Should we feed our pets a vegan diet? |
Katrien Devolder and Josh Milburn discuss whether it's ethical - and possible - to feed our pets a vegan diet. |
Josh Milburn, Katrien Devolder |
8 April, 2021 |
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004: Management - Like a Dog With a Bone |
This episode looks at management. What’s it like working through a platform, where the principal colleague you’re working with is your smartphone? |
Robbie Warin, Francis Scaife |
6 April, 2021 |
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003: Contracts - Stand Up For Your Rights |
This episode looks at contracts and in it we hear from Yaseen Aslam, the former Uber driver who successfully took them to court over his classification as self-employed, a ruling that has implications for gig workers around the world |
Yaseen Aslam, Robbie Warin, Kelle Howson |
6 April, 2021 |
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002: Conditions - Lockdown |
In this episode we here from Aziz - a pseudonym - a ridehail driver in London. We explore what it is like working during a pandemic, serving your community and keeping the country running. |
Robbie Warin |
6 April, 2021 |
|
001: Representation - The Deliveroo Strikes |
In this episode we hear from Mohaan Biswas about his first-hand experience of the Deliveroo strikes in 2016 that made headlines around the world. |
Mohaan Biswas, Robbie Warin |
6 April, 2021 |
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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 March, 2021 |
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Connections in the Making and Meaning of the Art of Bhutan and Tibet in the 17 th and 18 th Centuries: A Study of the Wall Paintings at Tango Monastery |
Pu Lan discusses her PhD project, which explores the 17th-century Monastery of Tango and how it illustrates the development of wall painting technology in Bhutan |
Pu Lan |
31 March, 2021 |
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The Geluk Domestication of Tantra |
Brenton Sullivan presents his new book "Building a Religious Empire: Tibetan Buddhism, Bureaucracy, and the Rise of the Gelukpa" and discuss the third chapter, "Institutionalizing Tantra", in more detail |
Brenton Sullivan |
31 March, 2021 |
|
Singing Together; Apart: Gregorian Chant Workshop for Candlemas |
Building on the repertoire from our previous workshop, we will add further pieces for Candlemas where everybody is invited to join in by singing the communal response |
Henrike Lähnemann, Nick Swarbrick, Andrew Dunning |
29 March, 2021 |
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Meet the Manuscripts: judging a book by its cover |
The covers can tell us as much about a book as its contents. This workshop explores the secrets which bookbindings reveal about the uses and histories of medieval manuscripts. |
Matthew Holford, Andrew Honey |
29 March, 2021 |
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Andrew Pollard and the Development of the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine |
Andrew Pollard discusses the development of the COVID-19 Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine with Stanley Ulijaszek |
Andrew Pollard, Stanley Ulijaszek |
25 March, 2021 |
|
LGBT+ History Month with Corinne Humphreys & Michael Gunning |
Watch the 2021 LGBT History Month lecture with Stonewall Sport Champions |
Corinne Humphreys, Michael Gunning |
22 March, 2021 |
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Translation and Retranslation: priorities, discoveries, pleasures |
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. |
Sasha Dugdale, Oliver Ready, Wes Williams |
22 March, 2021 |
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Beyond zero: the role of negative emissions |
What are the different ways to remove carbon dioxide from air? How much potential do they have, and how can we scale them up? Perhaps most importantly, will negative emissions be a vital addition to action on emissions or a costly distraction? |
Tim Kruger, Steve Smith |
18 March, 2021 |
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The stymieing effect of unresolved ethical issues on the conservation of biodiversity |
In this presentation, Professor John Vucetich & Professor David MacDonald, will examine how the terms “ecosystem health” and “endangered species” are underdetermined to the point of being increasingly problematic for advancing real-world conservation |
John Vucetich, David Macdonald |
18 March, 2021 |
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Leading and teaching Evidence-Based Health Care |
Professor Kamal Mahtani and David Nunan interview Professor Paul Glasziou, Director of the Institute for Evidence-Based Healthcare at Bond University, about his experience of leadership and his work in capacity building through teaching and supervision. |
Kamal Mahtani, David Nunan, Paul Glasziou |
18 March, 2021 |
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The Mongolian Kanjur - Should Tibetologists Care? |
Kirill Alekseev presents his latest research on the Mongolian Kanjur and its ramifications in Tibetan Studies |
Kirill Alekseev |
16 March, 2021 |
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The challenge of anti-microbial resistance |
In conversation with Chris Dye, Sally Davies will explore the major challenge of anti-microbial resistance and discuss whether people’s greater appreciation of medical risk due to the pandemic will help the development of effective countermeasures. |
Dame Sally Davies, Chris Dye |
15 March, 2021 |
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Thinking again about the future and prospects for humanity |
In conversation with Charles Godfray, Martin Rees will explore how the global experience of the COVID-19 pandemic might change the way societies and policymakers grapple with the major challenges of the 21st century. |
Martin Rees, Charles Godfray |
15 March, 2021 |
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The Dead Speak: Identity, Autochthony and the Occult in Kenya’s Western Highlands |
In this seminar we hosted David Anderson of Warwick University as he presented on "The Dead Speak: Identity, Autochthony and the Occult in Kenya’s Western Highlands". |
David Anderson |
12 March, 2021 |
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Among the Supporting Cast |
Sir Timothy Sainsbury (1953) on his memoir, Among the Supporting Cast. |
Sir Timothy Sainsbury |
10 March, 2021 |
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Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Elana Shapira: Berta Zuckerkandl and Her Circle: Austrian Nationalism and Zionism in Viennese Modernism |
Elana Shapira discusses the tangled relationship between Austrian Nationalism and Zionism in Viennese Modernism |
Elana Shapira |
9 March, 2021 |
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Greed is dead: politics after individualism |
Economists Paul Collier and John Kay discuss their book, Greed is Dead, with Sir Charles Godfray |
Paul Collier, John Kay, Charles Godfray |
9 March, 2021 |
|
Being and Becoming African as a Permanent Work in Progress: Inspiration from Chinua Achebe’s Proverbs |
In this seminar we hosted Professor Francis Nyamnjoh as he presented his lecture titled Being and Becoming African as a Permanent Work in Progress: Inspiration from Chinua Achebe’s Proverbs. |
Francis Nyamnjoh |
5 March, 2021 |
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Zero carbon energy systems |
Join Nick Eyre and Steve Smith for a discussion on a renewable energy, energy efficiency and carbon emissions. |
Nick Eyre, Steve Smith |
4 March, 2021 |
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'The Lady Collationers': women and the study of medieval manuscripts in the Bodleian Libraries |
A look at the careers of the Parker sisters known as the Lady Collationers |
Hope Williard |
2 March, 2021 |
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Learning since our mothers day |
Oxford's registrar gives a personal account of her mother's journey through education and early career, and the expectations for women at the time, and how that has shaped her own career. |
Gill Aitken |
2 March, 2021 |
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The architecture of women’s higher education in England, 1869–1914 |
How University architecture reflects the presence of women and their perceived needs, and the generosity of female benefactors |
Geoffrey Tyack |
2 March, 2021 |
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Diversifying portraiture: women’s place in a project to change the representation of Oxford success |
Alice Prochaska discusses the Diversifying Portraiture project designed by the Equality and Diversity Unit at Oxford University |
Alice Prochaska |
2 March, 2021 |
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A subject ‘for Honours men’: women in the early School of Geography |
A look at early women geography students at Oxford |
Elizabeth Baigent |
2 March, 2021 |
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Women of the Bodleian: personal stories behind progressive steps |
A look at the early women librarians of the Bodleian Library |
Anne Lawrence |
2 March, 2021 |
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The domestic work of women at Oxford colleges |
A look at the history of the women service sector workers at Oxford Colleges and upon whom the comfortable academic life depended |
Kathryne Crossley |
2 March, 2021 |
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Women college principals and their views on degrees, 1879–1920 |
Anne Keene explores the views of the 10 women principals of the 5 women's colleges estabished between 1879-1920 |
Anne Keen |
2 March, 2021 |
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The most woman-studentish? Somerville College and student life |
A look at early women students at Somerville College Oxford |
Mo Moulton |
2 March, 2021 |
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All but absent from history? Women in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |
Womens roles in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |
Jane Garnett |
2 March, 2021 |
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‘Must it be a man?’: the women who helped to make the Oxford English Dictionary |
Peter Gilliver discusses the contribution women made to the Oxford English Dictionary |
Peter Gilliver |
2 March, 2021 |
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Women workers at OUP |
A look back at women who worked at the Oxford University Press. Delivered by Peter Gilliver on behalf of Martin Maw |
Martin Maw, Peter Gilliver |
2 March, 2021 |
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Women in the Oxford English Dictionary |
A fascinating insight into the role of women in the Oxford English Dictionary |
Charlotte Brewer |
2 March, 2021 |
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Introduction |
Richard Ovenden, head of the Bodleian Library, gives a short introduction to the event |
Richard Ovenden |
2 March, 2021 |
|
Layers of Protection: Everyday Life with Empowered Objects |
In her talk, Inger Vasstveit discusses “empowered objects” - small Buddhist objects that people wear on their person - in relation to the broader socio-political and cosmological environment in India |
Inger Vasstveit |
2 March, 2021 |
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Towards a plasticity of the mind – New-ish ethical conundrums in dementia care, treatment, and research |
A New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar with Dr David M Lyreskog. |
David M Lyreskog |
1 March, 2021 |
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Net zero – why and how? |
The first discussion in the Oxford Net Zero Series, hosted by the Oxford Martin School, hones in on the fundamental motivation of the research programme: ‘Why net zero? |
Myles Allen, Kaya Axelsson, Sam Fankhauser, Steve Smith |
1 March, 2021 |
|
The Intimate State: Teachers as Fault Line Between Repression and Revolution |
In this seminar we hosted Jennifer Riggan as she gave a lecture entitled: The Intimate State: Teachers as Fault Line Between Repression and Revolution |
Jennifer Riggan |
24 February, 2021 |
|
Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar: Maja Gildin Zuckerman: The Pragmatism of Proto-Zionism: Tracing Jewish Nation-building through a Cultural Sociological Framework |
Maya Gildin Zuckerman discusses a 1897 tour from London to Palestine as a moment in the Zionist meaning making process. |
Maja Gilding Zuckerman |
23 February, 2021 |
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Mainstream |
Nathan Evans (1993) explores the anthology Mainstream |
Nathan Evans |
23 February, 2021 |
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Protein structure and AI: the excitement about the recent advance made by Google DeepMind’s AlphaFold Programme |
Why is it important to understand the 3-D structures of protein, why are they difficult to construct, and what is the nature of AlphaFold’s advance? Why is this so exciting and what further advances in medicine and the other biosciences may result? |
Yvonne Jones, Phil Biggin, Charles Godfray |
18 February, 2021 |
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How to prevent future pandemics |
Katrien Devolder and Jeff Sebo on factory farms as breeding grounds for pandemics |
Jeff Sebo, Katrien Devolder |
17 February, 2021 |
|
Jamie Stern-Weiner: IHRA: The Politics of a Definition |
Jamie Stern-Weiner (Oxford) traces the genesis and evolution of a controversial 'working definition' of antisemitism. |
Jamie Stern-Weiner |
16 February, 2021 |
|
Data work: the hidden talent and secret logic fuelling artificial intelligence |
Professor Gina Neff discusses artificial intelligence and data work, and the ethical and social implications of integrating these tools into organisations. |
Gina Neff, Ian Goldin |
16 February, 2021 |
|
An Expatriate Family in the Nigerian Civil War (Book Presentation and Discussion) |
In this podcast we hear from Selina Molteno, Publisher, Oxford & Robin Cohen, Senior Research Fellow, Kellogg College, University of Oxford, as they discuss their lecture titled An Expatriate Family in the Nigerian Civil War. |
Selina Molteno, Robin Cohen |
11 February, 2021 |
|
Rethinking diet, weight and health policy in and after the COVID-19 pandemic |
Prof Susan Jebb and Sir Charles Godfray discuss the possible implications of the pandemic on health policy and tackling obesity. |
Susan Jebb, Charles Godfray |
9 February, 2021 |
|
Anusocratie? Freemasonry, Sexual Transgression and Illicit Enrichment in Postcolonial Africa |
In this seminar, Rogers Orock (University of Witwatersrand) and Peter Geschiere (University of Amsterdam) jointly provide a lecture titled: Anusocratie? Freemasonry, Sexual Transgression and Illicit Enrichment in Postcolonial Africa. |
Rogers Orock and Peter Geschiere |
4 February, 2021 |
|
Death by Poisoning: Cautionary Narratives and Inter-Ethnic Accusations in Contemporary Sikkim |
Kikee Bhutia talks about the contemporary discourses around ‘othering’ in Sikkim and analyse the region’s inter-ethnic challenges |
Kikee Bhutia |
4 February, 2021 |
|
Healthcare after the COVID-19 pandemic: the walls are coming down |
Join Professor Chas Bountra, Professor of Translational Medicine and Professor Sir Charles Godfray as they discuss how the healthcare system has had to adapt due to the Covid-19 pandemic and what this means in the future. |
Chas Bountra, Charles Godfray |
4 February, 2021 |
|
Achillefs Kapanidis on developing a new rapid test for COVID-19 |
St Cross Fellow Achillefs Kapanidis talks with Stanley Ulijaszek about how his research group developed a new rapid test for SARS CoV2, the coronavirus responsible for COVID-19 |
Achillefs Kapanidis, Stanley Ulijaszek |
4 February, 2021 |
|
Anna Prashizky: Connecting Ethnicity and Space: The New Russian-Mizrahi-Mediterranean Pop Culture in Israel’s Periphery |
Ann Prashizky discusses 'self orientalistation' by the 1.5 generation of FSU immigrants to Israel. |
Anna Prashizky |
2 February, 2021 |
|
Fervent admiration and devotion: Exploring devotional literature in the collected works of the 3rd Dodrupchen |
Renée Ford's introduction to the devotional literature in the collected works of the 3rd Dodrupchen composed in admiration of his late teacher Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo. |
Renée Ford |
2 February, 2021 |
|
Sharks, Death, Surfers |
Melissa McCarthy (1994) on her book, Sharks, Death, Surfers |
Melissa McCarthy |
2 February, 2021 |
|
The ages of globalization |
Professor Jeff Sachs discusses his new book 'The Ages of Globalization' with Professor Ian Goldin. |
Jeff Sachs, Ian Goldin |
1 February, 2021 |
|
The Neuroscience of a Life Well-Lived |
Professor Morten L. Kringlebach explains how recent advances in neuroimaging offer an insight into hedonia and eudaimonia, and draws out implications for neuropsychiatric disorders. |
Morten L. Kringelbach |
27 January, 2021 |
|
Etiquette |
Isabel Parkinson (2015) on her debut novel, Etiquette |
Isabel Parkinson |
27 January, 2021 |
|
Adam Sutcliffe: Light Unto the Nations - The Idea of Jewish Purpose and the Emergence of Zionism (Reconsidering Early Jewish Nationalist Ideologies Seminar) |
Adam Sutcliffe (KCL) discusses how Zionist ideologues have viewed the notion of Jewish purpose. |
Adam Sutcliffe |
27 January, 2021 |
|
21st century technologies for tackling 21st century pandemics |
Christophe Fraser of Oxford’s Big Data Institute, who advises the UK’s NHS COVID-19 Tracing app, and Prof Oliver Pybus discuss the opportunities and challenges of successfully applying new technologies to pandemics past, present, and future. |
Christophe Fraser, Oliver Pybus |
26 January, 2021 |
|
Tal Shamur (Cambridge): The emergence of melancholic citizenship at the urban periphery: The case of south Tel Aviv protest against global migration |
Tal Shamur presents his work on the melancholic protest of Hatikva residents. |
Tal Shamur |
19 January, 2021 |
|
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 January, 2021 |
|
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 January, 2021 |
|
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 January, 2021 |
|
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 January, 2021 |
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'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 January, 2021 |
|
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 January, 2021 |
|
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 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
9 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
7 December, 2020 |
|
The Role of Prophecies in the Construction of the Geluk Tradition |
In this talk, Michael Ium explores the role of prophecies in the legitimation and construction of the Geluk tradition. |
Michael Ium |
3 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
2 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
2 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 |
1 December, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
Verse and Prose in Fantasy Literature |
An analysis of two forms that dominate fantasy literature. |
Katherine Olley |
24 November, 2020 |
|
Guy Gavriel Kay |
A short introduction to the writer Guy Gavriel Kay. |
Katherine Olley |
24 November, 2020 |
|
Affect, Value and Problems Assessing Decision-Making Capacity |
MT20 New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar with Assoc. Professor Jennifer Hawkins |
Jennifer Hawkins |
23 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|
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 November, 2020 |
|