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Oxpeace 2009: The Serious Study of Peace Introduction

Series
OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace
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At the morning plenary, Saturday 2 May, Revd Dr Liz Carmichael MBE (Oxford University, Theology) introduces the Conference.

Episode Information

Series
OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace
People
Liz Carmichael
Keywords
politics
peace
oxpeace
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 08/01/2021
Duration: 00:08:43

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Oxpeace 2009: The Serious Study of Peace Keynote

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OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace
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Professor Neil MacFarlane, Lester Pearson Professor of International Relations (Oxford) introduces Jonathan Powell to give the keynote address at the Conference dinner, on his experience of peacemaking and implementing peace in Northern Ireland.

Episode Information

Series
OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace
People
Neil MacFarlane
Keywords
peace
politics
oxpeace
northern ireland
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 08/01/2021
Duration: 00:41:54

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OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace

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OxPeace Conference 2009: The Serious Study of Peace
This Conference was organised by an ad hoc multidisciplinary group in Oxford University, which had begun in 2006 to discuss how to network and raise the profile of the research already being done in Oxford on peace, peacemaking, peacebuilding and peacekeeping. The title ‘The Serious Study of Peace’ underlines that peace was no longer seen merely as a fringe interest but was beginning to take its place in academe as a matter of serious concern to which a wide range of disciplines can contribute. The focus on peace adds a fresh dimension to established disciplines and engenders a distinctive interdisciplinary synergy. The Conference resulted in the creation of the ongoing Oxford Network of Peace Studies (OxPeace), with worldwide contacts, and led to the possibility, once endowments become available, of the establishment of research and teaching posts in peace studies in Oxford.

The conference organizers included Revd Dr Liz Carmichael MBE (Tutor in Theology, St John's), Dr Phil Clark (Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, and Oxford Transitional Justice Research Group), Professor Mary King (Fellow, Rothermere Institute; UN University for Peace), Revd Dr Robin Gibbons (Kellogg), Professor Neil Macfarlane (International Relations), Dr Sondra Hausner (St Peter's; anthropologist, head of Study of Religions in Theology), Dr Hugo Slim (Visiting Fellow: Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict), and Bryony Winn (Rhodes Scholar, M.Phil. Development Studies, Student Assistant).

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Florence Nightingale and the politicians’ pigeon holes: using data for the good of society

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Department of Statistics
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Professor Deborah Ashby, President of the RSS, gives the 2020 Florence Nightingale lecture.
Florence Nightingale, best known as the Lady with the Lamp, is recognised as a pioneering and passionate statistician. She was also passionate about education, having argued successfully with her parents to be allowed to study mathematics, and later nursing, herself. More widely, she offered opinions on the education of children, soldiers, army doctors, and nurses, as well as railing against the ‘enforced idleness’ of women. A particular concern was the lack of statistical literacy among politicians. As we celebrate the bicentenary of her birth, the need for education in statistical and data skills shows no signs of abating. What advice would Florence Nightingale offer were she here today?

The Lecture was followed by a Panel Session with Professor Deborah Ashby, Professor David Cox and Professor David Spiegelhalter. The Panel was chaired by Professor Jennifer Rogers about the role of statistics in society.

Deborah Ashby is Director of the School of Public Health at Imperial College London where she holds the Chair in Medical Statistics and Clinical Trials, and was Founding Co-Director of Imperial Clinical Trials Unit. She is a Chartered Statistician and her research interests are in clinical trials, risk-benefit decision making for medicines, and the utility of Bayesian approaches in these areas. She has sat on the UK Commission on Human Medicines and acts as adviser to the European Medicines Agency. Deborah was awarded the OBE for services to medicine in 2009, appointed an NIHR Senior Investigator in 2010, and elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2012. She is currently President of the Royal Statistical Society.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Statistics
People
Deborah Ashby
David Cox
David Spiegelhalter
Keywords
statistics
florence nightingale
education
women
maths
nursing
Department: Department of Statistics
Date Added: 07/01/2021
Duration: 00:39:15

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Seeing the Wood for the Trees

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Back Garden Biology
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In winter the bones of the trees are laid bare, giving us a chance to see their skeletons. Join Lindsay as she takes a tour round Wytham Woods in Oxford, showing you how to identify our common native trees from their bark and the shape of their branches.
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
Back Garden Biology
People
Lindsay Turnbull
Keywords
biology
trees
winter
Wytham Woods
Department: Department of Plant Sciences
Date Added: 07/01/2021
Duration: 00:17:16

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How 2020 changed journalism

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Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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In this final Future of Journalism podcast of the year, members of our senior leadership team reflect on this momentous year for journalism and what we can perhaps look forward to next year
2020 has been a year like no other. World-changing events including the COVID-19 pandemic, the movement for racial justice, a fractious U.S. presidential election and the continuation of the Brexit process, have impacted swathes of our society and economy. Journalism has not been exempt. In this final Future of Journalism podcast of the year, members of our senior leadership team reflect on this momentous year for journalism and what we can perhaps look forward to next year. Find a full transcript and more information on our website: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/risj-review?review_types=14&filtered=Filter

Our host is Eduardo Suárez, Head of Communications. Our guests are: Rasmus Nielsen, Director; Meera Selva, Director of the Journalist Fellowship Programme; Federica Cherubini, Head of Leadership Development;
Richard Fletcher, Senior Research Fellow and Team Leader

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Eduardo Suárez
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen
Meera Selva
Federica Cherubini
Keywords
journalism
media
news
trust
misinformation
Covid-19
vaccine
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 18/12/2020
Duration: 00:21:43

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Behind The Scenes of The Sound of Contagion

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The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations
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The “Sound of Contagion” explores what a society of contagion can sound like and how technology can illuminate 2020 pandemic and others throughout history.
The collaboration weaves together world-building, speculative fiction, artificial intelligence, and music to offer strange and thought-provoking answers

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations
People
Rob Laidlow
Wenzel Mehnert
Chelsea Haith
Keywords
arts
humanities
research
future
Climate Crisis
anthropocene
Berlin
collaboration
artificial intelligence
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 18/12/2020
Duration: 00:30:18

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The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations

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The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations
The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations showcase ideas and research across the arts and humanities. We are drawing on expertise from the University of Oxford and Berlin University of the Arts, to combine established methodologies from the Humanities with new and exciting forms of artistic expression.
Our encounters between researchers and artists from the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK Berlin) and the University of Oxford open up new fields of engagement between the arts, humanities and sciences. We anticipate that this new exchange of methodologies, modes of representation, language and other qualities will lead to innovative contributions in the arts and sciences alike. We embrace a worldview that purposely goes beyond preconceived disciplinary borders and integrates speculative, subjective and positivistic approaches to problem-solving and creation. Launching these encounters alongside the current shift to digital communication requires also a critical assessment of the impact that any given media has on the execution of its dependent activities. It is our desire to develop a balanced interaction between content and media, which can support, inform and structure each part positively and grant new experimental spaces of shared exploration between the members of both universities. The encounters are intended to provide a novel emphatic perspective on how we can work, think and communicate.

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The Literature of Absolute War - Transnationalism and WWII

Series
War and Representation
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Professor Nil Santiáñez discusses absolute war, total war, and the literature of WWII with Anders Engberg-Pedersen.
In this conversation Professor Nil Santiáñez discusses absolute war, total war, and the literature of WWII with Anders Engberg-Pedersen, Professor of Comparative Literature, Syddansk Universitet.
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
War and Representation
People
Anders Engberg-Pedersen
Nil Santiáñez
Keywords
war
representation
war writing
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 17/12/2020
Duration: 00:47:40

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An van Camp in conversation with Stanley Ulijaszek at the Young Rembrandt exhibition

Series
St Cross College Shorts
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As part of the St Cross College Shorts podcast series, Fellow and Ashmolean Museum Curator An van Camp discusses the Young Rembrandt exhibition with Stanley Ulijaszek, in October 2020.

Episode Information

Series
St Cross College Shorts
People
An Van Camp
Stanley Ulijaszek
Keywords
st cross
art history
Rembrandt
art
Department: St Cross College
Date Added: 16/12/2020
Duration: 00:19:07

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