lecturer in English and author of Postcolonialism, Psychoanalysis and Burton: Power Play of Empire (Routledge, 2009) reflects on Richard Francis Burton's sojourn in Oxford in the 1840s. | Ben Grant | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11718 | Dr Priya Atwal on 'Princesses Bamba and Catherine Duleep Singh at Oxford' | Historian, Dr Priya Atwal, takes a look at the lives of some of the University of Oxford's first Indian students. | Priya Atwal | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11719 | Episode 8 - Telling stories: Psychoanalysis and alien invasion | Tade Thompson explores alien invasion as a metaphor for colonialism and discusses the importance of psychoanalysis and self-awareness in the building of personal and group identities. | Tade Thompson, Chelsea Haith, Louis Greenberg | 30 Nov 2020 | |
11720 | Smallpox, and Jenner | Welcome to the eighteenth century, at a point when Europe is going through another major smallpox outbreak, a disease that by this point has been plaguing populations around the globe for centuries. | Peter Millican, Claas Kirchhelle, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti, Erica Charters | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11721 | The Great Plague | in the final plague episode of the series, Professor Peter Millican talks to his guests about the last major outbreak of this horrific disease in seventeenth-century England. | Peter Millican, Paul Slack, Emma Smith, Kees Windland | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11722 | The Black Death | Professor Peter Millican arrives in the fourteenth century and meets history's most notorious plague outbreak. | Peter Millican, Samuel Cohn, Blanche Oguti | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11723 | The Plague of Justinian | Welcome to the Eastern Roman Empire in the sixth century. This time, Professor Peter Millican discusses a plague that historians and medical experts agree was likely the first plague pandemic humanity experienced. | Peter Millican, Michael McCormick, Abigail Buglass | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11724 | Athens: the first plague? | Join Professor Peter Millican in 5th century Athens, a crowded city in the midst of a siege, where a devastating disease had just erupted. | Peter Millican, Tim Rood, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti, Nicolette D'Angelo | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11725 | Episode 7: Oxford Spanish Literature Podcast | In episode seven, we speak to Daniela Omlor (Associate Professor in Modern Spanish Literature) about Nada, by Carmen Laforet. | Daniela Omlor | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11726 | Creative Commons | Colonial encounters in Acholiland and Oxford: The Anthropology of F.K.Girling and Okot p'Bitek | For this podcast, we co-hosted Tim Allen of LSE with Oxford's Anthropology Department. | Tim Allen | 30 Nov 2020 |
11727 | Baby steps: the gender division of childcare during the COVID-19 pandemic | Professor Sarah Smith, Professor Almudena Sevilla and Professor Cameron Hepburn discuss the gender division of childcare during the covid-19 pandemic, and the impact of this on welfare and employment. | Sarah Smith, Almudena Sevilla, Cameron Hepburn | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11728 | Privacy is Power | Carissa Véliz discusses her new book 'Privacy is Power', focusing on the importance of understanding how our data is used and how we can protect our privacy. | Carissa Véliz, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11729 | Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Rose Stair (Oxford): Age and gender in German-language cultural Zionism | The fourth lecture in the Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies seminar series. Rose Stair discusses cultural Zionism through a focus on age and gender. | Rost Stair | 01 Dec 2020 | |
11730 | Child abuse and dancing boys in Afghanistan | Piotr Schulkes, Rose Johnson, and Max Randall dive into the phenomenon of the Dancing Boys of Afghanistan. | Piotr Schulkes, Rose Johnson, Max Randall | 03 Dec 2020 | |
11731 | Why Syria Still Matters and Why Assad is Still There | Dr Lina Khatib, Director, Middle East and North Africa Programme, Chatham, Jeremy Bowen (Middle East Editor, BBC News) give a talk on Syria and it's current political situation. Chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan (St Antony's College, Oxford). | Lina Khatib, Jeremy Bowen | 03 Dec 2020 | |
11732 | Introduction to Deep Learning and Graph Neural Networks in Biomedicine | Dr. Ekaterina Volkova-Volkmar, Senior Data Scientist, pRED Informatics - Data Science, Roche Pharma Research and Early Development, Roche, Basel, Switzerland, gives a talk on deep learning and graph neural networks in biomedicine. | Ekaterina Volkova-Volkmar | 03 Dec 2020 | |
11733 | Alan Rusbridger discusses his new book and how to rebuild trust in news | In a chat with Rasmus Nielsen, Alan Rusbridger, former Editor-in-Chief of the Guardian, argues journalists should be more transparent and rethink their relationship with their audience | Alan Rusbridger, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen | 04 Dec 2020 | |
11734 | Probabilistic Inference and Learning with Stein’s Method | Part of the Probability for Machine Learning seminar series. Presented by Prof Lester Mackey (Microsoft Research New England and Stanford University). | Lester Mackey | 04 Dec 2020 | |
11735 | Ideas for a Complex World - Anna Seigal | Science and maths are full of smart tools for explaining the world around us. Those tools can feel far removed from the way the rest of us understand that world. Can we reconcile the two approaches? Oxford Mathematician Anna Seigal provides some answers. | Anna Seigal | 07 Dec 2020 | |
11736 | Does AI threaten Human Autonomy? | This event is also part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | Peter Millican, Jonathan Pugh, Jessica Morley, Carina Prunkl | 07 Dec 2020 | |
11737 | The 2020 Besterman Lecture: Who were the French Revolutionaries? | TORCH Goes Digital! presents a series of weekly live events Big Tent - Live Events! Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities. | William Doyle, Karen O'Brien, Gregory S Brown, Lauren Clay | 07 Dec 2020 | |
11738 | Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years | Professor Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development at Oxford University, discusses his new book 'Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years' | Ian Goldin | 02 Dec 2020 | |
11739 | A tale of two crises: COVID-19 and the financial system | Dr Julia Giese, Bank of England, discusses the impact of Covid-19 on the financial system and how banks can play their part in economic recovery. | Julia Giese, Cameron Hepburn | 02 Dec 2020 | |
11740 | Reynard the Fox | In this BodCast from the Friends of the Bodleian, Professor Dame Marina Warner interviews Anne Louise Avery, writer and art historian, on the subject of Avery's recent book, Reynard the Fox https://bodleianshop.co.uk/products/reynard-the-fox | Dame Marina Warner, Anne Louise Avery | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11741 | The logic of chaos: The pattern of dictatorships | Ece Temelkuran, author of How to Lose a Country: the Seven Steps from Democracy to Dictatorship (2019) gives a talk for the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar series. Chaired by Dr Laurent Mignon (St Antony's College, Oxford). | Ece Temelkuran, Laurent Mignon | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11742 | David Beeson | David Beeson, Professor in Molecular Neurosciences, talks with Stanley Ulijaszek | David Beeson, Stanley Ulijaszek | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11743 | Adriana X Jacobs | Adriana X Jacobs, Associate Professor and Cowley Lecturer in Modern Hebrew Literature in conversation with Stanley Ulijaszek | Adriana X Jacobs, Stanley Ulijaszek | 13 Nov 2020 | |
11744 | What drives trust in news and what can be done to rebuild it | Two authors of the first report from our Trust in News Project discuss how partisanship, transparency and other factors may contribute to trust in news, and what outstanding questions need exploring. | Frederica Cherubini, Camila Mont Alverne, Benjamin Toff | 10 Dec 2020 | |
11745 | December 2020, with special guest Professor Mark Eisenberg | Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson discuss their Cochrane Review and emerging evidence. | Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, Nicola Lindson | 14 Dec 2020 | |
11746 | Re-imagining urban mobility after COVID-19 | The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in unprecedented disruptions to urban mobility systems across the globe yet also presented unique opportunities for people to drive less, walk/cycle more and reduce carbon emissions. | Tim Schwanen, Jennie Middleton, Jim Hall | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11747 | Singing Together; Apart: Gregorian Chant Workshop – Song of Simeon | In this online choir workshop you will learn to sing along with a simple voice part from the Candlemas Nunc Dimittis and see the 15th-century manuscript from the Cistercian nunnery of Medingen where the music is preserved in the Bodleian Libraries | Henrike Lähnemann, Nick Swarbrick, Andrew Dunning, Alexandra Burgar, Jasmine Lowe, Timothy Powell | 15 Dec 2020 | |
11748 | An van Camp in conversation with Stanley Ulijaszek at the Young Rembrandt exhibition | As part of the St Cross College Shorts podcast series, Fellow and Ashmolean Museum Curator An van Camp discusses the Young Rembrandt exhibition with Stanley Ulijaszek, in October 2020. | An Van Camp, Stanley Ulijaszek | 16 Dec 2020 | |
11749 | Creative Commons | The Literature of Absolute War - Transnationalism and WWII | Professor Nil Santiáñez discusses absolute war, total war, and the literature of WWII with Anders Engberg-Pedersen. | Anders Engberg-Pedersen, Nil Santiáñez | 17 Dec 2020 |
11750 | How 2020 changed journalism | In this final Future of Journalism podcast of the year, members of our senior leadership team reflect on this momentous year for journalism and what we can perhaps look forward to next year | Eduardo Suárez, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Meera Selva, Federica Cherubini | 18 Dec 2020 | |
11751 | Behind The Scenes of The Sound of Contagion | The “Sound of Contagion” explores what a society of contagion can sound like and how technology can illuminate 2020 pandemic and others throughout history. | Rob Laidlow, Wenzel Mehnert, Chelsea Haith | 18 Dec 2020 | |
11752 | Creative Commons | Seeing the Wood for the Trees | In winter the bones of the trees are laid bare, giving us a chance to see their skeletons. Join Lindsay as she takes a tour round Wytham Woods in Oxford, showing you how to identify our common native trees from their bark and the shape of their branches. | Lindsay Turnbull | 07 Jan 2021 |
11753 | Liu pin fo lou (Building of Six Classes of Sutra and Tantra), the Tibetan Buddhist pantheon in the Forbidden City | Ziyi Shao takes us to the reign of the Qianlong Emperor and will show us around the Fan hua lou (Hall of Buddhist Efflorescence), one of the most complex and prominent Buddhist monuments in the Forbidden city | Ziyi Shao | 26 Nov 2020 | |
11754 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/8: Searle versus Turing - Conclusion | Lecture 8 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11755 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/7: Blockhead, the Chinese Room, and ELIZA | Lecture 7 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11756 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/6: "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" - Overview of Turing's 1950 paper | Lecture 6 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11757 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/5: Settling Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem, and the Halting Problem | Lecture 5 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11758 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/4: Enumerating the Computable Numbers, and the Universal Turing Machine | Lecture 4 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11759 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/3: "On Computable Numbers" - Turing's 1936 Paper | Lecture 3 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11760 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/2: Hilbert's Programme and Gödel's Theorem | Lecture 2 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11761 | Creative Commons | Turing 2018/1: Types of number, Cantor, infinities, diagonal arguments | Lecture 1 in Peter Millican's 2018 Turing series. | Peter Millican | 14 Jan 2021 |
11762 | Coronavirus and ‘Disease X’ | Professor Peter Millican interviews the Oxford scientists working at the forefront of research into Disease X | Peter Millican, Sarah Gilbert, Peter Horby, Jimmy Whitworth, John Bell, Erica Charters | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11763 | Ebola | Professor Peter Millican begins the final episode of this series in 2014, at the onset of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. | Peter Millican, Kevin Decock, Katie Ewer, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11764 | HIV/AIDS | In the ninth episode of our History of Pandemics season, Professor Peter Millican leaves the perils of influenza behind, only to discover an entirely new virus: HIV. | Peter Millican, Harold Jaffe, John Frater, Kevin Decock, Jimmy Whitworth | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11765 | The 'Spanish' Flu | Professor Peter Millican arrives in the twentieth century, during the last years of the Great War, to a pandemic which you may have read a lot about during the early coverage of our current COVID outbreak. | Peter Millican, John Oxford, Brian Angus, Claas Kirchhelle | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11766 | 'Russian' Flu: the pandemic that wasn't? | In this episode, Professor Peter Millican discusses a controversial outbreak... | Peter Millican, Julia Mannherz, Claas Kirchhelle, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11767 | Cholera | Professor Peter Millican makes it to the nineteenth century to discuss the achievements of John Snow | Peter Millican, Claas Kirchhelle, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti | 14 Jan 2021 | |
11768 | Animal Eyes on the Planet (1/3) | First in a trilogy, this podcast introduces the creative collaboration on Climate Crisis Thinking. | Amanda Power, Nina Fischer, Eiko Soga, Lisa Maria Steppacher, Lilli Kuschel | 11 Jan 2021 | |
11769 | How premium lifestyle journalism sells subscriptions | Journalists from some of Scandinavia's leading news publishers discuss their organisations' premium news strategies, the value of lifestyle news and the false dichotomy of hard/soft news, and the role of gender. | Meera Selva, Jenni Kangasniemi, Evelyn Jones | 10 Dec 2020 | |
11770 | Medea - A Mirror for the 21st Century | Avery Willis Hoffman, Fran Amewudah and Shivaike Shah talk about the BAME Medea project | Avery Willis Hoffman, Fran Amewudah, Shivaike Shah | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11771 | Reading Greek Tragedy Online | A podcast with Paul O'Mahony, Joel Christensen, and Lanah Koelle | Paul O'Mahony, Joel Christensen, Lanah Koelle | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11772 | Ancient Theatre Around the Black Sea | A podcast with Edith Hall and Rosie Wyles | Edith Hall, Rosie Wyles | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11773 | Sicily and Ancient Greek Theatre | A podcast episode with Oliver Taplin and Giovanna Di Martino | Oliver Taplin, Giovanna Di Martino | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11774 | East and West in Ancient Drama | A podcast with Michael Scott and Marchella Ward | Michael Scott, Marchella Ward | 09 Dec 2020 | |
11775 | Strings and Fields | Will strings be the theory of everything?, presented by Prof Luis Fernando Alday. | Luis Fernando Alday | 16 Jan 2021 | |
11776 | Classical and Quantum Black Holes | Prof March-Russell explains our latest understanding of black holes, some of the most mysterious objects in the Universe. | John March-Russell | 16 Jan 2021 | |
11777 | Why is Quantum Gravity so hard? | A pressing question in our quest to understand the Universe is how to unify quantum mechanics and gravity, the very small and the very large. | John Wheater | 16 Jan 2021 | |
11778 | Introducing CBT for low mood and depression 4: A Tool for Dealing with Worry and Rumination | This fourth podcast focuses on two patterns of thinking that often come with low mood and depression: worry and rumination. | Jonathan Totman | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11779 | Introducing CBT for low mood and depression 3: Rules for living (and how to break them) | This third podcast focuses on the implicit “rules” affecting how you think and behave, helping you to spot when they’re serving you well and when they might be overly rigid or exacting. | Jonathan Totman | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11780 | What the Communities Say: Ex-Combatant Integration and Reconciliation in Sierra Leone | Breakout session on ‘Post-conflict reconstruction and Peacebuilding’, third talk: Johanna Boersch-Supan, D.Phil. Candidate, Politics and International relations, Oxford University. | Johanna Boersch-Supan | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11781 | Evaluating Stability: An Impossible dream?’ The challenges of evaluation in Afghanistan | Breakout session on ‘Post-conflict reconstruction and Peacebuilding’, second talk: Bjorn Muller-Wille, Royal Military Academy , Sandhurst. | Bjorn Muller-Wille | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11782 | The Stabilisation Discourse and ending War.’ British experience in Helmand, Afghanistan | Breakout session on ‘Post-conflict reconstruction and Peacebuilding’, first talk: Dr Stuart Gordon, Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. | Stuart Gordon | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11783 | The Politics and Peace and Justice: the Role of the ICC in Uganda | Breakout session on ‘Peace and Transitional Justice’, third talk: Lydiah Kemunto Bosire, D.Phil. Candidate, Politics and International Relations, Oxford University. | Lydiah Kemunto Bosire | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11784 | Sierra Leone’s transition: A Road to Peace in the Short Term | Breakout session on ‘Peace and Transitional Justice’, second talk: Chris Mahony, D.Phil Candidate, Politics and International Relations, Oxford University. | Chris Mahony | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11785 | Reconciliation’s Citizen: Insights from the Peace Process in Bosnia-Herzegovina | Breakout session on ‘Peace and Transitional Justice’, first talk: Briony Jones, Ph.D. Candidate, Manchester University; Student Chair, Oxford Transitional Justice Research. | Briony Jones | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11786 | To Heal and to Create: Healing Violent Conflict and re-creating Peace with Equity, Inclusion and Art | Breakout session on ‘Grassroots Peacebuilding – and linking it to national and international levels’, second talk: Dr Rama Mani, Centre for International Studies, Oxford University. | Rama Mani | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11787 | NGO Peacebuilding in Complex Emergencies: the case of Eastern Africa | Breakout session on ‘Grassroots Peacebuilding – and linking it to national and international levels’, first talk: Fr Elias Omondi Opongo, Ph.D. candidate, Dept of Peace Studies, Bradford University. | Fr Elias Omondi Opongo | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11788 | Misplaced Analogies: 'Coordination' and 'Learning' in the Building of Peace | Breakout session on 'The Role of International and Regional Organizations in Peacemaking, Peacebuilding and Peacekeeping', third talk: Dr Jochen Prantl, Oxford University, reflects on a lack of effective learning from peacebuilding experience. | Jochen Prantl | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11789 | Binding and Non-binding International Agreements (as explored by the OAS Juridical Committee) | Professor Duncan Hollis, Temple University, gives a talk for the Public International Law seminar series on 21st January 2021. | Duncan Hollis | 25 Jan 2021 | |
11790 | Vision or Mirage: Saudi Arabia at the Crossroads | First episode of Booktalk, where host Professor Eugene Rogan (St Antony's College, Oxford) talks with David Rundell on his book Vision or Mirage: Saudi Arabia at the Crossroads, Bloomsbury Publication (2020. | Eugene Rogan, David Rundell | 18 Jan 2021 | |
11791 | Should platforms have the power to ban leaders like Donald Trump? | Following the suspension or barring of Donald Trump by many of the largest social media and tech platforms, after his supporters stormed the Capitol building in January 2021, we explore the issues surrounding these decisions. | Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Nikhil Pahwa | 15 Jan 2021 | |
11792 | Building Peace in Georgia: International Organizations and Conflict Resolution in South Ossetia and Abkhazi | Breakout session on 'The Role of International and regional Organizations in Peacemaking, Peacebuilding and Peacekeeping,' second talk: Professor Neil MacFarlane, Lester Pearson Professor of International Relations, Oxford University. | Neil MacFarlane | 15 Jan 2021 | |
11793 | SADC and the Zimbabwe Crisis | Breakout session on 'The Role of International and Regional Organizations in Peacemaking, Peacebuilding and Peacekeeping’, first talk: Miles Tendi, D.Phil. candidate, Dept of Overseas Development, Oxford University. | Miles Tendi | 15 Jan 2021 | |
11794 | Different Approaches to Institutionalizing the Study of peace | Breakout session on 'The Study of Peace in Schools and Higher Education’, third talk: Professor Mary King, Fellow, Rothermere Institute, Oxford University. | Mary King | 15 Jan 2021 | |
11795 | Building Peace into the UK HE Curriculum | Breakout session on 'The Study of Peace in Schools and Higher Education’, second talk: Dr Neil Ferguson, Director, Desmond Tutu Centre for War and Peace Studies, Associate Professor of Political Psychology, Liverpool Hope University. | Neil Ferguson | 15 Jan 2021 | |
11796 | Constructing the defences of peace in the 'minds of man' | Professor David Johnson, Dept of Comparative Education, Oxford University, on 'Constructing the defences of peace in the "minds of man."' On improving peace education curricula in schools in conflict-affected countries. | David Johnson | 11 Jan 2021 | |
11797 | Sources for Peacebuilding in Islam | Breakout session on 'Religion, Peace and Conflict'. Third talk, Imam Monawar Hussein, Eton College and Central Oxford Mosque, on 'Sources for Peacebuilding in Islam.' | Monawar Hussein | 11 Jan 2021 | |
11798 | Christianity, Peace and Conflict in Northern Ireland | Breakout session on 'Religion, Peace and Conflict.' Second talk: Dr David Tombs, Irish School of Ecumenics, Trinity College, Dublin. on 'Christianity, Peace and Conflict in Northern Ireland'. | David Tombs | 11 Jan 2021 | |
11799 | Forcing the End Times: US Christian Zionism and Israel | Breakout session on 'Religion, Peace and Conflict.' First talk: Carlo Aldrovandi, Ph.D. candidate, Peace Studies, Univ. of Bradford, on 'Forcing the End Times: US Christian Zionism and Israel'. | Carlo Aldrovandi | 11 Jan 2021 | |
11800 | Security and Development | Dr Anke Hoeffler, Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford University, gives the second plenary address. | Anke Hoeffler | 11 Jan 2021 |