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The Lessons of 1950: Partition, and the making of the India- Pakistan Dynamic

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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The years that immediately followed their partition offer many interesting insights into the shaping of the India- Pakistan dynamic
The years that immediately followed their partition offer many interesting insights into the shaping of the India- Pakistan dynamic. Although both countries went to war over Kashmir within a few months of their independence, there were also parallel processes of collaborative dialogue based on the requirements of state consolidation. A host of issues relating to the position of minorities; their rights and access over property; corresponding decisions on formulating the rules for citizenship, as well as discussions on new frameworks for Inter- Dominion trade and water sharing, were thus the subject of dense negotiation between the governments of India and Pakistan in 1948- 52. These questions have gained renewed relevance and salience in recent years, as the hard-won gains of the partition settlements of 1950 have been subjected to renewed questioning, based on the attempt to rethink the values of the rationale for seeking a peaceful resolution to Partition. In this talk, I would like to explore the lessons that the early 1950s offer us for the building of a collaborative framework of dialogue by two post partition states.

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Pallavi Raghavan (Ashoka University
Delhi)
Keywords
india
Pakistan
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 19/11/2021
Duration: 00:48:21

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Episode 6: Tradition and modernity in African cultural philosophy

Series
African(a) and South Asian Philosophies
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Scarlett Whelan and Kei Patrick interview Prof Ochieng’-Odhiambo and Zeyad el Nabolsy about attitudes to tradition, modernity and modernisation in the work of two African philosophers: Amilcar Cabral and Henry Odera Oruka.
Scarlett Whelan (Mst African Studies) and Kei Patrick (BA Philosophy and French) interview Prof. Frederick Ochieng’-Odhiambo (University of the West Indies) and Zeyad el Nabolsy (Africana Studies, Cornell), on attitudes to tradition, modernity and modernisation in the work of two African philosophers: Amilcar Cabral and Henry Odera Oruka.

This episode aims to prepare listeners them for engagement with turn 2 of oxford public philosophy, by introducing some themes of modern Africana philosophy. We first raise and dispel some common meta-philosophical concerns about Africana discourses, and consider epistemic differences between the African and European traditions.

Diving into some approaches to particular philosophical traditions, Prof. Ochieng tells us about Kenyan philosopher Odera Oruka: his concept of philosophic sagacity, and his project of developing a truly authentic national culture, which would protect Kenya from harmful foreign practices and ideas.

Unpacking the idea of authentic national culture, we bring Oruka into conversation with cultural philosopher Amílcar Cabral. Cabral broadly endorsed an anti-essentialist, historicized conception of culture, and saw cultural liberation in terms of cultural autonomy as opposed to the preservation of indigenous cultures. Zeyad provides us with a useful distinction between cultural influence and cultural domination, which we apply to some common discussions about tradition and cultural development in Africa.

Episode Information

Series
African(a) and South Asian Philosophies
People
Scarlett Whelan
Kei Patrick
Frederick Ochieng’-Odhiambo
Zeyad el Nabolsy
Keywords
philosophy
cross-cultural
global
Africana philosophy
African philosophy
cultural philosophy
anthropology
meta-philosophy
academia
sagacity
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 19/11/2021
Duration: 01:53:30

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Amnon Aran - Israeli foreign policy since the end of the Cold War

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Amnon Aran maps the development of Israeli foreign policy since the end of the Cold War
This is the first study of Israeli foreign policy towards the Middle East and selected world powers including China, India, the European Union and the United States since the end of the Cold War. The book provides an integrated account of these foreign policy spheres and serves as an essential historical context for the domestic political scene during these pivotal decades. In my talk, I shall demonstrate how Israeli foreign policy is shaped by domestic factors, which are represented as three concentric circles of decision-makers, the security network and Israeli national identity. Told from this perspective, I shall highlight the contributions of the central individuals, societal actors, domestic institutions, and political parties that have informed and shaped Israeli foreign policy decisions, implementation, and outcomes. I shall demonstrate that Israel has pursued three foreign policy stances since the end of the Cold War - entrenchment, engagement and unilateralism-- and hope to explain why.
Amnon Aran (LSE, PhD) is a Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of International Politics at City, University of London. His research interests lie in the International Relations of the Middle East and Foreign Policy Analysis. His publications include three monographs, Israel's Foreign Policy towards the PLO: The Impact of Globalization (Sussex Academic Press, 2009); Foreign Policy Analysis: New Approaches (Routledge, 2016), with Chris Alden; and Israeli Foreign Policy since the End of the Cold War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020). He has also published in journals such as International Studies Review, International Politics, and the Journal of Strategic Studies.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Amnon Aran
Keywords
Israel
Foreign policy
Jew
Jewish
Cold War
middle east
china
india
european union
United States of America
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 18/11/2021
Duration: 00:51:22

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Michael Karayanni - Religion and State among the Palestinian-Arabs in Israel: A Multicultural Entrapment

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Michael Karayanni considers how the Israeli construction of religion and politics shapes the live Palestinian-Arabs in the state.
The religion-and-state debate in Israel is Jewish centred and systematically disregards the Palestinian-Arab minority. This is rather puzzling. For the religion-and-state debate in many other countries does take up conflicts pertaining to minority religions, and the Palestinian-Arab minority did generate quite a diverse series of questions that could have easily qualified as part of the existing debate. In this article, I decode this anomaly by pointing out the existence of a legal matrix in the Israeli religion-and-state debate. This matrix identifies the recognition accorded to Jewish religious institutions and norms as "public and coercive" but that accorded to the Palestinian-Arabs as "private and liberal". In the second part of this article, I point out some of the legal implications of this matrix as well as critically evaluate if what seems to be "private and liberal" is in fact as such.

Michael Karayanni was born in Kafr-Yasif, a Palestinian village located in the Western Galilee in Israel. After obtaining his undergraduate law degree at Bar-Ilan University (LLB 1990) and being admitted to the Israeli bar, he went on to pursue graduate studies in law in the United States (George Washington University, LLM 1994, University of Pennsylvania, SJD 2003) and in Israel (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, LLD 2000). His academic base is at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he is today the Bruce W. Wayne Professor of International Law. Throughout his career at Hebrew University he has held a number of administrative positions, among them Dean of the Faculty of Law, Academic Director of Minerva Center for Human Rights, Director of Sacher Institute for Legislative Research and Comparative Law and Founding Director of Center of the Study of Multiculturalism and Diversity. He has also held visiting positions at Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Georgetown Law Center, Melbourne Law School, Stanford Law School, Yale Law School and Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Recently he was elected to the Institut de Droit International. His work focuses on issues of private international law and interreligious law, civil procedure and multiculturalism.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Michael Karayanni
Keywords
Israel
religion
secularism
palestinians
Palestinian-Arab
palestine
state
religion-and-state
Jew
Jewish
jewish-muslim relations
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 18/11/2021
Duration: 00:54:00

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Emma Smith interviews Claire McGowan

Series
The Hertford Bookshelf
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Memories, genre fiction and writing under a different pen name are all on the agenda for this podcast with Northern Irish crime author Claire McGowan (and her alter ego Eva Woods).
Intro/outro music: Soni Ventorum Wind Quintet, Danzi: Wind Quintet Op 67 No 3 In E-Flat Major, 4 Allegretto. Cover photograph by Edmund Blok. Produced by Hannah Bironzo and Nathan Stazicker.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
The Hertford Bookshelf
People
Emma Smith
Claire McGowan
Keywords
hertford
oxford
college
books
novels
writers
authors
literature
english
modern languages
crime writer
thriller
crime fiction
romantic comedy
pseudonym
pen name
northern ireland
fiction
interview
writing
creative writing
prose
teaching writing
writers community
editing
library
Department: Hertford College
Date Added: 17/11/2021
Duration: 00:28:08

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The Blue-Clad Fennec: Authoritarian Environmentalism in Tunisia, and its afterlives

Series
Middle East Centre
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This is a recording of a live webinar held on 29th October 2021 for the MEC Friday Seminar Michaelmas Term 2021 series on the overall theme of The Environment and The Middle East.
Dr Jamie Furniss (Institut de recherche sur le Maghreb contemporain (Tunis) / Department of Social Anthropology, University of Edinburgh) presents: The blue-clad fennec: authoritarian environmentalism in Tunisia, and its afterlives.

Professor Walter Armbrust (St Antony’s College, Oxford) chairs this webinar, including the Q&A session.

There is hardly a city in the whole of Tunisia without a faded sign reading “Boulevard de l’environnement” (Shari‘ al-bi’a) on one of its most prominent thoroughfares. If it hasn’t fallen over from neglect or been removed—for example by angry protesters or as a sort of nostalgic and kitsch lawn ornament—one may find a statue of desert fox (Fennec) in a blue jumpsuit, minus a few limbs, standing at the end of the avenue. These are the traces of the authoritarian environmentalism of Ben Ali’s Tunisia, the forms and afterlives of which this paper seeks to sketch. I begin by arguing that environment emerged as a category of political action in 1990s Tunisia largely as a way of papering over the totalitarian state by appealing to strategic hot-button issues in the eyes of the “West” (like women’s rights), as well as an attempt at aesthetic and moral discipline. I then evoke some of the consequences this genealogy has on the ways “environment” is used and understood in Tunisia today. What exactly does “environment” refer to in Tunisia is both a necessary contextual backdrop to this paper and a question that emerges from the political and social history I aim to examine. From some examples such as analysis of the Arabic terms (bi’a vs. muhit), the discourse in public signage pertaining to waste, the creation in 2017 of Tunisia’s “environmental police” and participant observation I have conducted on civil society “environmental” projects, I attempt to demonstrate that environment is a concept characterized by visuality and proximity. This makes garbage and in particular its visual accumulation in public space a kind of archetypal “environmental problem”. The rapid political telescoping of waste into issues of corruption (e.g. during the “Italian waste scandal”) as well as the use of cleanup as a political idiom (e.g. during the halit wa‘I movement following Kais Said’s election as president) are indices of ongoing political overtones of the issues of waste, cleanliness, and environment more broadly, in contemporary Tunisia.

Dr Jamie Furniss is currently a researcher at the Institut de recherche sur le Maghreb contemporain in Tunis, on leave from a position as a lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh. He has a DPhil from the University of Oxford in International Development and has conducted fieldwork in Egypt and Tunisia, primarily on topics pertaining to environment, waste, and urban development.

Professor Walter Armbrust is a Hourani Fellow and Professor in Modern Middle Eastern Studies. He is a cultural anthropologist, and author of Mass Culture and Modernism in Egypt (1996); Martyrs and Tricksters: An Ethnography of the Egyptian Revolution (2019); and various other works focusing on popular culture, politics and mass media in Egypt. He is editor of Mass Mediations: New Approaches to Popular Culture in the Middle East and Beyond (2000).

If you would like to join the live audience during this term’s webinar series, you can sign up to receive our MEC weekly newsletter or browse the MEC webpages. The newsletter includes registration details for each week's webinar. Please contact mec@sant.ox.ac.uk to register for the newsletter or follow us on Twitter @OxfordMEC.

Accessibility features of this video playlist are available through the University of Oxford Middle East Centre podcast series: http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/series/middle-east-centre

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
jamie furniss
Walter Armbrust
Keywords
middle east
modern middle eastern studies
Environment
Tunisia
waste strategy
authoritarian
government
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 17/11/2021
Duration: 00:49:22

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History of Art Radio Hour with Lena Fritsch

Series
History of Art Radio Hour
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Lena Fritsch is the Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Ashmolean Museum, where she works on exhibitions, displays and acquisitions of international art.
Her most recent exhibition (co-curated with Clare Pollard), Tokyo: Art & Photography, is currently on display at the Ashmolean. In 2018, she authored a book titled Ravens & Red Lipstick. Japanese Photography since 1945 (Thames & Hudson and Seigensha). Before joining the Ashmolean in 2017, Lena worked as Assistant Curator, International Art at Tate Modern. She co-curated the large-scale retrospective exhibitions Giacometti (2017) and Agnes Martin (2015), and curated displays of works by artists such as Ai Weiwei and Simryn Gill. Before coming to the UK in 2013, she worked at the Directorate General, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum of Contemporary Art, Berlin. Lena holds a PhD from Bonn University, Germany and also studied at Keio University, Tokyo. She has taught courses on modern Japanese art at the University of Oxford, SOAS, V&A, and Art Academy Munster.

Episode Information

Series
History of Art Radio Hour
People
Lena Fritsch
Geoff Batchen
Keywords
modern art
contemporary art
Ashmolean
museum
Tate modern
japan
Japanese art
photography
Department: Department of History of Art
Date Added: 16/11/2021
Duration: 00:57:44

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Transitioning to a Sustainable Future Q&A

Series
Oxford Summit 2021
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Q&A session with the keynote speakers of the transitioning to a sustainable future theme
Q&A session with the keynote speakers of the transitioning to a sustainable future theme

Prof Dorota Grejner-Brzezinska, Associate Dean for Research, College of Engineering, The Ohio State University
Prof Rob Miller, Chair in Aerothermal Technology and Whittle Laboratory Director, University of Cambridge
Chaired by Tomas Coates Ulrichsen, Director of the University Commercialisation and Innovation (UCI) Policy Evidence Unit, University of Cambridge

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Summit 2021
People
Dorota Grejner-Brzezinska
Rob Miller
Tomas Coates Ulrichsen
Keywords
oxford summit
Sustainable Future
Department: University Administration and Services (UAS)
Date Added: 16/11/2021
Duration: 00:04:35

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Asset-based Microfinance for Microenterprises in Pakistan

Series
CSAE Research Podcasts
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Standard microcredit contracts seem to have modest if any effects on the performance of small firms and no effects on household consumption. Could we construct a better design product to improve on the standard contract?
Researchers discuss their project in Pakistan which explores if alternative contracts do better, and what the effects of offering larger financial products are. You can also find out more about the project on the CSAE website: https://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/asset-based-microfinance-for-microenterprises-in-pakistan#/

Featured speakers:
Faisal Bari (Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Development and Economic Alternatives, and Lahore University of Management Sciences)
Kashif Malik (Associate Professor in Economics, Lahore University of Management Sciences)
Pramila Krishnan (Professor of Development Economics at Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford)
Muhammad Meki (Departmental Lecturer, Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford)
Simon Quinn (Deputy Director, CSAE and Associate Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, University of Oxford)

Episode Information

Series
CSAE Research Podcasts
People
Faisal Bari
Kashif Malik
Pramila Krishnan
Muhammad Meki
Simon Quinn
Keywords
microfinance
microenterprises
asset-based microfinance
field experiment
Pakistan
microedit
contracts
small businesses
small firms
business
household consumption
Department: Department of Economics
Date Added: 16/11/2021
Duration: 00:32:31

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CSAE Research Podcasts

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CSAE Research Podcasts
A series of conversations between researchers and collaborators about projects taking place at the Centre for the Study of African Economies at the University of Oxford.

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