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CCW 2021 Annual Lecture: British Defence Policy: Reviews and Redirections

Series
Changing Character of War
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In light of the Integrated Review this year, what other military reviews have there been and what was their impact? Peter Watkins (former Director General in the UK MoD) looks back at previous military reviews and discusses continuing themes.
Peter Watkins became an associate fellow for Chatham House in June 2019. Before that, from 2014 to 2018, he was Director General (DG) in the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) responsible for strategic defence policy, including key multilateral and bilateral relationships (such as NATO), nuclear, cyber, space and prosperity (latterly this post was known as the DG Strategy and International). Previously he served as DG of the Defence Academy, Director of Operational Policy, Director responsible for the UK share of the multinational Typhoon combat aircraft programme and as Defence Counsellor in the UK Embassy in Berlin. He is a frequent participant in conferences on defence and security in the UK and overseas. He was awarded the CB (2019) and CBE (2004) for services to defence. He has an MA from Cambridge University.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Peter Watkins
Keywords
military strategy
military reform
ministry of defence
review
civil-military relations
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 00:48:07

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Emerging Military Technologies: A New Military Revolution?

Series
Changing Character of War
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How are new technologies impacting the conduct of war? And what will be the impact more broadly on our societies and, in particular, our understandings of time, space, and self.
“Military revolutions” refer to major changes in the technologies required for prosecuting wars, which in turn fundamentally alter the organization and functioning of human societies. This phenomenon has been observed for the Napoleonic wars, the industrial age, and the nuclear age. The 4th industrial revolution (4IR), characterized by the fusion of the digital, biological, and physical worlds through technologies such as artificial intelligence, robotics, genetic engineering and quantum computing (among others), is already profoundly changing the conduct of war (warfare). Yet, it also has the potential to simultaneously alter our perceptions of time (hyper-velocity weapons, speeding up of warfare), of space (militarization of new domains such as cyber and extra-atmospheric space), and of self (transformed human bodies through “augmented soldiers”, robotization of the battlefield). Combined, 4IR military technologies may trigger a new “military revolution” with far-reaching consequences not only for warfare but also for the politics, self-understanding and functioning of human societies. This talk will discuss how 4IR technologies may transform our understanding of war and affect our societies.

Dr Schmitt is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the Center for War Studies, University of Southern Denmark. He also currently serves as Vice-president and Scientific Director of the French Association for War and Strategic Studies (AEGES).Before joining CWS in 2015, he obtained his PhD from the department of War Studies, King’s College London, and was a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Montreal Center for International Studies (CÉRIUM). He holds MA degrees from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva) and Sciences Po Aix. A reserve officer in the French navy, De Schmitt has policy experience at the French MoD and NATO. He also worked for two think-tanks: the Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). He conducts research in two broad fields. First, he is interested in security and strategic studies, in particular multilateral military cooperation, comparative defence policies, arms control, military transformation and the changing character of warfare. Second, he looks at the role of ideas and norms in world politics, with research on strategic narratives, influence and propaganda, but also far-right ideologies. His current research project, entitled “Transforming Armed Forces in the 21st Century“, is founded by the Carlsberg Foundation (“Distinguished Associate Professor Fellowship“), the Independent Research Fund Denmark (“Research Project 1“) and the Gerda Henkel Foundation (special programme “Security, Society and the State“).

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Olivier Schmitt
Keywords
new technologies
military capabilities
military revolution
cyber
4IR
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 00:46:39

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The Central Role of Space Domain Awareness in Future Military Conflicts

Series
Changing Character of War
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As space becomes increasingly central in military planning and strategy development, what is the current situation and what capabilities (and weaknesses) currently exist?
Since the start of the Space Age, the orbital domain has always been used for military purposes; but in recent times there has been an increasing focus on tactical rather than strategic satellite applications. There has been a shift in military emphasis towards systems that provide wider coverage, more timely information, increased data capacity, and lower latency communications. Nevertheless, these novel military capabilities are now being surpassed by commercial mega-constellations, some of which are providing services that were once exclusively military functions.
For these reasons, space assets have now become targets; a number of nations have demonstrated anti-satellite (ASAT) systems in multiple orbital regimes. In a hostile military environment, both offensive and defensive space operations require highly detailed space domain awareness (SDA) information. This level of SDA is currently in relatively short supply, and as satellite systems start to develop SDA countermeasures, it will become increasingly difficult to acquire.
The lecture will explain the ongoing technical evolution in space systems that will, inevitably, influence future conflicts, and the increasing threats that such systems face. It will make the case that the outcome of future military engagements in orbit will be reliant on SDA which needs to be far better than the limited information that is available today, especially if satellite system designers start to protect their assets by conducting “SDA Warfare”.

In 2018, Stuart Eves founded his own space consultancy company, SJE Space Ltd, after spending 16 years with the UK Ministry Of Defence, and 14 years with Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL). He has been involved with a wide variety of space missions, including TopSat, which set a satellite world record for “resolution per mass” when it was launched in 2005, and which was featured in the Space Gallery at the Science Museum in London. Stuart’s recent book “Space Traffic Control”, describes the measures needed to maintain the space environment and protect satellites from both natural hazards and man-made threats. He serves on the Advisory Panel for the ESA Space Safety Programme, and is a founder of the GNOSIS network on sustainability in space. He has been involved in a diverse range of media activities on all aspects of space, (including most recently on “SSA Warfare”), and has previously been a recipient of an Arthur Clarke Award for space education and outreach. Stuart has an MSc in Astrophysics, a PhD in satellite constellation design, and has been a fellow of both the Royal Astronomical Society and the British Interplanetary Society for more than 25 years.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Stuart Eves
Keywords
space
military capabilities
new technologies
satellites
missiles
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 00:43:47

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Integration – The Goldilocks Factor

Series
Changing Character of War
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What is better integration? More integration may not be the simple answer for militaries like the US and UK.
The Integrated Review, Multi-Domain Integration, The Integrated Operating Concept, Multi-Domain Battle,, the list goes on. These concepts define US and UK ideas of how to fight and win in the future, and they all have a common underpinning premise: integrate better. But what is ‘better’ integration? Counter-intuitively to many, better integration is not as simple as more integration. ‘Better’ integration doesn’t just enable efficient communications, it enables systemic learning and memory, collective intelligence, speed of response, and effective adaption. Increased integration, but done badly, induces blindness, slower responses, bloat, and systemic stupidity. In an era where how data flows across a military system is going to matter more, what are the lessons from DeepMind’s research, paper plates, cats, the P-38 Lightning, the biggest theoretical artificial intelligence, the disaster that is the human eyeball, and even how you are sitting in that chair.

Lieutenant Colonel Al Brown is a Visiting Research Fellow at Oxford. In addition to all the things one might expect in a twenty-year military career in the post-9/11 era, Al was previously the lead for Defence on the study of global trends in robotics and artificial intelligence and their impacts on conflict. He has been one of the group of government experts providing advice to and speaking at the United Nations, and an occasional guest lecturer at various universities, the Royal United Services Institute, and the Alan Turing Institute.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Alan Brown
Keywords
military reform
integrated review
military ethics
psychology
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 00:39:51

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The political economy of Nigeria: challenges and opportunities for reform

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Join Professor Kingsley Moghalu, Oxford Martin Visiting Fellow on the Oxford Martin Programme on African Governance and former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, as he discusses the challenges and opportunities of Nigeria's political economy
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country and the continent’s largest economy, is populated by dynamic and talented citizens, but has faced steep challenges in development, leadership and governance.
Poverty is widespread. The country is currently embattled by terrorism, general insecurity, a depressed economy, and by challenges from separatist agitations to the existential legitimacy of the Nigerian state.

How can Nigeria achieve transformation economically and politically? Taking a political economy approach into the Nigerian conundrum, this public lecture by Professor Kingsley Moghalu, Visiting Fellow at the University of Oxford’s Oxford Martin School, examines how the West African country’s foundation as a British colony, and contemporary challenges of nationhood and political order formation, the resource curse of oil, corruption, and the absence of a strong leadership culture have created incentives for Nigeria’s current dysfunction. He identifies not just seven critical challenges, but also offers seven paths to reform and a longer term resolution of the country’s political and economic challenges. The result, if his prescriptions happen, could be the long-delayed emergence of Africa’s first truly indigenous global power.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Kingsley Moghalu
Ricardo Soares de Oliveira
Keywords
Nigeria
economics
African politics
political economy
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 01:09:27

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Private financing levelling-up: an idea of its time

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Join Ron Emerson, Chairman of Bank North, & Professor Colin Mayer, Lead Researcher on the Oxford Martin Initiative on Regional Levelling-up, as they discuss the above and in what ways does Bank North’s business model address these needs?
The UK has the most extreme regional inequalities in the OECD and one of the most centralised governance and financial systems all controlled from London.

How can the finance and banking world help level the playing field and shift all focus and control away from London? When it comes to finance and banking - why are they so important to levelling up? What has gone wrong with local access to finance? And what is needed to resolve this problem?

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Ron Emerson
Colin Mayer
Keywords
finance
banks
regional
inequality
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 01:05:37

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Renewing South Yorkshire: seizing new opportunities, overcoming old constraints

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Dave Smith, Chief Executive of South Yorkshire City-Region Authority and Colin Mayer, Professor of Finance, discuss how South Yorkshire can forge a strategy for change.
South Yorkshire, crucible of the Industrial Revolution, was once a proud, prosperous and highly-skilled society. In the 1980s its two major industries collapsed and it is now the poorest region in England.

It still has huge assets, including coherence between its economic geography and its political organisation. It has a nationally-central and under-utilised logistics hub at Doncaster, with fast road, rail, air and port connections. In the public sector it has two top-rated universities, and excellent teaching hospitals. In the private sector it has major clusters of SMEs, including a network of 800 IT firms. It has a vibrant civil society, with world-leading social enterprises. In other countries, similarly hit cities have revived.

Join Dave Smith and Colin Mayer as they discuss opportunities and challenges for the region.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Dave Smith
Colin Mayer
Keywords
Yorkshire
economics
industry
regional
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 07/12/2021
Duration: 01:31:20

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Talk 2: Beyond the velvet cover: textiles and craft in Byzantine bookbinding

Series
Textiles in Libraries: Context & Conservation series
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Georgios Boudalis explores the subject of textiles and craft in Byzantine bookbinding, sharing techniques little known not only in the context of Byzantine bookbinding but also more generally in the context of Byzantine material culture.
Beyond the sewing structure itself and the rich fabrics used to cover luxurious books, there are many other textiles and textile related techniques that have so far remained unnoticed in Byzantine codices. These techniques include braiding, twining, sumak and tablet weaving which have been used in Byzantine and similar codices for working endbands, bookmarks and fastenings straps. Beyond providing information on some so far unknown practices and techniques in the context of Byzantine bookbinding, such practices also provide very rare and thus valuable information on the knowledge and use of these techniques in Byzantine textile production.
Georgios Boudalis is the Head of Book and Paper Conservation at the Museum of Byzantine Culture in Thessaloniki, Greece.

Episode Information

Series
Textiles in Libraries: Context & Conservation series
People
Georgios Boudalis
Alice Evans
Keywords
textiles
byzantine
bookbinding
conservation
bodleian
sewing
manuscripts
weaving
looping
Department: Bodleian Library
Date Added: 06/12/2021
Duration: 00:59:20

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Fight against climate change - Are the efforts enough?

Series
Future of Business
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Join us in this episode to hear from conservationist Alexis McGivern on the state of our climate, what public and private leaders are doing to combat it, and whether it's enough.
Coming out of COP26, this interview gives an insider's look into the summit and what we can expect to happen next.

Speaker names:
Guest - Alexis McGivern
Host - Rudolph Okai

Episode Information

Series
Future of Business
People
Alexis McGivern
Rudolph Okai
Keywords
climate change
COP26
Energy
emissions
carbon credits
business
Said Business School
mba
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 06/12/2021
Duration: 00:28:20

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Introducing Future of Business Season 4

Series
Future of Business
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The Future of Business podcast is returning with rotating hosts and featuring students from Oxford MBA’s 2021-2022 cohort.
Our student guests will highlight key business trends and discuss how, with the help of the Oxford MBA, they will shape the future of business.

Episode Information

Series
Future of Business
People
Grace Chou
Keywords
business
future of business
Said Business School
mba
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 06/12/2021
Duration: 00:01:11

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