| Panel Discussion 'The age of the strongman: populism and authoritarianism in global politics' |
A discussion on leaders and populism with Lord Patten, Gideon Rachman, Margaret MacMillan and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira |
Lord Patten of Barnes, Gideon Rachman, Margaret MacMillan, Ricardo Soares de Oliveira |
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| The state of the African state: Where has it come from and where is it going |
Nick Westcott, Director of the Royal African Society, discusses the African State. |
Nick Westcott, Ricardo Soares de Oliveira |
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| Book talk: 'Butler to the world: how Britain became the servant of tycoons, tax dodgers, kleptocrats and criminals' |
In this event chaired by Ricardo Soares de Oliveira, Oliver Bullough discusses his best selling and critically acclaimed book, 'Butler to the World: How Britain Became the Servant of Tycoons, Tax Dodgers, Kleptocrats and Criminals'. |
Oliver Bullough, Ricardo Soares de Oliveira |
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| Inside Qatar: Hidden Stories from One of the Richest Nations on Earth |
A talk based on John McManus’s book, Inside Qatar: hidden stories from one of the richest nations on earth. |
John McManus, Eugene Rogan |
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| In the Shade of the Sunna: Salafi Piety in the 20th-Century Middle East |
Aaron Rock-Singer presents their latest book "In the Shade of the Sunna: Salafi Piety in the 20th-Century Middle East". |
Aaron Rock-Singer, Usaama al-Azami |
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| Why is trust in the government so vital during a pandemic? (Jamie Webb) |
During the pandemic, there were social gatherings in Number 10. This seriously undermined trust in government. But what exactly is trust? And why is trust so vital during a pandemic? Jamie Webb explains. |
Jamie Webb, David Edmonds |
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| Pandemics and inequality (Beth Kamunge-Kpodo and John Coggan) |
The pandemic had disproportionate impacts when measured by ethnicity, gender and geography. Beth Kamunge-Kpodo and John Coggan are both legal scholars, and both are interested in inequality. |
Beth Kamunge-Kpodo, John Coggan, David Edmonds |
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| Assessing public attitudes to both the pandemic and the government's response (Sarah Cunningham Burley) |
At the start of the covid pandemic there was little time for officials to consult the public. Sarah Cunningham Burley oversaw some public dialogues to assess public attitudes to the pandemic, and to the government’s response. |
Sarah Cunningham Burley, David Edmonds |
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| The use and misuse of health statistics and pandemic data (Melanie Smallman and James Wilson) |
During the height of the Covid pandemic we became accustomed to watching, listening to and reading about experts in health statistics. J. Wilson and M.Smallman have been researching the use, and sometimes misuse of pandemic data. |
Melanie Smallman, James Wilson, David Edmonds |
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| Who gets the vaccine first? (Jonny Pugh) |
Vaccines to combat Covid were developed in record time. Policy-makers then faced a tricky question. It was impossible to vaccinate everyone immediately: so who to inoculate first? Jonny Pugh says there were complex trade-offs. |
Jonny Pugh, David Edmonds |
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| Introducing the Pandemic Ethics Accelerator Programme (Ilina Singh) |
The Pandemic Ethics Accelerator programme was led by Ilina Singh, an Oxford Professor of Neuroscience and Society. In this interview she explains what the programme was, what it was designed to achieve and whether it succeeded. |
Ilina Singh, David Edmonds |
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| Neta Schramm - Zionist Neutral? The Sardonic Zionism of Yeshayahu Leibowitz and Ovadia Yosef |
Neta Schramm discusses the (non-ideological) "think Zionism" stances of two leading Israeli figures. |
Neta Schramm |
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| Axion Searches from Black Holes to the Basement |
Professor John March-Russell talks about the search possibilities for axions including many current and near future ultra-precise quantum `table top' experiments in the Beecroft basement. |
John March-Russell |
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| Axion Electrodynamics in Solid-State Materials |
Professor Siddharth Parameswaran gives the second talk on Axions. |
Siddharth Parameswaran |
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| The Axion: How Angles Become Particles |
Professor Joseph Conlon introduces the general idea of axions: particles associated to fields which are valued on a circle rather than a real line. |
Joseph Conlon |
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| All Necessary Measures? The United Nations and International Intervention in Libya |
Ian Martin presents his latest book on Libya: All Necessary Measures? The United Nations and International Intervention in Libya. |
Ian Martin |
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| The Making of the Modern Middle East |
A vivid and authoritative account of the making of the modern Middle East, from the BBC’s long-serving correspondent in the region. |
Jeremy Bowen, Eugene Rogan |
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| 5 - Shaharzad Akbar |
Human rights in Afghanistan - a feminist journey |
Shaharzad Akbar |
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| S1 Ep4: BOOKNESS with Stephen Emmerson |
BOOKNESS talks to poet and artist Stephen Emmerson about his book 'Translation of Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge', a paperback novel 'translated' into mushrooms. |
Alice Evans, Jo Maddocks, Stephen Emmerson |
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| Nemir Kirdar Memorial Event |
Memorial event for the late Mr Nemir Amin Kirdar (1936-2020). |
Roger Goodman, Margaret MacMillan, Eugene Rogan, Serra Kirdar, Yusef Abu Khadra, Mohammed Alardhi, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa |
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| S1 Ep3: BOOKNESS with Yiota Demetriou |
BOOKNESS talks to multi-media artist Yiota Demetriou about her book 'To You', a book made with thermal ink that requires the intimacy and heat of the reader's hands to reveal its text. |
Alice Evans, Jo Maddocks, Yiota Demetriou |
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| Unveiling the invisible belt: the shareholders of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, 1897–1901 |
Drawing on a detailed survey of shareholders of the Marconi in 1897 and 1900, this lecture will trace an overall profile of the diverse categories of investors who dared to back this venture through it's experimental phase to becoming commercially viable. |
Dr. Anna Guagnini |
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| The Rise of Guru Yoga in Twelfth-Century Tibet |
Zim Pickens looks at the origins of guru or lama worship in Tibet, introducing us to the Indian antecedents and the Tibetan emphasis on the role and status of the lama. |
Zim Pickens |
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| S1 Ep2: BOOKNESS with Ben Denzer |
In the first episode in this series, BOOKNESS talks to book designer and artist Ben Denzer, about a book he has created from 20 slices of Kraft American cheese. |
Alice Evans, Jo Maddocks, Ben Denzer |
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| S1 Ep1: Welcome to BOOKNESS |
Welcome to BOOKNESS, a podcast from the Centre for the Study of the Book at the Bodleian Libraries exploring artists' books made of unusual materials… |
Alice Evans, Jo Maddocks, Chris Fletcher, Emma Smith, Adam Smyth |
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| 'Regression and Resistance: The Struggle for Women's Rights in Afghanistan' |
Shaharzad Akbar in conversation with Shazia Choudhry; convened by Mansfield College Principal, Helen Mountfield KC. |
Shaharzad Akbar, Shazia Choudhry, Helen Mountfield |
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| Gabriel Schwake - Dwelling on the Green Line: Privatize and Rule in Israel/Palestine |
Gabriel Schwake discusses his new book dealing with urban planning along the green line. |
Gabriel Schwake |
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| Strachey Lecture: Integrating Logic, Probability and Neuro-Symbolic Reasoning using Probabilistic Soft Logic |
An overview of work on probabilistic soft logic (PSL), an SRL framework for large-scale collective, probabilistic reasoning in relational domains and a description of recent work which integrates neural and symbolic (NeSy) reasoning. |
Lise Getoor |
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| 4 - Dr Natasha Robinson |
Post-doc researcher and education consultant Natasha Robinson talks about cultural identity, feminist turmoil in relationships and the constant fluctuation between drive and angst in academic work. |
Dr Natasha Robinson |
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| The Jocelyn Bell Burnell Lecture: The Real World of Forensic Anthropology |
Professor Dame Sue Black in conversation with Professor Stephen Blundell. Introduction by Helen Mountfield KC. |
Sue Black, Stephen Blundell, Helen Mountfield |
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| Sporadic, late-onset, and multi-stage diseases |
Dr Anthony Webster, University of Oxford gives a talk on combining mathematical modelling with big data statistics to distinguish between sporadic, late-onset, and multi-stage diseases. |
Anthony Webster |
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| Displacement: Tibetan Buddhist Contributions to the International Humanitarian Field |
Dr Kilby's talk explores Tibetan Buddhist perspectives on displacement that can inform the international humanitarian response to the displacement crisis |
Christina Kilby |
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| Albert Hourani’s Impact |
2022 is the 60th anniversary of the publication of Albert Hourani’s magnum opus Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age, 1798-1939. |
Matthew Smith, Charles Ough, Paul Dresch, Eugene Rogan, Marilyn Booth |
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| 3 - Mary Adeyemo |
Winner of a Vice-Chancellor's Diversity Award talks faith, loss, and culture shock |
Mary Adeyemo |
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| When does (or did) the Covid-19 pandemic end? |
Katrien Devolder interviews Erica Charters, Professor of the Global History of Medicine at the University of Oxford |
Erica Charters, Katrien Devolder |
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| How to understand, and interact with, AI |
Professor Peter Railton presents his take on how to understand, and interact with, AI |
Peter Railton, Katrien Devolder |
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| How should we teach evidence-based medicine in the 21st century? |
Dr Gordon Guyatt provides a guest talk on how we should teach evidence-based medicine in the 21st century |
Gordon Guyatt |
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| Freedom Between Order and Chaos: Reading a Political Satire From India |
Freedom Between Order and Chaos: Reading a Political Satire From India Jyotirmaya Sharma (University of Hyderabad) speaks at the Oxford South Asian Intellectual History Seminar on 16 May 2022. For queries, please contact seminar convenors at saih@history |
Jyotirmaya Sharma |
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| Queer Azaadi and the origins of Indian homonationalism in Kashmir |
In 2019, the Indian government unilaterally revoked the autonomy of the disputed region of Kashmir amidst one of the harshest and longest military blockades and communications blackouts in history of the region |
Anish Gawande |
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| 1 - Dame Hermione Lee |
Our first and so far only female president - heroes, milestones and 17 year old blunders |
Hermione Lee |
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| 2 - Tom Brennan |
Playwright and producer lands at Wolfson as Creative Arts Fellow for his first foray into the world of Oxford |
Tom Brennan |
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| Gut Instinct Ep. 6 - Cell-free DNA diagnostics for biliary strictures, diet and weight loss, and minimum unit price strategies for alcohol |
Another fun-filled episode from your favourite GI podcasters. From hepatobiliary disease to alcohol policy, luminal gastro to nutrition, we have something for everyone this episode. Enjoy! |
Michael Fitzpatrick, Tamsin Cargill |
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| 2022 Disability Lecture: Hands Off - navigating unwanted touch, consent and disability |
Dr Amy Kavanagh delivers the 2022 Annual Disability Lecture |
Amy Kavanagh |
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| Professor Anna Petherick |
Georgina Ferry interviews Anna Petherick, Associate Professor in Public Policy, 20 December 2021. |
Anna Petherick, Georgina Ferry |
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| Professor Andy Pollard |
Georgina Ferry interviews Sir Andrew Pollard, Professor of Paediatric Infection and Immunity and Director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, 3 December 2021. |
Andy Pollard, Georgina Ferry |
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| Professor Betty Raman |
Georgina Ferry interviews Betty Raman, Associate Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine, 16 November 2021. |
Betty Raman, Georgina Ferry |
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| Professor Paul Harrison |
Georgina Ferry interviews Paul Harrison, Professor of Psychiatry, 11 November 2021. |
Paul Harrison, Georgina Ferry |
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| Professor Richard Hobbs |
Georgina Ferry interviews Richard Hobbs, Head of Department at the Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care Sciences and Nuffield Professor of Primary Care, 29 November 2021. |
Richard Hobbs, Georgina Ferry |
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| Professor Trisha Greenhalgh |
Georgina Ferry interviews Trisha Greenhalgh, Professor of Primary Care Health Sciences, 5 November 2021. |
Trish Greenhalgh, Georgina Ferry |
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| How to improve climate change coverage. Ideas from three reporters around the world |
In this episode of our podcast, we speak to members of our Oxford Climate Journalism Network (OCJN) on their experience participating in the network. |
Elisângela Mendonça, Krixia Subingsubing, Ethan van Diemen, Diego Arguedas Ortiz |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 7: Which journalists do people pay most attention to and why? |
In this episode we look at findings from our DNR22 on the types of journalists that people across six countries pay most attention to. |
Nic Newman, Federica Cherubini |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 6: Have news audiences become more polarised over time? |
In this episode we look at findings from our DNR22 on news audience polarisation in four countries and whether there's been a shift since 2016. |
Federica Cherubini, Richard Fletcher |
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| Religion II |
Professor Elizabeth Shakman Hurd (Northwestern University) speaking on 'Decolonizing the category of religion' and Dr Rushain Abbasi (Stanford University) speaking on 'Regulating Religion in Premodern Islamic Governance'. |
Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Faisal Devji, Usaama al-Azami |
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| Understanding and managing troubling mental images |
Troubling mental images, such as bad memories, fearful ‘flashforwards’ and negative images of the self can impact our mental health and sense of self. |
Hannah Murray, Cathy Creswell |
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| That's a Wrap! |
Resilience, cool communicators and space robots. This episode wraps a brilliant season of PTNPod, with Ari and Claudine's favourite 5 moments. |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman |
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| TORCH Post-Show Conversations: Scandaltown |
Listen in as Caroline Taylor and Ruth Moore discuss a recent production of Mike Bartlett's 'Scandaltown' |
Caroline Taylor, Ruth Moore |
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| Human Rights Violations in Tajikistan |
Steve Swerdlow, Neil Clarke, Syinat Sultanalieva discuss human rights violations in Tajikistan, chaired by Faisal Devji |
Steve Swerdlow, Neil Clarke, Syinat Sultanalieva |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 5: Perceptions of media coverage of the war in Ukraine |
In this episode we look at findings from our DNR22 about how people are engaging with news coverage of the war in Ukraine. |
Federica Cherubini, Kirsten Eddy |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 4: The role of email news in engagement and monetisation |
In this episode of our podcast we look at findings from our DNR22 around the enduring appeal of email newsletters to readers and news organisations. |
Nic Newman, Federica Cherubini |
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| Value & Benefits |
SPECIAL CONFERENCE EPISODE getting the inside scoop on UK Cyber Strategy. |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Chris Ensor, Bernard Parsons, Harmonie Toros, Furrah Hussain, Fabio Pierazzi, John W5, Awais Rashid, Andrew Martin, Steve Schneider, Andrew Hood, Matthew Boakes, Marios Samanis, Maria Sameen, Priyanka Badva |
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| The Role of Social Endometriosis Research in Improving Care and Addressing Intersectional Health Disparities |
Dr Annalise Weckesser will discuss her qualitative studies exploring women’s experiences of endometriosis and doctors’ perspectives on treating the condition and how to improve care. |
Annalise Weckesser |
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| Relevant & Useful |
We discuss communication challenges and pipeline problems in cyber security. |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman, Andrew Martin, Louise Axon, Kevin McMahon |
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| Expulsion as Statecraft: Histories of Violence from the Asian Expulsion of 1972 to the Banyarwanda Crisis of 1982 |
Alicia Decker (Penn State) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality |
Alicia Decker |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 3: How people access climate change news |
In this episode of our podcast we look at findings from our DNR22 on how people access news about climate change. |
Craig T. Robertson |
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| Insecurities of Expulsion: Race, Violence, Citizenship and Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transregional Uganda |
Anneeth Kaur Hundle (UC Irvine) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality |
Anneeth Kaur Hundle |
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| Don't call yourselves Asian! Uganda's Indians and the problem of naming |
Taushif Kara (Cambridge) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality |
Taushif Kara |
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| Making Victory Visible in Idi Amin's Uganda |
Derek Peterson (Michigan) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality |
Derek Peterson |
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| Afrocentrism and the Indian Question: A Continental Reckoning with the Ugandan Expulsion |
Shobana Shanker (Stonybrook) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality |
Shobana Shanker |
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| Raising the Bar |
Surprising social media harms and the Online Safety Bill. This week we're talking about Claudine's research into long term harms of social media content and managing the 'mundane'. |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman |
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| Gut Instinct Ep. 5 - Transplants for alcoholic hepatitis, Single-cell in ulcerative colitis, and haemopray |
This month Fitz and Tamsin discuss outcomes from early liver transplant for alcoholic hepatitis, a single-cell study of UC plasma cells, whether haemospray really is the answer in GI bleeds, coeliac epidemiology, and more! |
Michael Fitzpatrick, Tamsin Cargill |
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| The Life and Death of Poetry |
A distracted walkabout with T.S Eliot and others. |
Alice Oswald |
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| Illicit finance and the role of professional enablers in the United Kingdom: are things finally changing? |
MPs Andrew Mitchell and Margaret Hodge discuss illicit finance and their work on improving regulations. |
Andrew Mitchell, Margaret Hodge, John Heathershaw, Ricardo Soares de Oliveira |
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| Emotion, AI, and Human Values |
Professor Rosalind W. Picard, Sc.D., FIEEE presents the 2022 Tanner Lecture. |
Rosalind W Picard |
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| Digital News Report 2022. Episode 2: The news habits of younger audiences |
Listen to findings from our Digital News Report 2022 on how young people consume news. |
Federica Cherubini, Kirsten Eddy |
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| Hope in Healthcare |
In this St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Professor Stephen Clarke the role of hope in patients undergoing major healthcare procedures, and how it relates to decision-making in situations of risk and uncertainty. |
Stephen Clarke |
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| A Theory of Weak-Supervision and Zero-Shot Learning |
A lecture exploring alternatives to using labeled training data. |
Eli Upfal |
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| Power to the Ppl |
Data protection and making consent more of a conversation. Listen up, and prosper! |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman |
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| TORCH Post-show Conversations: Private Lives |
Listen in as Kirsten Shepherd-Barr and Sos Eltis discuss a recent production of Noel Coward's Private Lives |
Kirsten Shepherd-Barr, Sos Eltis, Ruth Moore |
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| May 2022 Podcast with Neal Benowitz |
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson discuss emerging evidence in e-cigarette research and interview Neal Benowitz. |
Neal Benowitz, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, Nicola Lindson |
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| 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics: Ethics and Artificial Intelligence (3 of 3) |
In last of the three 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, Professor Peter Railton explores how we might "programme ethics into AI" |
Peter Railton |
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| 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics: Ethics and Artificial Intelligence (2 of 3) |
In the second 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, Professor Peter Railton explores how we might "programme ethics into AI" |
Peter Railton |
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| 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics: Ethics and Artificial Intelligence (1 of 3) |
In the first of three 2022 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, Professor Peter Railton explores how we might "programme ethics into AI" |
Peter Railton |
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| Reflexive Control Theory: a Soviet perspective on influence and why it matters in the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine |
Maria de Goeij provides a brilliant introduction to reflexive control theory, a Soviet theory of influence. Listen to learn more and appreciate how it can help us better understand today's world, including strategic decision making in hybrid warfare. |
Maria de Goeij |
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| Voice Hackers R Us |
We’re learning about speech interfaces and hacking home assistants with nonsense and wordplay. |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman, Mary Bispham |
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| Gideon Katz - The Fear of Judaism in Israeli Culture |
Gideon Katz discusses some of the mure surprising aspect of Israeli secularism |
Gideon Katz |
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| How do you carry out a realist synthesis of an intervention when there's 'no evidence'? |
Joanne Greenhalgh, Professor of Applied Social Research Methodology (University of Leeds) on the experiences of conducting a realist synthesis of the feedback of aggregated patient reported outcome measure (PROMs) data to improve patient care. |
Joanne Greenhalgh |
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| Why class still matters in UK newsrooms |
In this episode of our podcast we look at how class divisions impact newsrooms and the journalism they produce. |
Caithlin Mercer, Robyn Vinter |
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| Assimilation or change? Normans at Winchester |
The fifth lecture in the Lyell Lecture 2022 series delivered by Professor Susan Rankin (University of Cambridge) |
Susan Rankin |
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| We are what we do |
Instead of passwords, what if computers used our high fives to log us in? |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman, Klaudia Krawiecka |
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| Women's Rights Research Seminar: Threatened motherhood in the Israeli welfare state: The discourse and the practice behind the disqualification of disadvantaged women's motherhood |
Prof. Esther Hertzog gives a talk on the vulnerable situation of motherhood in the Israeli welfare state. |
Esther Hertzog, Soraya Tremayne |
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| Nitzan Lebovic: Is Zionism a “Left-Wing Melancholy”? |
Nitzan Levobic discusses Zionism and melancholy, through the woks of Israel Zarchi |
Nitzan Levobic |
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| Nils Chr. Stenseth And Barbara Bramanti On Evolutionary And Ecological Ends Of Epidemics |
A discussion on how evolutionary biology and biological anthropology help understand the end of epidemics, particularly plague. |
Nils Chr. Stenseth, Barbara Bramanti, Erica Charters |
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| Clark Larsen and Fabian Crespo on Biology, Archaeology, and Multi-disciplinary Ends |
A discussion on why multi-disciplinary approaches that combine social and biological research are helpful in understanding how epidemics end. |
Clark Larsen, Fabian Crespo, Erica Charters |
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| Cristiana Bastos and the Human End of Epidemics |
Professor Cristiana Bastos (Lisbon) and Professor Erica Charters discuss how anthropology and ethnology measure the end of epidemics, including HIV/AIDS, and the difference between illness and disease. |
Cristiana Bastos, Erica Charters |
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| Make or Break |
Join us as we explore how to describe trust, reputation and messiness using maths! |
Arianna Schuler Scott, Claudine Tinsman, Sean Sirur |
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| From Neumes in campo aperto to Neumes on Lines (at Christchurch, Canterbury) |
The forth lecture in the Lyell Lecture 2022 series delivered by Professor Susan Rankin (University of Cambridge) |
Susan Rankin |
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| St Augustine’s and Christchurch, 950–1091 |
The third lecture in the Lyell Lecture 2022 series delivered by Professor Susan Rankin (University of Cambridge) |
Susan Rankin |
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| Against Legalizing Female 'Circumcision' of Minors |
In this St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Dr Brian Earp argues that all medically unnecessary genital cutting of non-consenting persons should be opposed on moral and legal grounds. |
Brian D. Earp |
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| Tony Shaw and Giora Goodman - Hollywood and Israel: A History |
The authors of a recently published book dealing with the history of Hollywood's relation with Israel discuss some of their findings |
Tony Shaw, Giora Goodman |
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| Should we give COVID vaccines to young children? |
Katrien Devolder and Dominic Wilkinson explore reasons why some parents are vaccine-hesitant |
Katrien Devolder, Dominic Wilkinson |
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