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women

Evidence-Based Health Care

Evidence in Women's Health: Menopause and Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) - What are the risks, benefits and experiences for women?

EBHC DPhil Director, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Dr. Anne Marie Boylan discuss menopause and hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
Mansfield Public Talks
Captioned

'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.
Evidence-Based Health Care

Evidence in Women's Health: Are there higher mortality rates in women who have been operated on by male surgeons?

In 2022 a Canadian population based retrospective cohort study hit the headlines in the U.K. by claiming that women were 32% more likely to die if operated on by a male surgeon.
Pivot Points: Moments That Shape Us
Captioned

1 - Dame Hermione Lee

Our first and so far only female president - heroes, milestones and 17 year old blunders
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Lost and found in the map library: changes in early map librarianship

Georgia Brown, UW-Milwaukee Libraries, WI, USA, gives the third talk in session 3B of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Beyond “clerical cartography”: gender and the production of Sanborn fire insurance maps in the 1920s

Jack Swab, University of Kentucky, USA, gives the second talk in session 3B in the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Where are all the women? The case of the Halls

Debbie Hall, Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in session 3B in the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

From body as territory to feminicides mapping: discourses and mapping languages by Latin American feminist cartographies

Manuela Silveira, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, gives the third talk in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Mapping toward equitable solutions in public transit planning

Suzie Birdsell, Nelson\Nygaard Consulting, Boston, USA, gives the second presentation, in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

‘Octavia always enjoyed a map’: Octavia Hill, maps, and Victorian social reform

Elizabeth Baigent, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Women and children first: gender, flood and victimhood in Dutch eighteenth-century maps of dike-breaks

Anne-Rieke van Schaik, University of Amsterdam, gives the third in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

The rise, persistence and surprising end of female personifications of the continents on maps

Chet Van Duzer, University of Rochester, NY, USA, gives the second presentation in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Where are the women on sixteenth-century French World maps?

Camille Serchuk, Southern Connecticut State University, USA, gives the first talk in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Welcome and Introduction

Catríona Cannon, Deputy Librarian, Bodleian Libraries, introduces the seminar.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

The Black Chicago Renaissance Women: Lives and Legacies in Music | Dr. Samantha Ege

Held on International Women's Day 2021, Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future, Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities - in collaboration with Lincoln College, Oxford.

How can we amplify women's voices in journalism?

In this episode we speak to to three women journalists from Kyrgyzstan, India and Indonesia discuss female representation in the news media, why they got into journalism, and how to ensure women’s voices and interests are heard.
'Must it be a Man?' Women's contribution to the University of Oxford
Captioned

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.
'Must it be a Man?' Women's contribution to the University of Oxford
Captioned

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
'Must it be a Man?' Women's contribution to the University of Oxford
Captioned

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
'Must it be a Man?' Women's contribution to the University of Oxford
Captioned

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

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