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Total Results: 13794
| # | Episode Title | Description | People | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10601 | Creative Commons | City region food systems: potential for impacting planetary boundaries and food security | Dr Mike Hamm will explore the opportunity for regional food systems in-and-around cities for mutual benefit. | Michael Hamm | 30 May 2019 |
| 10602 | Creative Commons | Homer and the Discovery of the Pacific | An APGRD public lecture given in May 2019: Henry Power (Exeter) discusses Homeric resonances in the work of Alexander Pope, John Keats, and Thom Gunn. | Henry Power | 21 May 2019 |
| 10603 | Veteran Poetics | Book at Lunchtime: Veteran Poetics: British Literature in the Age of Mass Warfare, 1790–2015 | Suzan Kalayci, Kate McLoughlin, Santanu Das, Elleke Boehmer | 12 Jun 2019 | |
| 10604 | The 2019 Sir John Elliott Lecture in Atlantic History | Health and disease history of the Caribbean, 1491-1850: two syndemics | John R. McNeill | 06 Jun 2019 | |
| 10605 | Creative Commons | The Connections and Disconnections in Teacher Education Policy, Research and Practice Future Research Directions | This seminar examines the alignments and tensions between teacher education research, policy and practice. This is the sixth seminar in a series of eight public seminars on 'Future directions in teacher education research, practice and policy'. | Diane Mayer | 03 Jun 2019 |
| 10606 | Episode 7: Living Absences | In this conversation with Trinidadian Scottish poet Vahni Capildeo, author of Venus as a Bear (2018), we explore the layered, polyphonous histories of the places we pass through and inhabit. | Vahni Capildeo, Adriana X Jacobs | 07 Jun 2019 | |
| 10607 | Driving Africa's prosperity through sustainable and innovative practices | Guest lecture by the 6th President of Mauritius- Prof Ameenah Gurib-Fakim. | Ameenah Gurib-Fakim | 04 Jun 2019 | |
| 10608 | The Thirty Year Genocide - Turkey's destruction of its Christian minorities, 1894-1924 | Professor Benny Morris and Professor Dror Ze'evi give a talk for the Middle East Studies Centre seminar series. Chaired by Dr Laurent Mignon (St Antony's College). | Benny Morris, Dror Ze'evi | 03 Jun 2019 | |
| 10609 | Intro : Cortex Just Keeps the Rest of the Brain Warm | We talk through what listeners can expect from future episodes of CortexCast. | Alex von Klemperer, Paula Kaanders, Samuel Picard | 31 May 2019 | |
| 10610 | At First Sight - Holly Bridge | We discuss how the Brain processes vision. | Alex von Klemperer, Samuel Picard, Paula Kaanders, Holly Bridge | 08 Jun 2019 | |
| 10611 | Sleeping with One Eye Open - Vladyslav Vyazovskiy | We discuss the Science of Sleep | Alex von Klemperer, Samuel Picard, Paula Kaanders, Vladyslav Vyasovskiy | 08 Jun 2019 | |
| 10612 | Creative Commons | OES Annual Lecture: The Quest for Better Teaching | This lecture explores why efforts to improve teaching too often fail and outlines new research on pedagogy and teacher development, which has been achieving promising signs of real change. | Jenny Gore (Visiting Professor, Department of Education) | 29 May 2019 |
| 10613 | Search for the Electron EDM Using Molecular Ions | 4th and final lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 lecture series | Jung Ye | 30 Apr 2019 | |
| 10614 | Quantum Matter and Atomic Clocks | 3rd lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series | Jun Ye | 30 Apr 2019 | |
| 10615 | A Quantum Gas of Polar Molecules | 2nd lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series | Jun Ye | 30 Apr 2019 | |
| 10616 | General introduction - Control of Light: Frequency Comb Spectroscopy from IR to UXV | 1st lecture in the Hinshelwood 2019 series | Jun Ye | 30 Apr 2019 | |
| 10617 | Creative Commons | Navigating knowledge: new tools for the journey | Like the wind, knowledge can be difficult to see or grasp, but if well-harnessed, it can help us do extraordinary things. | Penny Mealy | 11 Jun 2019 |
| 10618 | Creative Commons | Unlocking digital competition | Is competition in the digital economy desirable? Does it currently exist? Is it possible? Is there anything policy can do? | Jason Furman | 11 Jun 2019 |
| 10619 | Creative Commons | Behavioural Interventions to Improve the Quality of the Grocery Shopping | This evening lecture is given in conjunction with the Introduction to Study Design and Research Methods accredited short course, part of the Evidence-Based Healthcare programme at the University of Oxford's Department for Continuing Education. | Carmen Piernas | 11 Jun 2019 |
| 10620 | Early childhood development – A blue ocean opportunity? | This talk was recorded as part of the Future of Business Series. | Tarun Varma, Laura White and Puja Balachander | 11 Jun 2019 | |
| 10621 | Episode 8: Death Leaves Signs | This episode, the final one of this season, features the work of Palestinian poet Yousif M. Qasmiyeh, author-in-residence at Refugee Hosts. | Yousif M. Qasmiyeh, Adriana X Jacobs | 14 Jun 2019 | |
| 10622 | Literary Matter in Early Modern England | Dianne Mitchell and Katherine Hunt speak about their exhibition that showcases the material lives of literary texts from the collections of the Queen’s College Library. | Katherine Hunt, Dianne Mitchell | 13 Jun 2019 | |
| 10623 | 2019 Disability Lecture: The Triple Cripples... creators, educators, rule breakers, and the personification of empowerment | Jay Abdullahi and Kym Oliver, a team of two black disabled women, reclaim the word ‘cripple’ in their fight against three layers of discrimination. | Jay Abdullahi, Kym Oliver | 13 Jun 2019 | |
| 10624 | Creative Commons | Changing technology, changing economics | Prof Diane Coyle discusses how digital technologies are changing economics. | Diane Coyle | 14 Jun 2019 |
| 10625 | Creative Commons | Is the human species slowing down? | Prof Danny Dorling discusses the idea that that humanity is slowing down in almost everything that we do, and what this means for our future. | Danny Dorling | 14 Jun 2019 |
| 10626 | Compassion's Edge | Book at Lunchtime: Compassion's Edge, Winner of the 2018 Society for Renaissance Studies Book Prize. | Katherine Ibbett, Lorna Hutson, Teresa Bejan, Emma Claussen, Philip Bullock | 18 Jun 2019 | |
| 10627 | Creative Commons | The future of the corporation, economy and society | Professor Sir Paul Collier and Professor Colin Mayer CBE will share the latest thinking and research into the future of capitalism and the corporation to understand how business might be changed to make it work better for society. | Colin Mayer, Paul Collier | 19 Jun 2019 |
| 10628 | Creative Commons | Protecting the high seas (Oxford Green Week talk) | As part of Oxford Green Week, Prof Alex Rogers and Dr Gwilym Rowlands discuss the importance of protecting the high seas, and how marine protection areas can be enforced. | Alex Rogers, Gwilym Rowlands | 19 Jun 2019 |
| 10629 | Creative Commons | Building Research Capacity in Teacher Education | Seminar 8 of 8 on teacher education reforms. Alis unpacks the notion of 'capacity' through a historiography of initiatives and a review of attempts at conceptual development. | Alis Oancea | 19 Jun 2019 |
| 10630 | One Minute in Haditha: Neuroscience, Emotion and Military Ethics | In this special lecture, Professor Mitt Regan discusses the latest research in moral perception and judgment, and the potential implications of this research for ethics education in general and military ethics training in particular. | Mitt Regan | 19 Jun 2019 | |
| 10631 | Protecting newsrooms from political pressures | Bobby Ghosh, editorial board member at Bloomberg Opinion, explains how traditional revenue models in India make it challenging to resist external pressures on reporting – but there is a still way through it. | Bobby Ghosh | 17 Jun 2019 | |
| 10632 | Creative Commons | How complexity can resolve the crisis in economics | Professor Doyne Farmer will discuss the constraints of current economic models and propose complexity economics as a solution. | J Doyne Farmer | 30 May 2019 |
| 10633 | Creative Commons | Freedom of Political Communication, Propaganda and the Role of Epistemic Institutions in Cyberspace | Professor Seumas Miller defines fake news, hate speech and propaganda, discusses the relationship between social media and political propaganda. | Seumas Miller | 20 Jun 2019 |
| 10634 | State Capture: What It Is and What It Means for the Constitutional Order | Legal researchers Katarina Sipulova and Nick Friedman describe corruption in politics and the judiciary in the post-transitional states of Eastern Europe and South Africa | Katarína Šipulová, Nicholas Friedman | 18 Jun 2019 | |
| 10635 | Creative Commons | APGRD/TORCH panel discussion of 'We Are Not Princesses' | Nur Laiq (TORCH Global South Visiting Fellow), Hal Scardino (producer) and Fiona Macintosh (APGRD) discuss We Are Not Princesses, a documentary about Syrian women living as refugees in Beirut telling their stories through the ancient Greek play, Antigone. | Fiona Macintosh, Nur Laiq, Hal Scardino | 18 Jun 2019 |
| 10636 | Creative Commons | Current Challenges to International Justice: Lean in or Leave? | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Laila Sadat | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10637 | Book Launch: The Trial of the Kaiser | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | William Schabas | 25 Jun 2019 | |
| 10638 | Creative Commons | Transitional Justice in Historical Perspective: Book Launch of 'Justice framed: A Genealogy of Transitional Justice' | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Marcos Zunino | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10639 | Decay and closure of libraries - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (6) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019 gives the sixth and final lecture in the 2019 Lyell series. Part of the series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy. | Richard Sharpe | 16 May 2019 | |
| 10640 | Creative Commons | Un-Becoming a Victim: Between Historic Reminder and Hallucination, Geographical Document and Childhood Memory, Collective Tragedy and Personal Healing | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Sasa Rajsic | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10641 | Growth, competition, stability, loss, renewal - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (5) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019 gives the fifth lecture inthe 2019 Lyell series. Part of the lecture series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy. | Richard Sharpe | 14 May 2019 | |
| 10642 | Turnover in libraries - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (4) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019 gives the fourth lecture in the 2019 Lyell series. Part of the series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy | Richard Sharpe | 09 May 2019 | |
| 10643 | Creative Commons | Prospects for Meaningful Accountability for Rights Violations in Sri Lanka | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Kiran Grewal, Farzana Haniffa, Gehan Gunatilleke, Dharsha Jegatheswaran | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10644 | Library books and personal books - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (3) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019, gives the third lecture in the 2019 Lyell series. Part of the lecture series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy. | Richard Sharpe | 07 May 2019 | |
| 10645 | English medieval library catalogues - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (2) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019 gives the second lecture in the 2019 Lyell series. Part of the series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy. | Richard Sharpe | 02 May 2019 | |
| 10646 | Creative Commons | Witness Testimony and the Negotiation of 'Culture' at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Nigel Eltringham | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10647 | Medieval libraries of Great Britain - The Lyell Lectures 2019 (1) | Professor Richard Sharpe, Lyell Reader in Bibliography 2018-2019, gives the first of the 2019 Lyell lecture series. Part of the lecture series; Libraries and books in medieval England: the role of libraries in a changing book economy. | Richard Sharpe | 30 Apr 2019 | |
| 10648 | Creative Commons | The Journalist Perspective: Low Expectations and Promising Trends in Transitional Justice | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Thierry Cruvellier | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10649 | Creative Commons | The Arrest of a Head of State Pursuant to an ICC Warrant. The Al-Bashir Case | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Flavia Lattanzi | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10650 | Creative Commons | The ICC Rohingya Case: Radical or Routine? | This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. | Payam Akhavan | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10651 | Creative Commons | New economic and moral foundations for the Anthropocene | Prof Beinhocker will argue that by changing the ideologies, narratives, and memes that govern our economic system, we can create the political space required to rapidly transform to a sustainable and just economic system. | Eric Beinhocker | 24 Jun 2019 |
| 10652 | Creative Commons | From pollution to solution: will China save the planet? | Barbara Finamore discusses whether China will take the lead in saving our planet from environmental catastrophe. | Barbara Finamore, Radhika Khosla | 24 Jun 2019 |
| 10653 | Creative Commons | International Criminal Law and Border Control: The Expressive Role of the Deportation and Extradition of Rwandan Citizens | Dr Nicola Palmer analyzes the role that international criminal law in the extradition, deportation or domestic prosecution of Rwandan nationals. | Nicola Palmer | 25 Jun 2019 |
| 10654 | Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: John Bush - Walking on water: from biolocomotion to quantum foundations | In this Public Lecture, which contains more technical content than our norm, John Bush presents seemingly disparate topics which are in fact united by a common theme and underlaid by a common mathematical framework. | John Bush | 28 Jun 2019 | |
| 10655 | Delius and the Sound of Place | Book at Lunchtime: Delius and the Sound of Place | Daniel Grimley, Philip Bullock, Peter Franklin, Alexandra Harris, Charlotte de Mille | 28 Jun 2019 | |
| 10656 | Creative Commons | The Gut-Brain Connection | Why is digestive health so central to our understanding of who we are? How has this changed since the nineteenth century? How did Victorians perceive the gut-brain connection? What does science tell us now? | Emilie Taylor-Brown, Katerina Johnson | 24 Jun 2019 |
| 10657 | Creative Commons | A Networked Age | What does it means to live in a networked age? Was the electric telegraph a forerunner of the internet? Have the benefits of new means of communication been universal? Is the long-awaited ‘global village’ still on the horizon? | Grant Blank, Jean-Michel Johnston | 24 Jun 2019 |
| 10658 | Creative Commons | Surgical Consent | How has the relationship between doctor and patient changed since the nineteenth century? Did Victorian surgeons take their patients’ wishes seriously? How have the regulations surrounding surgical consent changed? | Ashok Handa, Sally Frampton | 24 Jun 2019 |
| 10659 | Social media, democracy and dissent in Sri Lanka | Meera Selva, Director of the Reuters Institute Journalism Fellowship Programme, addresses our closing seminar of the term with a presentation on the media situation in Sri Lanka. | Meera Selva | 24 Jun 2019 | |
| 10660 | Addressing childhood obesity using a family and community-based approach: The MEND programmes | This UBVO seminar was presented by Paul Sacher, the Chief R&D Officer for MEND, on 3 November 2009 | Paul Sacher | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10661 | 'Instruments and Institutions'. An interview on 'Evolving Human Nutrition' | An interview with Professor Stanley Ulijaszek (5 November 2018) | Stanley Ulijaszek | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10662 | Energy balance behaviours: the role of emotions and emotion regulation | This UBVO seminar was presented by Cristiana Duarte (University of Leeds) on 31 January 2019 | Cristiana Duarte | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10663 | Making Cultures Count: Following the Mayi Kuwayu National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing | Sarah Bourke (a DPhil student in Anthropology, Oxford) presented this UBVO seminar on 1 February 2019 | Sarah Bourke | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10664 | How do we fix the food waste problem? | Claire Kneller (Head of Food, Wrap Global) delivered this UBVO seminar on 21 February 2019. | Claire Kneller | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10665 | Functions of fat. What are the determinants and what does it matter? | Marijana Todercevic (Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolis), delivered this UBVO seminar on 28 February 2019 | Marijana Todercevic | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10666 | Obesity, insecurity, inequality and social welfare | A talk by Professor Stanley Ulijaszek | Stanley Ulijaszek | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10667 | Obesity and socioeconomic status | A talk by Professor Stanley Ulijaszek (march 2019) | Stanley Ulijaszek | 01 Jul 2019 | |
| 10668 | The Space Episode! | Venture with us to the ‘final frontier’ for a very special episode on the future of space. | Chad Anderson | 28 Jun 2019 | |
| 10669 | The 2019 Esmond Harmsworth Lecture in American Arts and Letters | New Yorker fiction through the decades | Deborah Treisman | 27 Jun 2019 | |
| 10670 | What are Teachers' Professional Competencies? | This public seminar series considers teacher education reforms around the world in order to tease out future directions and possibilities for the relationships between teacher education policy, research and practice. | Auli Toom | 19 Jun 2019 | |
| 10671 | The secret diary of a health ethnographer - what's it *really* like doing qualitative observation in operating rooms, ambulances, triage call centres and other health care settings? | This guest lecture draws on nearly thirty years' experience of doing qualitative research in a variety of health settings that contain people, blood, injury, disease, emotions, and technologies. | Catherine Pope | 03 Jul 2019 | |
| 10672 | Big data in heart failure - opportunities and realities | The global health burden of heart failure is high, both as the common end-point for many cardiovascular diseases (e.g. hypertension and heart attacks) and a common point on the trajectory of non-cardiovascular diseases (e.g. chronic respiratory disease). | Amitava Banerjee | 03 Jul 2019 | |
| 10673 | Creative Commons | Responses to the Government White Paper on Online Harms and the ‘right to be forgotten’ | LSE media expert and government adviser Damian Tambini and Roxana Radu from Oxford Law Faculty respond to the UK government’s White Paper on Online Harms and assess the implications of the new rights of the digital age such as the ‘right to be forgotten’. | Damian Tambini, Roxana Radu | 03 Jul 2019 |
| 10674 | Governance of Public Opinion in the Age of Platforms: A Study of China | Jufang Wang, former news editor in China, and Ralph Schroeder of the Oxford Internet Institute, assess the Communist Party’s efforts to control public opinion in China by regulation of social media platforms and the controversial ‘social credit system’. | Jufang Wang, Ralph Schroeder | 03 Jul 2019 | |
| 10675 | The Great Debate; Should We Engineer Our Way Out of Climate Change? | We must reduce emissions of carbon dioxide to avoid dangerous climate change, right? But can we? Is it too late? Should we focus our efforts on adapting to the coming change instead? Or should we engineer the earth system to avoid climate change? | Gideon Henderson, Nick Eyre, Felix Heilmann, Friederike Otto, Clare Shakya | 04 Jul 2019 | |
| 10676 | Creative Commons | China in the global reproduction migration order | Peidong Yang (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) presented this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar series on 14 January 2019 | Peidong Yang | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10677 | Creative Commons | Food insecurity of fatness: from evolutionary ecology to social science | This Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health seminar was presented by Professor Daniel Nettle (Newcastle University) on 16 January 2019 | Daniel Nettle | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10678 | Creative Commons | Intimate geopolitics: migration, marriage of citizenship across Chinese borders | This COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar was presented by Elena Barabantseva (University of Manchester) on 21 January 2019 | Elena Barabantseva | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10679 | Creative Commons | The dual burden of malnutrition and the obstetric dilemma | Professor Jonathan Wells (University College London) delivered this seminar as part of the Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health series on 23 January 2019 | Jonathan Wells | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10680 | Grandparenting migration: reproduction, care circulations and care ethics across borders | Elaine Ho (National University of Singapore) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 28 January 2019 | Elaine Ho | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10681 | Creative Commons | Investment migration and social reproduction: the case of recent patterns of migration from China | Professor Gracia Liu-Farrer (Waseda University, Tokyo) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 4 February 2019 | Gracia Liu-Farrer | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10682 | Creative Commons | Iron, infection and anaemia: evolutionary viewpoint on a huge global health problem | Hal Drakesmith (Radcliffe Department of Medicine, Oxford) delivered this seminar as part of the Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health series on 6 February 2019 | Hal Drakesmith | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10683 | Creative Commons | Birth tourism from China and Taiwan to the United States: cosmopolitan strategies and aspirations | Sean Wang (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 11 February 2019 | Sean Wang | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10684 | Creative Commons | Stunting does not equal malnutrition: evolutionary perspective on human height variation applied to public health | An Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health seminar delivered by Professor Barry Bogin (Loughborough University) on 13 February 2019 | Barry Bogin | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10685 | Creative Commons | Assisted reproductive technologies and medical travel | A COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar delivered by Professor Andrea Whittaker (Monash University) on 18 February 2019 | Andrea Whittaker | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10686 | Creative Commons | Childbearing as global security strategies | Professor Pei-Chia Lan (National Taiwan University) delivered this COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar on 25 February 2019 | Pei-Chia Lan | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10687 | Creative Commons | Educational migration: youth, time and transformation | Professor Francis Collins (University of Waikato) delivered this COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar on 4 March 2019 | Francis Collins | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10688 | The Science of Modelling Through | Professor Dan Sarewitz delivered this seminar at the Institute for Science Innovation and Society on 4 March 2019 | Daniel Sarewitz | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10689 | Is female health cyclical? Evolutionary perspectives on menstruation | Alex Alvergne (Oxford) delivered this seminar on 6 March 2019 as part of the Primate Conversations seminar series | Alexandra Alvergne | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10690 | Creative Commons | Global householding: care migration and the question of gender inequality | A presentation by Professor Brenda Yeoh (National University of Singapore) for the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar (11 March 2019) | Brenda Yeoh | 08 Jul 2019 |
| 10691 | Cherwell-Simon Memorial Lecture: The XENON Project: at the forefront of Dark Matter Direct Detection | What is the Dark Matter which makes 85% of the matter in the Universe? We have been asking this question for many decades and used a variety of experimental approaches to address it, with detectors on Earth and in space. | Elena Aprile | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10692 | Review and conclusion | Silvio Funtowicz chairs the final review and conclusion, with comments from Jerry Ravetz. | Silvio Funtowicz, Jerry Ravetz | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10693 | The future of policy-mathematics | Panel discussion and presentations on the future of policy mathematics. With Presentations by Maurice Chiodo and Zora Kovacic. With a response by Jerry Ravetz. Chaired by Andrea Saltelli. | Maurice Chiodo, Zora Kovacic, Jerry Ravetz, Andrea Saltelli. | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10694 | The future of post-normal science | Panel discussion and presentations on post-normal science. With presentations by Dan Sarewitz (via Skype), Marta Struminska and Jeroen van der Sluijs. With a response by Jerry Ravetz. Chaired by Roger Strand. | Dan Sarewitz), Marta Struminska, Jeroen van der Sluijs, Jerry Ravetz, Roger Strand. | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10695 | The future of science | Panel presentations on the future of science, with presentations by Peter Gluckman, Ehsan Masood and Andrea Saltelli with a response from Jerome Ravetz. Chaired by Javier Lezaun. | Peter Gluckman, Ehsan Masood, Andrea Saltelli, Jerome Ravetz, Javier Lezaun. | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10696 | Welcome and brief statements | Welcome to the event, with presentations from Charles Godfray and Rob Iliffe. Chaired by Silvio Funtowicz. | Charles Godfray, Rob Iliffe, Silvio Funtowicz | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10697 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Climate change, ice, and the oceans' invisible forest | Professor Heather Bouman (Oxford) presents 'Climate change, ice, and the oceans' invisible forest' at the OxPeace 2019 conference. | Heather Bouman | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10698 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Final plenary: Where to from here? | Dr Noele Crossley chairs the final plenary 'Where to from here?' with Steve Killelea AM, Founder & Executive Chair at the Institute for Economics and Peace. | Steve Killelea | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10699 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Human fatalities and the question of sustainability in Nigeria's ranching schemes | Oluwasolape Onafowora presents 'Human fatalities and the question of sustainability in Nigeria's ranching schemes' at the 2019 OxPeace conference. | Oluwasolape Onafowora | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10700 | Creative Commons | Rethinking Work from A Uganda Marketplace | William Monteith explores the marketplaces of Uganda, specifically larger ones in Kampala, to discuss how the differences between waged and non-waged labour are viewed. He also discusses the role of different types of work in this context. | William Monteith | 20 Nov 2019 |
| 10701 | Chineke! Championing Change and Celebrating Diversity in Classical Music | Chineke! Founder Chi Chi Nwanoku OBE talks about her orchestra of majority BME musicians. | Chi Chi Nwanoku OBE, Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey | 20 Nov 2019 | |
| 10702 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Taking back control - 'existential threat' and large group anxiety | Dr Coline Covington presents 'Taking back control - 'existential threat' and large group anxiety' at the OxPeace 2019 conference. | Coline Covington | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10703 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Population, urbanisation and health | Professor Romola Davenport (Cambridge) presents 'Population, urbanisation and health' at the OxPeace 2019 conference. | Romola Davenport | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10704 | OxPeace 2019, Peace in the Anthropocene: Welcome | Reverend Dr Liz Carmichael MBE and Reverend Professor Andy Gosler, Co-conveners of OxPeace, open the 2019 OxPeace conference. | Liz Carmichael, Andy Gosler | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10705 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: New politics for surviving the Anthropocene | Professor Mark Maslin (UCL) presents 'New politics for surviving the Anthropocene' at OxPeace 2019. | Mark Maslin | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10706 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Challenges of Addressing Food Insecurity | Brian Lander, Deputy Director, World Food Programme (WFP) presents the 'Challenges of Addressing Food Insecurity' at OxPeace 2019. | Brian Lander | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10707 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Options for a Global Food System | Professor Sir Charles Godfray (Oxford Martin School) presents 'Options for a Global Food System' at OxPeace 2019. | Charles Godfray | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10708 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: How to exacerbate conflict by your response to climate change | Professor Henry Shue (Oxford) presents 'How to exacerbate conflict by your response to climate change' at OxPeace 2019. | Henry Shue | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10709 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Global Heating: too big for politics? | Professor Franz Baumann (NYU) presents 'Global Heating: too big for politics?' at OxPeace 2019. | Franz Baumann | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10710 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: A kaleidoscope of problems and responses | Reverend Dr Liz Carmichael chairs 'Building peace in the anthropocene? A kaleidoscope of problems and responses' with Prof. Heather Bouman (Oxford), Prof. Romola Davenport (Cambridge), Dr Coline Covington, Dr Daniel Ruiz and Oluwasolape Onafowora. | Liz Carmichael, Heather Bouman, Romola Davenport, Coline Covington, Daniel Ruiz, Oluwasolape Onafowora | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10711 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Feeding the World, Happily, Equitably and Sustainably | Federica d'Allessandra chairs a plenary session on 'Feeding the World, Happily, Equitably and Sustainably', featuring Professor Sir Charles Godfray (Oxford Martin School), Brian Lander (Deputy Director, WFP, Geneva) and Professor Mark Maslin (UCL). | Federica d'Allessandra, Charles Godfray, Brian Lander, Mark Maslin | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10712 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Opening Plenary: The situation we are in | Dr Isabella Bunn (Human Rights law, Regent's Park College) chairs the opening plenary with Professor Franz Baumann (NYU) and Professor Henry Shue (Oxford). | Isabella Bunn, Franz Baumann, Henry Shue | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10713 | OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene: Conference Dinner remarks: Brian Lander, Deputy Director at the World Food Programme (WFP) in Geneva | Brian Lander opens the annual OxPeace Conference with his remarks at the Conference dinner. | Brian Lander | 08 Jul 2019 | |
| 10714 | Historically Informed Performance and Recordings | In this episode, Marten Noorduin talks to Eric Clarke about the different ways in which HIP performers and researchers have engaged with early recordings, as well as some of the work that the TCHIP project has been doing. | Marten Noorduin, Eric Clarke | 03 Jul 2019 | |
| 10715 | Defying Hitler: The White Rose Resistance Group | Dr Alexandra Lloyd, Lecturer in German, Magdalen College and St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, gives a talk on the White Rose Resistance Group. | Alexandra Lloyd | 25 Jun 2019 | |
| 10716 | Europe, Migration and Cities | Convened by: Kellogg Urban Knowledge Exchange. A multidisciplinary seminar, as part of the Kellogg Urban Knowledge Exchange series in association with Maison Française Oxford. | Sarah Spencer, Phoebe Clay, Michael Keith | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10717 | Design and Testing of Advanced Tidal System Turbine Arrays | Richard Willden MEng PhD, Professor of Engineering Science, EPSRC Fellow, gives a mini-lecture as part of the 2019 annual Lubbock lecture event. | Richard Willden | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10718 | Thermally Induced Lateral Buckling of Subsea Pipelines | Chris Martin BE, MA DPhil, Professorial Research Fellow, Fellow of Mansfield College, gives a mini-lecture on the 2019 Lubbock event. | Chris Martin | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10719 | 2019 Maurice Lubbock Lecture: Engineering at the crossroads: Lessons from History and a 21st-Century Vision from Across the Channel | Where is engineering going? Revolutions in knowledge, new challenges such as those raised by the digital revolution and the environmental crisis call for innovation in engineering education and professional practice. | Sophie Mougard, Antoine Picon | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10720 | Enterprising Women: Lunch and Learn – Dr Martine Abboud, Department of Chemistry | Dr Martine Abboud talks about her scientific journey as a first-generation graduate, how to maintain life-work balance and the various enterprise-related opportunities a science researcher can access in Oxford. | Martine Abboud | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10721 | Enterprising Women: Lunch and Learn – Prof Angela Russell, Department of Organic Chemistry | Find out how Prof Angela Russell combines the worlds of business and research through Oxtem, a company she co-founded, and still find time for family life. | Angela Russell | 09 Jul 2019 | |
| 10722 | Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 3. Applied Mathematics at Oxford | Our Open Days are intended to give an insight in to Maths at Oxford, whether you are a potential applicant or are just curious. | Dominic Vella | 10 Jul 2019 | |
| 10723 | Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 2. Pure Mathematics at Oxford | In this talk Vicky Neale gives a glimpse of the undergraduate Pure Maths courses through the lens of elliptic curves. | Vicky Neale | 10 Jul 2019 | |
| 10724 | Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 1. Introduction to Mathematics | In this talk, Admissions Guru James Munro explains how we teach, how you can apply and what your Oxford mathematical life might be like. | James Munro | 10 Jul 2019 | |
| 10725 | Knowledge Exchange Showcase - Understanding Visitor Engagement of Free Heritage Sites Using Social Media | Kathryn Eccles (Oxford Internet Institute), gives a talk on her Knowledge Exchange research project on using social media data to understand visitor engagement at heritage sites. | Kathryn Eccles | 15 Jul 2019 | |
| 10726 | Knowledge Exchange Showcase - Understanding Postgraduate Medical Ethics Education | Andrew Papanikitas Primary Care Health Sciences and John Spicer Health Education England give a talk on their Knowledge Exchange research project on teaching ethics to medical students. | Andrew Papanikitas, John Spicer | 15 Jul 2019 | |
| 10727 | Knowledge Exchange Showcase - Refugee Heritage: the Archaeology of the Calais 'Jungle' | Sarah Mallet School of Archaeology and Louise Fowler Museum of London Archaeology give a talk for the Knowledge Exchange Showcase on their research on the Calais migrant camp known as the Jungle. | Sarah Mallet, Louise Fowler | 15 Jul 2019 | |
| 10728 | Knowledge Exchange Showcase - Jewish Country Houses | Abigail Green (Faculty of History), Nino Strachey (National Trust), and Silvia Davoli, (Strawberry Hill House) give a presentation on their Knowledge Exchange research project on Jewish Country Houses | Abigail Green, Nino Strachey, Silvia Davoli | 15 Jul 2019 | |
| 10729 | The Act of Living: Street Life, Marginality and Development in Urban Ethiopia (Book Launch) | ASC seminar with Marco Di Nunzio | Marco Di Nunzio | 13 Jul 2019 | |
| 10730 | Joao Lourenco's reform agenda in post Dos Santos Angola: Ambiguities and asymmetries | ASC seminar with Rui Verde | Rui Verde | 13 Jul 2019 | |
| 10731 | Decolonisation Dilemmas: Challenges for University Leadership | ASC and Oxford Africa Society special lecture with Dr Max Price, former Vice Chancellor of UCT. | Max Price | 13 Jul 2019 | |
| 10732 | Episode 16: 'The Rough and the Refined: Sensing the Luxurious and the Everyday' – PART 2 | Dr Juanjo García-Granero (Postdoctoral Researcher, Archaeology) explores the senses in grand and ordinary living, through examining a Minoan cooking vessel. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Juanjo García-Granero, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10733 | Episode 15: 'The Rough and the Refined: Sensing the Luxurious and the Everyday' – PART 1 | Clare Gardom (DPhil Student, Classics) explores the senses in grand and ordinary living, through examining textiles from Classical Egypt. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Clare Gardom, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10734 | Episode 14: 'Making Sense of Death' – PART 2 | In this episode, Alexis Gorby (DPhil Student, Archaeology) looks at glass from the Roman catacombs to explore how ancient and contemporary cultures use the senses to make sense of death. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Alexis Gorby, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10735 | Episode 13: 'Making Sense of Death' – PART 1 | Dr Carrie Ryan (Postdoctoral Researcher, Anthropology) uses Angela Palmer’s Ashmolean Mummy Boy 3 to explore how ancient and contemporary cultures use the senses to make sense of death. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Carrie Ryan, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10736 | Episode 12: 'Stripping Back to Sharpen the Senses: A Holy Face and a Waterfall Vase' – PART 2 | Yayoi Teramoto Kimura (DPhil Student, Computational Neuroscience) focuses on a twentieth-century Japanese vase to demonstrate how artists can engage our senses through a pared down approach. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Yayoi Teramoto Kimura, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10737 | Episode 11: 'Stripping Back to Sharpen the Senses: A Holy Face and a Waterfall Vase' – PART 1 | Eleanor Townsend (DPhil Student, History of Art) focuses on a seventeenth-century Spanish painting to demonstrate how artists can engage our senses by focusing on a pared down approach. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Eleanor Townsend, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10738 | Episode 10: 'Sights for Sore Eyes: Reading the Senses in Religious and Cultural Pilgrimage' – PART 2 | Jasmine Proteau (DPhil Student, History) uses an eighteenth-century carriage clock to explore the significance of the senses in reading and travelling to centres of culture and spiritual salvati. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast | Jasmine Proteau, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10739 | Episode 9: Sights for Sore Eyes: Reading the Senses in Religious and Cultural Pilgrimage' – PART 1 | Raphaela Rohrhofer (DPhil Student, English) uses the Alfred Jewel and the reliquary casket of St Thomas Becket to explore the significance of the senses in reading and travelling. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Raphaela Rohrhofer, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10740 | Episode 8: 'Altered States of Body: The Power of the Senses in Ritual and Revelry' – PART 2 | In this episode, Helena Guzik (DPhil Student, History of Art) analyses Indian pilgrim stamps to show how objects have the power to transform us, engaging the senses to alter the body. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Helena Guzik, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10741 | Episode 7: 'Altered States of Body: The Power of the Senses in Ritual and Revelry' – PART 1 | In this episode, Dr Hugo Shakeshaft (Postdoctoral Researcher, Classics) analyses a Greek symposium cup to show how objects have the power to transform us, engaging the senses to alter the body. Further reading:https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Hugo Shakeshaft, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10742 | Episode 6: 'Sensory Intoxication: Getting Drunk From Oxford to Iran' – PART 2 | Jonny Lawrence (DPhil Student, Oriental Institute) looks at an Iranian tile scene to explore how drunkenness and intoxication play a big role in the visual culture of the senses. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Jonny Lawrence, Christy Callaway-Gale | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10743 | Episode 5: 'Sensory Intoxication: Getting Drunk from Oxford to Iran' – PART 1 | Sian Witherden (DPhil Student, English) uses a medieval puzzle jug to explore how drunkenness and intoxication play a big role in the visual culture of the senses. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Sian Witherden, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10744 | Episode 4: 'The Senses and Disease: A Renaissance Perfume Burner and a Victorian Poisonous Bookcase' – PART 2 | In this episode, Amélie Bonney (DPhil Student, History of Science) examines a toxic Victorian bookcase to discover the sensory world of disease. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Amélie Bonney, Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10745 | Episode 3: 'The Senses and Disease: A Renaissance Perfume Burner and a Victorian Poisonous Bookcase – PART 1 | In this episode, Christy Callaway-Gale (DPhil Student, Medieval and Modern Languages) examines a Renaissance Italian perfume burner to discover the sensory world of disease. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast. | Christy Callaway-Gale, Jonny Lawrence | 12 Jul 2019 | |
| 10746 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 6: The Way Forward | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Thandabantu Nhlapo, Geoff Budlender, Tembeka Ngcukaitobi | 18 Jun 2019 | |
| 10747 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 5: The Scope of Chiefly Power | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Jason Brickhill, Janine Ubink, Michael Mbikiwa, Monica De Souza Louw, Maame Mensa Bonsu | 18 Jun 2019 | |
| 10748 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 4: Traditional Leaders and Communities, Money and Accountability | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Jonny Steinberg, Sonwabile Mnwana, Wilmien Wicomb; | 17 Jun 2019 | |
| 10749 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 3: Mining and Resources: issues arising from recent litigation | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Nolundi Luwaya, Johan Lorenzen, Michael Bishop, William Beinart | 17 Jun 2019 | |
| 10750 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 2: What is Living Customary Law? And how should the courts identify it and apply it? | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Nick Barber, Thandabantu Nhlapo, Nolundi Luwaya, Kate O'Regan | 17 Jun 2019 | |
| 10751 | Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 1: Where are we now? The Constitution, Traditional Leaders and Customary Law | It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state. | Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, Peter Delius, Aninka Claassens | 17 Jun 2019 | |
| 10752 | Using Formative Assessment to Catalyse Self-Regulated Learning | This 2019 Oxford University Centre for Educational Assessment lecture is delivered by Professor Nancy Perry. | Nancy Perry | 17 Jul 2019 | |
| 10753 | Creative Commons | Diabetes, blood sugar, and red wine: a personal study | This talk was delivered by Martin Bland. | Martin Bland | 17 Jul 2019 |
| 10754 | Creative Commons | Nursing research in a global context | Professor Sharon Brownie explains her research on nursing in LMICs | Sharon Brownie | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10755 | Creative Commons | The treatment and outcomes of care for sick newborns | Researcher Jalemba Aluvaala tells us about his work concerning newborn care in LMICs. | Jalemba Aluvaala | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10756 | Creative Commons | Under pressure, the challenges of neonatal nursing | Jacob McKnight tells us about the challenges faced by nurses caring for newborns in Kenya. | Jacob McKnight | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10757 | Creative Commons | Quantifying nursing care done (or left undone) | David Gathara tells us about his work leading nursing research | David Gathara | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10758 | Creative Commons | Understanding nurses' work to care for sick newborns | Social Scientist Jacinta Nzinga tell us about her research on the care of sick newborns. | Jacinta Nzinga | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10759 | Creative Commons | Health services that deliver for newborns. | Professor Mike English tells us about the research project Health Services that Deliver for Newborns. | Mike English | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10760 | Creative Commons | Infectious diseases in the tropics | Professor Tran Hien, founder member of our OUCRU unit in Vietnam tells us about the development of this very successful Clinical Research Unit. | Tran Hien | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10761 | Creative Commons | Sophisticated biostatistics for complex clinical research | Professor Ronald Geskus from our OUCRU unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, tells us about the contribution of biostatisticians to complex clinical research. | Ronald Geskus | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10762 | Creative Commons | Viral infections in Laos | Dr Audrey Dubot-Peres from our LOMWRU unit in Laos and IRD (Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Marseille, France) tells us about her research on viral infections in Laos. | Audrey Dubot-Peres | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10763 | Creative Commons | Antimicrobial resistance in poultry production | Dr Juan Carrique-Mas from OUCRU, our Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, tell us about his research in the development of antimicrobial resistance in small-scale poultry production. | Juan Carrique-Mas | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10764 | Creative Commons | Mathematical modelling for tropical diseases | Lisa White, Professor of Modelling and Epidemiology at our MORU unit in Thailand, tells us how we can use mathematical and economic modelling to better use limited resources to control or eradicate tropical diseases | Lisa White | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10765 | Creative Commons | Scrub typhus in northern Thailand | Dr Tri Wangrangsimakul from our MORU unit and based in Chiangrai, northern Thailand, tells us about his research on scrub typhus. | Tri Wangrangsimakul | 16 Jul 2019 |
| 10766 | Creative Commons | Research at OUCRU Hanoi | Professor Rogier van Doorn, director of our OUCRU unit in Hanoi, Vietnam, tells us about his research on antimicrobial resistance and avian influenza. | Rogier van Doorn | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10767 | Creative Commons | Clinical research in low and middle-income countries | Professor Heiman Wertheim from our OUCRU unit in Hanoi, Vietnam, tells us about his research on drug resistant infections in low and middle-income countries. | Heiman Wertheim | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10768 | Creative Commons | Tuberculosis meningitis | Professor Guy Thwaites, director of our OUCRU unit in Vietnam, tells us about his research on tuberculosis meningitis. | Guy Thwaites | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10769 | Creative Commons | OUCRU laboratory management | Dr Motiur Rahman from our OUCRU unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, tells us about his responsibilities in laboratory management. | Motiur Rahman | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10770 | Creative Commons | Developing collaborative clinical trials in Indonesia | Dr Raph Hamers from our EOCRU unit in Jakarta, Indonesia, tells us how he developed collaborative clinical trials. | Raph Hamers | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10771 | Creative Commons | Central nervous system and HIV infections in Vietnam | Professor Jeremy Day from our OUCRU unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, tells us about his research on central nervous system and HIV infections in Vietnam. | Jeremy Day | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10772 | Creative Commons | Connecting research with communities in Nepal | Dr Abhilasha Karkey from our Clinical Research Unit in Kathmandu, Nepal, tells us how research is brought to local communities in Nepal. | Abhilasha Karkey | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10773 | Creative Commons | Health policy and systems | Dr Marco Haenssgen tells us about his research on Health policy and systems. | Marco Haenssgen | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10774 | Creative Commons | Transmission dynamics of hospital acquired infections | Dr Tom Crellen from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about his research on transmission dynamics of infections aquired in hospitals. | Tom Crellen | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10775 | Creative Commons | Antibiotic prescription in primary care | Dr Thomas Althaus from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about his research on antibiotic prescription at the point of primary care. | Thomas Althaus | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10776 | Creative Commons | Curing Plasmodium vivax malaria | Professor Ric Price, affiliated with our OUCRU unit, tells us of his research on surveillance, diagnostics and treatments for Plasmodium vivax malaria | Ric Price | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10777 | Creative Commons | Genomics and global health | Professor Olivo Miotto from our MORU programme in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us how genomics can help us improve global health | Olivo Miotto | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10778 | Creative Commons | Tracking antimalarial resistance and treatment of malaria using Triple ACTs | Dr Rob van der Pluijm from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about his work as project coordinator in mapping resistance to antimalarials | Rob van der Pluijm | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10779 | Creative Commons | Blocking malaria transmission | Dr Andrea Ruecker from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, talks about possible interventions to block the transmission of falciparum malaria | Andrea Ruecker | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10780 | Creative Commons | Fighting malaria in Myanmar | Professor Frank Smithuis from our MOCRU unit in Myanmar tells us about his research on malaria | Frank Smithuis | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10781 | Creative Commons | Primaquine and vivax malaria | Dr James Watson from MORU in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about his research in the biology of relapse in vivax malaria, as well as the development of statistical models to better understand the pharmacology of antimalarial drugs. | James Watson | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10782 | Creative Commons | Using big data to eliminate malaria | Dr Xin Hui Chan from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about the use of big data in our efforts to eliminate malaria | Xin Hui Chan | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10783 | Creative Commons | Malaria elimination and mass drug administration | Dr Tom Peto from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us how mass drug administration can help eliminate malaria | Tom Peto | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10784 | Creative Commons | Primaquine for vivax and falciparum malaria | Dr Bob Taylor from MORU (Mahidol Oxford Research Unit) in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us about his research on malaria, and how we can use primaquine to treat vivax malaria and prevent the transmission of falciparum malaria | Bob Taylor | 12 Jul 2019 |
| 10785 | FMR 61 - From the Editors | What moral principles guide our work? This issue debates many of the ethical questions that confront us in programming, research, safeguarding and volunteering, and in our use of data, new technologies, messaging and images. | Marion Couldrey, Jenny Peebles | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10786 | FMR 61 - Big data, little ethics: confidentiality and consent | Donors’ thirst for data is increasingly undermining security and confidentiality, putting both survivors of violence and staff at risk. | Nicole Behnam, Kristy Crabtree | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10787 | FMR 61 - New technologies in migration: human rights impacts | States are keen to explore the use of new technologies in migration management, yet greater oversight and accountability mechanisms are needed in order to safeguard fundamental rights. | Petra Molnar | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10788 | FMR 61 - Social media screening: Norway’s asylum system | The growing use of data gathered from social media in asylum claim assessments raises critical yet underexplored ethical questions. | Jan-Paul Brekke, Anne Balke Staver | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10789 | FMR 61 - Developing ethical guidelines for research | The IASFM has agreed an international code of ethics to guide research with displaced people. Challenges that arose during its development merit continued discussion. | Christina Clark-Kazak | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10790 | FMR 61 - ‘Over-researched’ and ‘under-researched’ refugees | A number of ethical issues emerge from working with ‘over-researched’ and ‘under-researched’ refugee groups. | Naohiko Omata | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10791 | FMR 61 - Research fatigue among Rwandan refugees in Uganda | Refugees in Nakivale refugee settlement demonstrate research fatigue, yet a return visit by one particular researcher reveals an interesting twist to the tale. | Cleophas Karooma | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10792 | FMR 61 - Over-researching migration ‘hotspots’? Ethical issues from the Carteret Islands | The situation of the Carteret Islanders, often characterised as the first ‘climate change refugees’, has attracted much research interest. What is the impact of such interest? And are standard ethics compliance processes appropriate? | Johannes M Luetz | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10793 | FMR 61 - Ethics and accountability in researching sexual violence against men and boys | Researching sexual violence against men and boys in humanitarian settings requires navigating multiple ethics- and accountability-related tensions. | Sarah Chynoweth, Sarah Martin | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10794 | FMR 61 - Ethics and consent in settlement service delivery | Service providers working in settlement contexts could draw more on research principles in order to better enable new arrivals to understand questions of rights and consent. | Carla Nayton and Sally Baker | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10795 | FMR 61 - Ethical primary research by humanitarian actors | As humanitarian agencies increasingly follow the example of academia in establishing ethics review committees, one such agency reflects on the benefits and drawbacks. | Prisca Benelli, Tamara Low | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10796 | FMR 61 - EU migration strategy: compromising principled humanitarian action | EU migration policies are undermining basic humanitarian principles and making it more difficult for humanitarian actors to uphold their ethical commitments. | Anaïs Faure Atger | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10797 | FMR 61 - A humanitarian approach to travel medicine? | When MSF recently piloted travel medicine services for people travelling along migration routes in Greece, various ethical challenges and moral dilemmas emerged. | Marta Aleksandra Balinska | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10798 | FMR 61 - Principled humanitarian assistance and non-State armed groups | The humanitarian community needs to develop a better shared understanding of how to provide principled assistance in areas controlled by proscribed groups. | Ruta Nimkar, Viren Falcao, Matthew Tebbutt, Emily Savage | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10799 | FMR 61 - Ethical dilemmas posed by unethical behaviour by persons of concern | What ethical dilemmas affect humanitarian agencies’ responses to fraudulent behaviour by persons of concern? And how might refugee community structures be more involved in defining responses? | Anna Turus | 20 Jun 2019 | |
| 10800 | FMR 61 - Ethical quandaries in volunteering | Volunteers in Greece who are filling gaps in service provision can encounter complex ethical situations for which they may be insufficiently trained and supported. | Ashley Witcher | 20 Jun 2019 |