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Let's talk e-cigarettes

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Let's talk e-cigarettes

Since coming on the market over a decade ago, e-cigarettes have divided opinion. A team of Oxford researchers are searching for new e-cigarette studies every month. In this podcast series, Dr Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Dr Nicola Lindson talk about what has been found, and how this changes what we know about e-cigarettes.
This podcast is made possible through generous funding from Cancer Research UK.
Art work by Olivia Barratier.
Produced by Dr Ailsa Butler.

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Why Syria Still Matters and Why Assad is Still There

Series
Middle East Centre
Embed
Dr Lina Khatib, Director, Middle East and North Africa Programme, Chatham, Jeremy Bowen (Middle East Editor, BBC News) give a talk on Syria and it's current political situation. Chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan (St Antony's College, Oxford).
After nine years of civil war, the prospects for regime change in Syria seem more remote than ever. Its society dispersed and its economy shattered, Syria remains a central state in the Middle East. Regional stability cannot be restored while Syria’s conflict rages, yet the gulf separating the warring sides seems unbridgeable so long as Bashar al-Asad remains in power. In this webinar, Dr Lina Khatib, Director of the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House, and Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East Editor, will discuss the contemporary struggle for Syria and Assad’s survival

Speaker biographies:

Jeremy Bowen (Middle East Editor, BBC News)

I have been with the BBC since 1984 and have reported extensively from the Middle East since 1990. For the purposes of this session on Syria - I did the last major interview of Bashar al Assad in 2015, the third time I interviewed him. I've done many reporting assignments in Syria before the war and since it started, on both sides of the front line. My reporting of the Syria war won various journalism awards, including interview of the year from the Royal Television Society for the Assad interview - also in the US I received an Emmy and a Peabody award for Syria reporting.

Dr Lina Khatib

Dr Lina Khatib leads the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House. She was formerly director of the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut and co-founding Head of the Program on Arab Reform and Democracy at Stanford University’s Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law.

Her research focuses on the international relations of the Middle East, Islamist groups and security, political transitions and foreign policy, with special attention to the Syrian conflict. She is a research associate at SOAS, was a senior research associate at the Arab Reform Initiative and lectured at Royal Holloway, University of London. She has published seven books and also written widely on public diplomacy, political communication and political participation in the Middle East. She is a frequent commentator on politics and security in the Middle East and North Africa at events around the world and in the media.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Lina Khatib
Jeremy Bowen
Keywords
middle east
syria
assad
dictatorship
war
civil war
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 03/12/2020
Duration: 00:56:48

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Introduction to Deep Learning and Graph Neural Networks in Biomedicine

Series
Department of Statistics
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Dr. Ekaterina Volkova-Volkmar, Senior Data Scientist, pRED Informatics - Data Science, Roche Pharma Research and Early Development, Roche, Basel, Switzerland, gives a talk on deep learning and graph neural networks in biomedicine.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Statistics
People
Ekaterina Volkova-Volkmar
Keywords
statistics
deep learning
biomedicine
graph neural networks
Department: Department of Statistics
Date Added: 03/12/2020
Duration: 00:52:41

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Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Professor Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development at Oxford University, discusses his new book 'Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years'
Expert in globalisation and development, Professor Ian Goldin uses state-of-the-art maps to show humanity’s impact on the planet and demonstrate how we can save it and thrive as a species.
He has traced the paths of peoples, cities, wars, climates and technologies on a global scale in his new book Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years, which he co-authored with Robert Muggah.

In this book talk he will demonstrate the impact of climate change and rises in sea level on cities around the world, the truth about immigration, the future of population growth, trends in health and education, and the realities of inequality and how to end it.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Ian Goldin
Keywords
globalisation
maps
society
climate
population
inequality
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 02/12/2020
Duration: 00:59:23

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A tale of two crises: COVID-19 and the financial system

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
Embed
Dr Julia Giese, Bank of England, discusses the impact of Covid-19 on the financial system and how banks can play their part in economic recovery.
Date
14 October 2020, 12:30pm - 1:30pm

Location
Online

Event Recording:


COVID-19 has caused a global collapse in activity and loss of jobs that is probably unprecedented in its scale and speed.

Small and large businesses across every country in the world have had to close their doors to customers and employees. The sharp accompanying decrease in firms’ revenues and households’ incomes will result in the first global recession since 2009. It will also present the global financial system with its largest stress event since at least the global financial crisis.

Dr Julia Giese, Bank of England, and Professor Cameron Hepburn, INET Oxford, will discuss that banks are now part of the solution, rather than part of the problem, thanks to regulatory and institutional reforms over the past decade. Heeding the lessons from the Global Financial Crisis has paid dividends. They will outline some early lessons from the COVID-19 crisis for the financial system going forward.

This talk is in conjunction with The Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at the University of Oxford and the Oxford Review of Economic Policy.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Julia Giese
Cameron Hepburn
Keywords
banking
finance
economics
Covid-19
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 02/12/2020
Duration: 00:59:16

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Smallpox, and Jenner

Series
Futuremakers
Embed
Welcome to the eighteenth century, at a point when Europe is going through another major smallpox outbreak, a disease that by this point has been plaguing populations around the globe for centuries.
Professor Peter Millican will discover why milkmaids may be to central to the story of vaccination, how smallpox features in popular contemporary literature and what Napoleon thought of an English physician called Edward Jenner.

This episode is part of our History of Pandemics season - follow Professor Peter Millican as he talks to researchers from around the world about some of the devastating pandemics humanity has experienced. Peter and his colleagues will discuss ten major outbreaks: from the Plague of Athens to the West African Ebola outbreak, via the Black Death, Smallpox and Cholera, and ask how these outbreaks have shaped society, what we may be able to learn from them today, and where we might be heading? Find out more at https://bit.ly/TheHistoryOfPandemics

Futuremakers is created in-house at The University of Oxford, and presented by Professor Peter Millican, from Hertford College. The voice actor for this episode was Anna Wilson. The score for the series was composed and recorded by Richard Watts, and the series is written and produced by Ben Harwood and Steve Pritchard.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Claas Kirchhelle
Brian Angus
Blanche Oguti
Erica Charters
Keywords
pandemic
smallpox
Plague
cholera
Black Death
HIV/AIDS
Spanish flu
Russian flu
ebola
epidemics
diseases
Health
history of medicine
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 01/12/2020
Duration: 00:43:23

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The Great Plague

Series
Futuremakers
Embed
in the final plague episode of the series, Professor Peter Millican talks to his guests about the last major outbreak of this horrific disease in seventeenth-century England.
Along the way they dispel some myths – for example it wasn’t the Great Fire of London that finally defeated the disease – and he drops in on one of the outbreaks most famous commentators – Samuel Pepys. Stay tuned to the end for a bonus conversation on Shakespeare’s experience during the plague outbreaks which led up to this final Great Plague.

This episode is part of our History of Pandemics season - follow Professor Peter Millican as he talks to researchers from around the world about some of the devastating pandemics humanity has experienced. Peter and his colleagues will discuss ten major outbreaks: from the Plague of Athens to the West African Ebola outbreak, via the Black Death, Smallpox and Cholera, and ask how these outbreaks have shaped society, what we may be able to learn from them today, and where we might be heading? Find out more at https://bit.ly/TheHistoryOfPandemics

Futuremakers is created in-house at The University of Oxford, and presented by Professor Peter Millican, from Hertford College. The voice actor for this episode was Tom Wilkinson. The score for the series was composed and recorded by Richard Watts, and the series is written and produced by Ben Harwood and Steve Pritchard.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Paul Slack
Emma Smith
Kees Windland
Keywords
pandemic
smallpox
Plague
cholera
Black Death
HIV/AIDS
Spanish flu
Russian flu
ebola
epidemics
diseases
Health
history of medicine
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 01/12/2020
Duration: 01:06:32

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The Black Death

Series
Futuremakers
Embed
Professor Peter Millican arrives in the fourteenth century and meets history's most notorious plague outbreak.
The Black Death is a gruesome name well-matched with a grim disease, and as you'll find out, it's not just the name which has survived to the modern period...

This episode is part of our History of Pandemics season - follow Professor Peter Millican as he talks to researchers from around the world about some of the devastating pandemics humanity has experienced. Peter and his colleagues will discuss ten major outbreaks: from the Plague of Athens to the West African Ebola outbreak, via the Black Death, Smallpox and Cholera, and ask how these outbreaks have shaped society, what we may be able to learn from them today, and where we might be heading? Find out more at https://bit.ly/TheHistoryOfPandemics

Futuremakers is created in-house at The University of Oxford, and presented by Professor Peter Millican, from Hertford College. The voice actor for this episode was Tom Wilkinson. The score for the series was composed and recorded by Richard Watts, and the series is written and produced by Ben Harwood and Steve Pritchard.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Samuel Cohn
Blanche Oguti
Keywords
pandemic
smallpox
Plague
cholera
Black Death
HIV/AIDS
Spanish flu
Russian flu
ebola
epidemics
diseases
Health
history of medicine
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 01/12/2020
Duration: 00:45:18

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The Plague of Justinian

Series
Futuremakers
Embed
Welcome to the Eastern Roman Empire in the sixth century. This time, Professor Peter Millican discusses a plague that historians and medical experts agree was likely the first plague pandemic humanity experienced.
You may not have heard much about the emperor Justinian I, or why he’s got a plague outbreak named after him, but by the end of this episode you’ll hear just how devastating and long-lasting this pandemic was.

This episode is part of our History of Pandemics season - follow Professor Peter Millican as he talks to researchers from around the world about some of the devastating pandemics humanity has experienced. Peter and his colleagues will discuss ten major outbreaks: from the Plague of Athens to the West African Ebola outbreak, via the Black Death, Smallpox and Cholera, and ask how these outbreaks have shaped society, what we may be able to learn from them today, and where we might be heading? Find out more at https://bit.ly/TheHistoryOfPandemics

Futuremakers is created in-house at The University of Oxford, and presented by Professor Peter Millican, from Hertford College. The voice actor for this episode was Liz McCarthy. The score for the series was composed and recorded by Richard Watts, and the series is written and produced by Ben Harwood and Steve Pritchard.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Michael McCormick
Abigail Buglass
Keywords
pandemic
smallpox
Plague
cholera
Black Death
HIV/AIDS
Spanish flu
Russian flu
ebola
epidemics
diseases
Health
history of medicine
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 01/12/2020
Duration: 00:55:46

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Athens: the first plague?

Series
Futuremakers
Embed
Join Professor Peter Millican in 5th century Athens, a crowded city in the midst of a siege, where a devastating disease had just erupted.
Our guests discuss whether this really was plague, the breakdown in law and order that began to emerge, and how the historian Thucydides survived the disease that hit his city.

This episode is part of our History of Pandemics season - follow Professor Peter Millican as he talks to researchers from around the world about some of the devastating pandemics humanity has experienced. Peter and his colleagues will discuss ten major outbreaks: from the Plague of Athens to the West African Ebola outbreak, via the Black Death, Smallpox and Cholera, and ask how these outbreaks have shaped society, what we may be able to learn from them today, and where we might be heading? Find out more at https://bit.ly/TheHistoryOfPandemics

Futuremakers is created in-house at The University of Oxford, and presented by Professor Peter Millican, from Hertford College. The voice actor for this episode was Shaunna-Marie Latchman. The score for the series was composed and recorded by Richard Watts, and the series is written and produced by Ben Harwood and Steve Pritchard.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Tim Rood
Brian Angus
Blanche Oguti
Nicolette D'Angelo
Keywords
pandemic
smallpox
Plague
cholera
Black Death
HIV/AIDS
Spanish flu
Russian flu
ebola
epidemics
diseases
Health
history of medicine
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 01/12/2020
Duration: 00:46:11

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