School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography
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The School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography is a dynamic and stimulating department, the largest and arguably the most diverse in the UK, with an ethos of openness and tolerance at its heart. Its mission is to be a world leader in all forms of anthropological research and to train the next generations of anthropologists, whether working in the academy or outside it, through research-driven teaching programmes that produce future leaders in their fields. The School produces internationally recognised research and delivers teaching on a wide range of intellectually challenging and socially pressing issues. The School prides itself on its interdisciplinary and wide-ranging approaches to solving real world problems that contribute to the promotion of intercultural understanding and tolerance.
Series associated with School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography
# | Episode Title | Description | People | Date | |
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665 | Creative Commons | Asymmetrical Sympathies: the Global North’s Response to Protection Seekers | Why are some countries across the Global North more open and accepting towards refugees than others? How can asymmetrical sympathies and differential treatments be better understood? We search for answers with an expert panel. | Isabelle Lemay, Bridget Anderson, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 23 Aug 2024 |
664 | Monstrosities and Metamorphosis in More-Than-Human Worlds | Metamorphosis is constantly taking place in the worlds of people and other animals. A freewheeling discussion featuring shape-shifting leopard men in Nigeria, gut microbes that shape the human condition, and circus freakshows. | David Pratten, Jamie Lorimer, Beth Greenhough, Eva Bredler | 20 Aug 2024 | |
663 | Extraordinary Bodies, Disability Justice, and Metamorphosis | All of our bodies are gradually undergoing metamorphosis. Yet, many people with extraordinary bodies and minds experience discrimination in everyday life. Our speakers imagine metamorphosis and transformations on a grand societal scale. | Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Anna Landre, Benedict Ipgrave, Stuart Murray | 12 Aug 2024 | |
662 | Keynote: Time traveling with Gregor Samsa, or what you can do with six legs | Professors Rosemarie Garland-Thomson and Eben Kirksey use Gregor's transformation in 'Metamorphosis' to muse on the everyday changes we all experience and their relations to disability, design justice and ableism. | Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Eben Kirksey | 07 Aug 2024 | |
661 | CRISPR, Gene Editing, and Metamorphosis | Biotechnology is transforming the human condition. A molecular tool called CRISPR-Cas9 is being used to edit human DNA. Scientists will join influential disabled thinkers to discuss ethical issues hovering around gene editing. | Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Nada Kubikova, Dagan Wells, Julia-Sophia Bellingrath | 26 Jul 2024 | |
660 | Creative Commons | Global Migration Data: Making Sense of the Numbers | Why does official data tell us so little about migration? Why do some migration statistics seem to clash? How can we shape this “age of migration data” for better? | Frank Laczko, Elisa Mosler Vidal, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 16 Jul 2024 |
659 | Hunger Artistry: Kafka and the Art of Starvation | Kafka’s provocative story “The Hunger Artist” explores starvation, art, and the nature of human existence. Experts discuss the story and its reception. | Peter Boxall, Ankhi Mukherjee, Meindert Peters, Karen Leeder | 10 Jul 2024 | |
658 | Fatness and the body 5/5: When the measure becomes the metric - making sense of the body mass index in research and practice | How body size is used in research and discourse on health, bringing together theory from anthropology, sociology, public health and more. With llya Gutin, University of Texas at Austin | llya Gutin | 24 Jun 2024 | |
657 | Fatness and the body 4/5: Fifteen (plus!) ways estrogens influence adipose tissues | Exploring the phenomenal range of roles estrogens play with respect to our metabolism – a range that is only just beginning to be understood. With Deborah Clegg, Texas Tech University | Deborah Clegg | 24 Jun 2024 | |
656 | Fatness and the body 3/5: Why is there a higher prevalence of overweight and obesity in rural areas? A qualitative study of rural children's perspectives of rural foodways | Exploring children's views on their diets in relation to culture, identity and tradition in their everyday lives. With Ellen Margrete Iveland Ersfjord, University of Agder, Norway | Ellen Margrete Iveland Ersfjord | 24 Jun 2024 | |
655 | Fatness and the body 2/5: Being fat or having obesity - combining social constructivism and biomedical research on childhood obesity | Where or what is the difference between childhood obesity and fatness, who has the right to decide that, and why is it important? With Zofia Boni, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan | Zofia Boni | 24 Jun 2024 | |
654 | Fatness and the body 1/5: Childhood adversity and adiposity - examining differences by sociocultural context | Looking at the complex relationships between adversity in childhood and obesity in adulthood, with Shakira Suglia, Emory University | Shakira Suglia | 24 Jun 2024 | |
653 | ‘Franz Kafka’s ‘Metamorphosis’: Insects and Disgust and Repulsion’ | Franz Kafka exploited people’s disgust at insects as his protagonist, Greger Samsa, was transformed into a giant insect. Is this disgust innate, widely shared or justified and what are the consequences for our treatment of insects? | Liam Crowley, Rosemary Gillespie, Clair Linzey, Geraldine Wright | 12 Jun 2024 | |
652 | Tuberculosis: vaccines, diagnostics and experience | Kafka died in 1924 of tuberculosis, which remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases. This talk looks at the various aspects of tuberculosis from candidate vaccines, the role of genetics in TB treatments and the perspective of a patient. | Helen McShane, Philip Fowler | 12 Jun 2024 | |
651 | Oxford Reads Kafka | A collective public reading of 'Metamorphosis' to celebrate the 100-year anniversary of Franz Kafka’s death. Bringing together literary figures, civic leaders and University academics and students, this event celebrates the power of Kafka’s voice today. | Lemn Sissay, Ben Okri, Lisa Appignanesi, Helen McShane | 12 Jun 2024 | |
650 | 'Kafka's Ape' and 'Words and Music' | Interview with the creatives behind two shows inspired by Kafka's story 'A Report for an Academy' which explore race, migration, ageing and "humanimal" agency. | Ed Gaughan, Karen Leeder, Tony Miyambo, Wes Williams | 07 Jun 2024 | |
649 | Creative Commons | Intersecting Crises: Housing and Forced Migration in Oxford | How does housing relate to migration and asylum issues? Using the City of Oxford as a case study, we consider the affordability and accessibility of housing to newcomers and the impact this has on refugee and asylum seekers. | Tiger Hills, Hari Reed, J, Rob McNeil | 30 Apr 2024 |
648 | Emotions in international food law | Anne Saab, associate professor at the Geneva Graduate Institute looks at how feelings such as fear and anxiety might influence food safety regulations. | Anne Saab | 30 Apr 2024 | |
647 | Sugarcoated: Sugar tax and media discourses on the context of policymaking | Dr Esther Gonzalez-Padilla asks what is sugar? Why should we study it? And how much sugar should we be eating? | Esther Gonzalez-Padilla | 30 Apr 2024 | |
646 | Sweetness as an aesthetic relationship | Dr Maddalena Borsato, senior researcher at Ritsumeikan University examines the ambiguities and of the contradictions of sweetness. | Maddalena Borsato | 30 Apr 2024 | |
645 | Outwitting the temporalities of ‘control’ for Type 2 diabetes in urban India | Pallavi Laxmikanth speaks about her PhD research examining understandings and practises of diabetes management in middle class communities in Hyderabad’s High-Tech City. | Pallavi Laxmikanth | 30 Apr 2024 | |
644 | Creative Commons | Diaspora Communities: Powerful Partners Driving Change | What makes diaspora communities unique? We learn about the roles of diasporas, contributions to development and humanitarian initiatives across the globe and unpack how people living in diaspora drive change in their communities. | Alan Gamlen, Larisa Lara, Martin Russell, Rob McNeil | 20 Mar 2024 |
643 | From grassroots to platforms. The reconfiguration of alternative food provisioning in an online world | Dr Francesca Forno, Associate professor at the University of Trento discusses how new, grassroots food movements are using online platforms and how their online platforms are being appropriated by bigger businesses. | Francesca Forno, Stanley Ulijaszek, Tanja Schneider | 13 Mar 2024 | |
642 | Curating good choice, digital marketplace platforms and the framing of eating | Dr Jeremy Brice explores how consumer choice is governed, protected, and cared for by firms which operate digital marketplace platforms from the likes of Deliveroo to Amazon Fresh. | Jeremy Brice, Stanley Ulijaszek, Tanja Schneider | 13 Mar 2024 | |
641 | Creative Commons | Excess as entertainment: Mukbang and the theatrics of eating for an online audience | Dr Thao Dam explores how food is experienced digitally, through the Korean-originated practice of mukhbang, where people pay to watch others eat inline. | Thao Dam, Stanley Ulijaszek, Tanja Schneider | 13 Mar 2024 |
640 | Creative Commons | Personalised nutrition and dietary behaviour change in an online study across 7 European countries | Dr Anna Macready, associate professor in the School of Agriculture Policy and Development at the University of Reading, takes us through personalised nutrition and asks, ‘is there a right or wrong diet?’ | Anna Macready, Stanley Ulijaszek, Tanja Schneider | 13 Mar 2024 |
639 | Creative Commons | Artivism and Migration | Intersections of art and activism are used as a tool to promote diversity, address human rights and make calls to action in contexts of migration. What is artivism and how can it support individuals to tell their own stories? | Salma Zulfiqar, Natalia Federenko, Ruth Nyabuto, Rob McNeil | 20 Feb 2024 |
638 | Creative Commons | The Moral Economy of Infrastructures in Everest Tourism | As social media posts from the slopes of Mount Everest become almost commonplace Dr Jolynna Sinanan (University of Manchester) focuses on digital media use amongst guides and porters and the impact of digital infrastructures in the area. | Jolynna Sinanan, Peyton Cherry | 06 Feb 2024 |
637 | Creative Commons | Pentecostalism, Deliverance and Queer Sexuality in Nigeria: Literary Representations | Professor Adriaan van Klinken takes us to the epicentre of Pentecostalism. | Adriaan van Klinken, Olivia Elizabeth Freidinger | 06 Feb 2024 |
636 | Stepping in, helping out, competing with…? State and civic actors in Ukraine’s wartime heritage work | Dr. Vonnak reflects on how socio historical events impact the definition, preservation, and sometimes neglect of cultural heritage. She draws from her extensive field work in Ukraine over the past eight years. | Diana Vonnak, Dora Duo | 25 Jan 2024 | |
635 | Creative Commons | Municipal IDs and Local Citizenship | For irregular migrants, the inability to provide proof of identity affects nearly every aspect of life. We explore cities that have introduced municipal ID cards to enhance social integration and enable access to key services. | Myriam Cherti, Albert Gamarra, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 18 Jan 2024 |
634 | Excess as entertainment: Mukbang and the theatrics of eating for an online audience | Dr Thao Dam explores how food is experienced digitally, through the Korean-originated practice of mukhbang, where people pay to watch others eat inline. | Thao Dam | 15 Dec 2023 | |
633 | From grassroots to platforms. The reconfiguration of alternative food provisioning in an online world | Dr Francesca Forno, Associate professor at the University of Trento discusses how new, grassroots food movements are using online platforms and how their online platforms are being appropriated by bigger businesses. | Francesca Forno | 15 Dec 2023 | |
632 | Curating good choice, digital marketplace platforms and the framing of eating | Dr Jeremy Brice explores how consumer choice is governed, protected, and cared for by firms which operate digital marketplace platforms from the likes of Deliveroo to Amazon Fresh. | Jeremy Brice | 15 Dec 2023 | |
631 | Personalised nutrition and dietary behaviour change in an online study across 7 European countries | Dr Anna Macready, associate professor in the School of Agriculture Policy and Development at the University of Reading, takes us through personalised nutrition and asks, ‘is there a right or wrong diet?’ | Anna Macready | 15 Dec 2023 | |
630 | Emptiness, War and Migration | In the UK, migration debates tend to be about the idea of fullness – concepts of arrivals, overcrowding, competition for resources – but what about emptiness? We learn why it is such an important part of understanding migration. | Maria Gunko, Volodymyr Artiukh, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 07 Nov 2023 | |
629 | Creative Commons | Parasites, Invention, and Grace: Taking Turns in a Streetcorner Bureaucracy | Michael Degani analyzes the styles of work and conflict amongst electrical contractors who congregate across the street from a power utility office in urban Tanzania. | Michael Degani, Peyton Cherry | 02 Oct 2023 |
628 | Creative Commons | Anthropology, Philosophy and Symmetrisation | Philippe Descola, one of Anthropology's most influential figures, invites us to go beyond the traditional boundaries of nature and culture and redefine our understanding of humanity's relationship with the world around us. | Philippe Descola, Luise Eder | 02 Oct 2023 |
627 | Intimate Rites: Ancestors and Queer Kinship in Zimbabwe | Raffaela Taylor-Seymourn examines the engagements with ancestral spirits among young queer Zimbabweans | Raffaela Taylor-Seymourn, Peyton Cherry | 02 Oct 2023 | |
626 | Creative Commons | Nutritional Anthropology | Stanley Ulijaszek discusses human dietary evolution, dietary flexibility and present day undernutrition and infection | Stanley Ulijaszek, Jacob Evans | 02 Oct 2023 |
625 | Creative Commons | How to Stitch Ethnography | Feminist anthropologist Tania Perez-Bustos discusses how immersion in the act of embroidery affects the body and enables collective reflection and listening. | Tania Perez-Bustos, Malin Schlode | 02 Oct 2023 |
624 | The Rise and Fall of Generations | Does life take you any nearer to your ancestors or does it draw you ever further away from them? | Tim Ingold, Luise Eder | 02 Oct 2023 | |
623 | Creative Commons | Living in Tide: The Climate of the Urban Sea | How do fishers and scientists read the uncertain terrain of the city in the sea? What stories does the urban sea hold for the futures of the city? | Lan Duo, Nikhil Anand | 02 Oct 2023 |
622 | Creative Commons | Crude Sonics: Field Recordings from an Extractive Zone | Zsuzsanna Ihar leads us through field recordings captured in the marginal settlements of Baku, capital of Azerbaijan. She traces sounds that haunt, interrupt, and resist processes of gentrification, displacement, and capitalist profiteering. | Zsuzsanna Ihar, Eben Kirksey | 02 Oct 2023 |
621 | Automating Immigration in the Digital Age | What do advancements in AI mean for immigration? We discuss the current and emerging practices of new technologies in the field, and explore developments in the use of predictive analytics, automated risk assessment and profiling. | Derya Ozkul, Caterina Rodelli, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 29 Sep 2023 | |
620 | Creative Commons | Cheaters Dilemma: Iraq, WMD and the path to the 2003 war | Why did Iraq fail to prove its WMD absence before the 2003 invasion? This seminar examines new evidence from Iraq and United Nations sources to shed light on the internal debates leading up to the 2003 war. | Målfrid Braut-Hegghammer, Neil Ketchley | 10 Jul 2023 |
619 | Creative Commons | The Popular Mobilisation Units and their Pursuit of Power and Legitimacy within the Iraqi State | This talk examines the Shi‘ite political parties linked to Iraq's Popular Mobilisation Units (PMU) and their influence over the state, exploring their strategies for legitimacy in politics, religion, and society. | Inna Rudolf, Maryam Alemzadeh | 10 Jul 2023 |
618 | Creative Commons | The Iraq Invasion and Transnational Jihadism | This talk explores the impact of the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 on militant Islamism using new evidence. | Thomas Hegghammer, Neil Ketchley | 10 Jul 2023 |
617 | Creative Commons | The Aftermath of Forced Return | With the help of our panel, we discuss forced return migration and the different power dynamics at play. What are the difficulties of forced returnees to home countries and what are the differences between the wealth and influence of certain states? | Matthew Gibney, Guadalupe Chavez, Maggie Loredo | 27 Jun 2023 |
616 | Precarious Migrants | We often think of migration in binary terms of regular or irregular migration; legal or illegal, but often people move in between these states and are left in an insecure status. How does this precarity effect a migrant’s access to services in cities? | Marie Mallet-Garcia, Shams Asadi, Wanjiku Ngotho-Mbugua | 19 May 2023 | |
615 | Creative Commons | Politics of Emigration | In this episode of The Migration Oxford Podcast, we are discussing the politics of emigration. All countries are countries of immigration and of emigration, yet the politics of emigration are often less obsessed over as attitudes toward immigration. | Anna Kyriazi, Julia Rone, Madeleine Reeves, Rob McNeil | 21 Feb 2023 |
614 | Who Counts? Data and Migration | We discuss the role of data science in migration studies, joined by Dr. Emre Korkmaz, lecturer in migration and co-author of Data Science for Migration and Mobility and Christina Pao, PhD student and co-organiser of the Measuring Migration Conference 2022 | Emre Korkmaz, Christina Pao, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead | 19 Jan 2023 | |
613 | Creative Commons | Gendered Migration | How does gender affect experiences of migration and communities left behind? In the age of a controversial Nationality and Borders Bill, we ask how current policies interact with gender and find out what happens when a gender lens on migration is ignored. | Jacqui Broadhead, Rob McNeil, Melissa Siegel, Alphonsine Kabagabo | 05 Oct 2022 |
612 | Creative Commons | BONUS- Immigration to Innovation | Aditi Anand (Artistic Director, Migration Museum) takes us on an extended tour of the immersive Taking Care of Business exhibition and introduces us to the stories behind migrant businesses we often don't get to hear. | Aditi Anand | 13 Sep 2022 |
611 | Creative Commons | Immigration to Innovation | We take a tour round the Taking Care of Business exhibition at the Migration Museum and hear about new research into refugee entrepreneurialism. | Aditi Anand, Gilda Borriello | 06 Sep 2022 |
610 | Creative Commons | Movement of Money | As we enter a period of global instability, we ask what role remittances will play and how we can improve data collection on remittances to better understand their vital importance on a local and global scale. | Carlos Vargas-Silva, Dilip Ratha | 08 Aug 2022 |
609 | Rwanda and refoulement: Can the 1951 Refugee Convention survive? | In this episode of the Migration Oxford Podcast, we ask if the 1951 Refugee Convention is under attack. | Catherine Briddick, Sabir Zazai | 16 May 2022 | |
608 | How has COVID-19 influenced domestic life? | The Disobedient Buildings team reflect on both the positive and negative implications of spending more time in the home and within the community during Covid-19 lockdowns across their field sites. | Inge Daniels, Gabriela Nicolescu, Anna Ulrikke Andersen | 04 May 2022 | |
607 | Does home ownership increase inequality? | The Disobedient Buildings team examine the relationships between the privatization of housing and rising inequality in London, Bucharest and Oslo. | Inge Daniels, Gabriela Nicolescu, Anna Ulrikke Andersen | 04 May 2022 | |
606 | What does welfare mean today? | The Disobedient Buildings team explore the continuities and differences in the welfare systems in the UK, Romania and Norway . | Inge Daniels, Gabriela Nicolescu, Anna Ulrikke Andersen | 04 May 2022 | |
605 | Are local authorities meeting the needs of diverse communities? | Anna Ulrikke Andersen interviews researcher Tom Davies about socially driven building design in post-Second World War Oslo and the challenges inhabitants of those buildings face today. | Anna Ulrikke Andersen, Tom Davies | 04 May 2022 | |
604 | Have people lost their sense of civic duty? | Gabriela Nicolescu interviews architecture lecturer Ilinca Păun-Constantinescu about the loss of community and the demise of civic duty in post-socialist Bucharest. | Gabriela Nicolescu, Ilinca Păun-Constantinescu | 04 May 2022 | |
603 | Will the State look after you? | Inge daniels talks to Jacky Peacock from Advice to Renters on the housing challenges faced by vulnerable people in London. | Inge Daniels, Jack Peacock | 04 May 2022 | |
602 | Can participatory design reach ‘forgotten people’ in Oslo? | Anna Ulrikke Andersen interviews the founders of MakersHub Oslo to discuss the value of participatory design in architectural practice. | Anna Ulrikke Andersen, Jack Hughes, Else Abrahamsen | 04 May 2022 | |
601 | Is ‘ghettoisation’ happening in Bucharest? | Gabriela Nicolescu speaks with Ștefan Ghenciulescu about social housing, privatisation and the impact of the market economy on residents in Bucharest. | Gabriela Nicolescu, Ștefan Ghenciulescu | 04 May 2022 | |
600 | Is London the most unequal European City? | Inge daniels interviews Geography Professor Danny Dorling to discuss the extent of social and economic inequality in London. | Inge Daniels, Danny Dorling | 04 May 2022 | |
599 | What is a Disobedient Building? | The Disobedient Buildings team unpacks 'disobedience' and what the term means in the homes of their research participants in London, Bucharest and Oslo. | Inge Daniels, Gabriela Nicolescu, Anna Ulrikke Andersen | 04 May 2022 | |
598 | Citizenship Deprivation | As the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill works its way through parliament in the UK, we investigate Clause 9 which focuses on citizenship deprivation and the rights of the Home Secretary to take somebody's citizenship away. | Abhishek Saha, Rob McNeil, Jacqui Broadhead, Zoe Gardner | 08 Apr 2022 | |
597 | Leaving Ukraine | We discuss the war on Ukraine and the almost unprecedented speed and size of the movement of people fleeing the country. We discuss the displacement taking place, how refugees are being received in Europe, and the impact this will have on post-EU Britain. | Roxana Barbulescu, Emma Rimpiläinen, Volodymyr Artiukh, Rob McNeil | 23 Mar 2022 | |
596 | Lazy, crazy and disgusting: stigma and the undoing of global health | This UBVO seminar was given by Alexandra Brewis (Arizona State University) on 3 December 2020 | Alexandra Brewis | 22 Oct 2021 | |
595 | Connection and conflict: hHw neoliberal healthism and inequity shape bariatric surgery support forum dynamics | This UBVO seminar was presented by Zoe Meleo-Erwin (William Paterson University of New Jersey) on 19 November 2020 | Zoe Meleo-Erwin | 22 Oct 2021 | |
594 | 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 | |
593 | Cultured meat as a case study in the future of food | This UBVO seminar was presented by Ben Wurgaft (MIT) on 5 November 2020 | Ben Wurgaft | 22 Oct 2021 | |
592 | Feeling the ‘weight’ of expectation: The necessity of understanding ‘obesity’ as a biopsychosocial phenomenon | A UBVO seminar presented by Oli Williams (King's College London) on 29 October 2020 | Oli Williams | 22 Oct 2021 | |
591 | The damaging impact of weight stigma: Psychosocial stress and harmful health consequences | This UBVO seminar was given by Rebecca Puhl (University of Connecticut) on 22 October 2020 | Rebecca Puhl | 22 Oct 2021 | |
590 | The syndemic of COVID-19, obesity and food insecurity in the United States | This UBVO seminar was given by William Dietz (George Washington University) on 15 October 2020 | William Dietz | 22 Oct 2021 | |
589 | "Emptiness: Ways of Seeing" Conference 2021 - Roundtable 1: Emptiness, Space, Capital and the State | Considering the contours of emptiness by examining the shifting relationships between people, place, capital and the state. | Volodymyr Artiukh, Dace Dzenovska, Saskia Sassen, Johanna Bockman | 05 Oct 2021 | |
588 | "Emptiness: Ways of Seeing" Conference 2021. Roundtable 2: On the Edge: Life along the Russia-China border | A book discussion with Franck Billé and Caroline Humphrey | Dominic Martin, Caroline Humphrey, Franck Billé, Madeleine Reeves | 05 Oct 2021 | |
587 | Making Cultures Count: Following the Mayi Kuwayu National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing | A UBVO seminar presented by Sarah Bourke (National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University) on 24 January 2019 | Sarah Bourke | 31 Mar 2021 | |
586 | Framing obesity as a problem | Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, University of Oxford) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 27 February 2020 | Stanley Ulijaszek | 25 Feb 2021 | |
585 | Protein and meat as powerful symbols | Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, University of Oxford) gave this presentation at the UBVO seminar on 21 February 2020 | Stanley Ulijaszek | 25 Feb 2021 | |
584 | Sustainability on stage: FoodTech and the spectacle of innovation | Tanja Schneider (University of St Gallen, Switzerland) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 12 March 2020 | Tanja Schneider | 25 Feb 2021 | |
583 | Is obesity a choice? | Giles Yeo from the University of Cambridge gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 30 January 2020 | Giles Yeo | 25 Feb 2021 | |
582 | Height, weight and prostate cancer | Aurora Perez-Cornago (University of Oxford) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar series on 23 January 2020 | Aurora Perez-Cornago | 25 Feb 2021 | |
581 | Coffee, pure and simple: Rejection of milk and sugar by Brazilian specialty coffee consumers | Sabine Parrish (from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar on 6 February 2020 | Sabine Parrish | 25 Feb 2021 | |
580 | An eco-bio-socio-political approach to anaemia in Peru | Doreen Montag (Queen Mary College London) gave this presentation for the UBVO seminar on 13 February 2020 | Doreen Montag | 25 Feb 2021 | |
579 | Creative Commons | Nutrient timing and human health | A UBVO Seminar given by James Betts (Professor of Metabolic Physiology, Department for Health, University of Bath) on 24 October 2019 | James Betts | 22 Jan 2020 |
578 | Creative Commons | Can wearable sensors and machine learning enhance our understanding of lifestyle health behaviours? | A UBVO Seminar given by Aidan Doherty (Nuffield Department of Population Health, Oxford) on 17 October 2019 | Aiden Doherty | 22 Jan 2020 |
577 | Creative Commons | How mapping frames obesity and chronic disease risk factors | Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, Oxford) interviews Professor Danny Dorling (School of Geography and the Environment, Oxford) for the UBVO Instruments and Institutions Interviews series, November 2019 | Danny Dorling | 22 Jan 2020 |
576 | Creative Commons | Changing ecologies of disease | A lecture given by Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, Oxford) on 16 October 2019 | Stanley Ulijaszek | 22 Jan 2020 |
575 | Creative Commons | Biocultural approaches to human physical activity in (increasingly smart) urban environments | A presentation given by Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, Oxford) at the Department of Cultural Heritage, University of Bologna, at Ravenna | Stanley Ulijaszek | 20 Jan 2020 |
574 | Creative Commons | The social life of childhood obesity | A UBVO seminar presented by Zofia Boni (University of Poznan, Poland) on 2 March 2019 | Zofia Boni | 20 Jan 2020 |
573 | Creative Commons | Obesity: human developmental perspectives | The Keynote Lecture at the UBVO Green Templeton College Obesity Conference, 16 September 2019, given by Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, Oxford) | Stanley Ulijaszek | 20 Jan 2020 |
572 | Creative Commons | The UK government's childhood obesity plan | A presentation given by Mike Rayner (Professor of Population Health and Director of the Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention, Oxford) at the UBVO Green Templeton College Obesity Conference, 16 September 2019 | Mike Rayner | 20 Jan 2020 |
571 | Creative Commons | The evolution of adipose tissues and how natural obesity in wild mammals elucidates human obesity | A presentation given by Caroline Pond (Emeritus Professor, Open University) at the UBVO Green Templeton College Obesity Conference, 16 September 2019 | Caroline Pond | 20 Jan 2020 |
570 | Creative Commons | The metabolic consequences of obesity | A presentation given by Leanne Hodson (Professor of Metabolic Physiology, Radcliffe Department of Medicine, Oxford) at the UBVO Green Templeton College Obesity Conference, 16 September 2019 | Leanne Hodson | 20 Jan 2020 |
569 | Creative Commons | Using low-energy diets to treat obesity: from research to practice | A presentation given by Nerys Astbury (Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, Oxford) at the UBVO Green Templeton College Obesity Conference, 16 September 2019 | Nerys Astbury | 20 Jan 2020 |
568 | Creative Commons | What's in the fridge? The everyday materiality of health and well-being | A UBVO seminar presented by Tess Bird (Wesleyan University) on 15 May 2019 | Tess Bird | 20 Jan 2020 |
567 | Creative Commons | The Danish Health Interview Surveys | An interview with Ola Ekholm (Senior Adviser, National Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark) for the UBVO Instruments and Institutions Interviews series (20 December 2010) | Ola Ekholm | 20 Jan 2020 |
566 | Creative Commons | Materialities of eating disorders | A UBVO seminar presented by Dr Karin Eli (Research Affiliate, University of Oxford) on 30 April 2019 | Karin Eli | 20 Jan 2020 |
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