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An Expatriate Family in the Nigerian Civil War (Book Presentation and Discussion)

Series
African Studies Centre
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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.

Episode Information

Series
African Studies Centre
People
Selina Molteno
Robin Cohen
Keywords
Nigeria
civil war
expatriates
Department: Centre for African Studies
Date Added: 11/02/2021
Duration: 00:40:48

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Silences

Series
The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations
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Silences explores what we mean by silence and what silence means to us. Interweaving silences, sounds and voices, it reveals the rich pleasures and mysteries of experiences without noises or words.
Listening to Silence layers interweaves, connects, filters, composes and decomposes interviews, ambiences and music.
Script by Kate McLoughlin, composition and production by Thorsten Weigelt, including the piece untitled #5 by Christian Kesten"

Expert listeners may recognize:
Last Plane from Tegel and Reversing Pendulum Music by Alberto de Campo, Untitled #5 by Christian Kesten performed by Maulwerker, Berlin Hinterhof Contemplation and Vico Virtual Silence by Kirsten Reese, Berliner Dom before and Berliner Dom after by Thorsten Weigelt, I Went To Archive Silence (12/VI/2020, 04.20) by Sylee Gore, Tape noise from the family archive (Christmas 1961) and Field recording on the rooftop of Akademie der Wissenschaften, Berlin (27.04.2012, 15:35) by Fritz Schlüter.

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations
People
Kate McLoughlin
Ariane Jeßulat
Sylee Gore
Thorsten Weigelt
Kirsten Reese
Fritz Schlueter
Alberto de Campo
Keywords
creative collaboration
silence
acoustic art
silences
sounds
cities
oxford
Berlin
listening
art
literature
media
creativity
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 11/02/2021
Duration: 00:19:59

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Delusional states: Love, Citizenship and Resistance in Gilgit-Baltistan

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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This talk examines the emotional and intimate logics of occupation, citizenship, and state-making in Gilgit-Baltistan, a contested borderland between India and Pakistan that forms part of the Kashmir dispute.

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Nosheen Ali
Keywords
history
South Asia
anthropology
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 10/02/2021
Duration: 00:47:00

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Rethinking diet, weight and health policy in and after the COVID-19 pandemic

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Prof Susan Jebb and Sir Charles Godfray discuss the possible implications of the pandemic on health policy and tackling obesity.
The current covid-19 pandemic has focussed attention on the variability in personal risk of serious illness. After age and ethnicity, one of the most important factors associated with developing serious covid complications, requiring admission to hospital or ICU, is being overweight.

Excess weight has long been known to be a risk factor for ill-health, though governments have rarely encouraged weight loss, and have even been cautious about interventions which may help to prevent obesity developing, for fear of accusations of ‘nannying’ or because of opposition by the food industry. However covid-19 seems to have sparked a notable change. In the United Kingdom, the Prime Minister, who acknowledges he is overweight, suffered complications from covid-19, and since his recovery has launched a new government plan to tackle obesity. This offers more support to people trying to lose weight and promises much greater action to curb unhealthy eating habits.

Professor Susan Jebb is a nutrition scientist with a special interest in designing and testing public health interventions to prevent and treat obesity. In this conversation, we shall explore the policy options available to governments and other bodies to tackle obesity and ask whether, as we emerge from the pandemic, there will be a new focus on the benefits of a healthy body weight.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Susan Jebb
Charles Godfray
Keywords
Health
health policy
weight
diet
obesity
Covid-19
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 09/02/2021
Duration: 00:59:43

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Platforming Artists Podcasts: Azan Ahmed

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Shivaike Shah hosts a podcast series with the artists and academics on the team in order to create a dialogue with potential audiences. The podcasts discuss the collaborations on Medea and explores the work of each guest beyond the ‘Medea’ project.
Supported by the Humanities Cultural Programme and the Arts Council England.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Azan Ahmed
Shivaike Shah
Keywords
Medea
performance
theatre
staging
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 09/02/2021
Duration: 00:40:57

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Lebanon’s Economic and political crisis

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
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Piotr Schulkes, Felix Walker, and Michael Memari cover the ongoing crises in Lebanon’s political and economic systems.
They discuss the importance of the confessionalist system in perpetuating the corruption and dependency structures that have hollowed out the Lebanese state, the role of foreign actors, and what the country might face in the future.

Episode Information

Series
Almanac – The Oxford Middle East Podcast
People
Michael Memari
Felix Walker
Piotr Schulkes
Keywords
lebanon
crisis
Beirut
Hezbollah
Israel
iran
Turkey
united states
syria
Refuges
corruption
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 09/02/2021
Duration: 00:44:32

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The Worm that Turned

Series
Back Garden Biology
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The species with the biggest biomass in any garden is almost certainly the earthworm. These humble denizens of our soil provide essential services by turning over soil and promoting plant growth.
Professor Peter Holland explains why Darwin found them so fascinating and Lindsay explains how their muscles work, allowing them to escape from birds, no matter how early they turn up.

Episode Information

Series
Back Garden Biology
People
Lindsay Turnbull
Peter Holland
Keywords
biology
plants
worms
gardens
Department: Department of Plant Sciences
Date Added: 08/02/2021
Duration: 00:17:17

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Rediscovering the Islamic Classics: How Editors and Print Culture Transformed an Intellectual Tradition

Series
Middle East Centre Booktalk
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Join us for the third MEC Booktalk episode where Dr Usaama al-Azami talks with guest author Ahmed El Shamsy about his new book, Rediscovering the Islamic Classics: How Editors and Print Culture Transformed an Intellectual Tradition.
The book can be purchased direct from the publisher's website at a 25% discount until 28/04/21, by quoting DIS21 at check-out:

https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691174563/rediscovering-the-islamic-classics

Ahmed El Shamsy is Associate Professor in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. He studies the intellectual history of Islam, focusing on the evolution of the classical Islamic disciplines and scholarly culture within their broader historical context. His research addresses themes such as orality and literacy, the history of the book, and the theory and practice of Islamic law.

Dr Usaama al-Azami is Department Lecturer in Contemporary Islamic Studies in the Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Oxford. His research explores the way in which Islamic scholars, known as the ulama, have responded to modernity, especially in the political realm. He is the author of a forthcoming monograph entitled Islam and the Arab Revolutions: The Ulama between Democracy and Autocracy.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre Booktalk
People
Ahmed El Shamsy
Usaama al-Azami
Keywords
middle east
books
islam
islamic classics
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 07/02/2021
Duration: 00:32:43

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More than a Morbid Quest: obituaries and mapping the invisible college of international lawyers

Series
Public International Law Part III
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Luíza Leão Soares Pereira, Lecturer in International Law at the University of Sheffield, and Doctoral Candidate at the University of Cambridge, gives a talk for the Public International Law seminar series.
This presentation narrates my experience using obituaries[1] of international lawyers to gain better insights into the international legal profession. My research looks at these unusual sources through three different methodological lenses – quantitative, doctrinal, and critical (broadly construed). Looking at the profession through different lenses yields a richer picture of the same object. Looked at through a quantitative lens, using Social Network Analysis, obituaries unveil professional and personal connections between international lawyers, shared career paths, and avenues whereby ideas may move, beyond single institutions or individual anecdotes.[2] Quantitative methods used in this way also help substantiate critiques about the lack in diversity in the high echelons of the profession. Through a doctrinal and qualitative lens, reading obituaries reveals how individuals have shaped the law in singular stances. Collating these examples shows a pattern that challenges traditional narratives in sources literature that discount the role of individuals in international lawmaking. Through a critical lens, the playful use of obituaries connects us to ‘the inner lives of the people who become international lawyers’[3], reigniting our passion for the discipline, and our belief in the ability to ‘enable us to encounter ambivalence’[4] and practice international law in a way that is ‘enlivening, productive and critically transformative’.[5] Broader lessons about the importance of methodological openness also underpin this exercise.

Luíza Leão Soares Pereira is a Lecturer in International Law at the University of Sheffield, and Doctoral Candidate at the University of Cambridge, both in the UK. Her research focuses on the role of individual members of the international legal profession in the making of international law, using an eclectic methodology. Previously, she undertook her LLB at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil), and an LLM at the University of Cambridge, where she received the Clive Parry (Overseas) Prize for International Law. She was an intern at the Office of the Prosecutor in the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (Radovan Karadzic Case), and a Pegasus Trust Scholar at Inner Temple.

Footnotes
[1] More specifically, the obituaries published since 1920 in the British Yearbook of International Law.

[2] Luiza Leao Soares Pereira and Niccolò Ridi, ‘Mapping the “Invisible College of International Lawyers” through Obituaries’ Leiden Journal of International Law (Forthcoming).

[3] Isobel Roele, ‘The Making of International Lawyers: Winnicott’s Transitional Objects’ in Jessie Hohmann and Daniel Joyce (eds), International Law’s Objects (OUP 2018) 73.

[4] Isobel Roele, ‘Policing Critique’ (2018) 81 701, 721.

[5] Anne Orford, ‘International Law and the Limits of History’, The Law of International Lawyers: Reading Martti Koskenniemi (Forthcoming) (2015) 8.
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
Public International Law Part III
People
Luíza Leão Soares Pereira
Keywords
law
politics
invisible lawyers
obituaries
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 05/02/2021
Duration: 00:36:16

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Platforming Artists Podcasts: Francesca Amewudah-Rivers

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
Embed
Shivaike Shah hosts a podcast series with the artists and academics on the team in order to create a dialogue with potential audiences. The podcasts discuss the collaborations on Medea and explores the work of each guest beyond the ‘Medea’ project.
Supported by the Humanities Cultural Programme and the Arts Council England

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Francesca Amewudah-Rivers
Shivaike Shah
Keywords
Medea
performance
theatre
staging
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 05/02/2021
Duration: 00:30:13

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