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Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power Episode 3: Bacchus – queer party god of contradictions?

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
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Jozie Kettle (Pitt Rivers Museum), talks to Harriet Haugvik and Cameron Wallis about their involvement in the 2020 exhibition Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power. Harriet and Cam explore Bacchus’ complex and intriguing connections to queerness.

Episode Information

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Harriet Haugvik
Cameron Wallis
Jozie Kettle
Keywords
queer
museum
baccus
greek myths
roman myths
gender
sexuality
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 06/01/2020
Duration: 00:31:00

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Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power Episode 2: Uncovering queerness within the collections

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
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Jozie Kettle (Pitt Rivers Museum), talks to Mara Gold about her involvement in the 2020 exhibition Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power.
Mara and Jozie explore some of the museum items Mara has spent time researching to uncover hidden queer stories.

Episode Information

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Mara Gold
Jozie Kettle
Keywords
queer
power
gender
sexuality
museum
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 06/01/2020
Duration: 00:37:22

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Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power Episode 1: Museums, beadwork and Indigenous agency

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
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Jozie Kettle (Pitt Rivers Museum), talks to Dan Laurin about his involvement in the 2020 exhibition Beyond the Binary: Gender, Sexuality, Power.
Dan is a transgender Métis postgraduate and artist who is steadily reconnecting with his culture by practicing his Nation’s well-known floral beadwork deigns. He aims to share his story and passion for Indigenous people’s unique art with Native Two-Spirit youth and further the conversation regarding the decolonization of American Indian gender and sexual identity through traditional art like beadwork.

Episode Information

Series
Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Dan Laurin
Jozie Kettle
Keywords
queer
museum
LGBTQ+
sexuality
gender
politics
power
history
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 06/01/2020
Duration: 00:33:40

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Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum

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 Beyond the Binary: Queering and Questioning Collections and Displays at the Pitt Rivers Museum
Podcasts from the Beyond the Binary Project, held at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Building on existing engagement work with LGBTQ+ stakeholders and set out an ambitious programme to build inclusive practice within theMuseum. This will transform the Museum through events, interpretation and exhibitions.

By 'queering', we mean challenging hetero-normative interpretations of the Museum’s collections - and identifying human histories that are unrepresented as a result of intolerance. This is so that no individual or group feels excluded from the Museum because of their sexuality or gender, and so that all visitors - however they might identify themselves - can understand humanity better.
We will re-interpret objects within our permanent collections with the aim of providing a richer, more diverse context to their histories and stories. The project will challenge accepted historical interpretations and offer alternative understandings from people with different identities. We will work with a broad range of partners, from researchers to community activists, to reshape the Pitt Rivers as a welcoming inclusive space.
In addition to exploring the existing collections, this project will include a community focussed acquisition programme. Although the Pitt Rivers has some objects that tell the stories of LGBTQ+ histories, there has not been a dedicated endeavour to accession LGBTQ+ cultural and historical artefacts into the collection. We will collect objects from British communities and a number of objects from across the globe that highlight traditions of gender non-conformity, bringing British LGBTQ+ heritage into conversation with global LGBTQ+ material culture.

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All Souls Seminar - Structural Racism and Deaths in Police Custody in Europe: At the Crossroads of Criminal Law and Human Rights

Series
Criminology
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All Souls Seminar - Structural Racism and Deaths in Police Custody in Europe: At the Crossroads of Criminal Law and Human Rights
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
Criminology
People
Eddie Bruce-Jones
Keywords
criminology
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 02/01/2020
Duration:

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This Might Hurt - Irene Tracey

Series
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast
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We discuss the Neuroscience of Pain perception
Lukas Krone and Alex von Klemperer talk to Prof Irene Tracey of the Oxford Nuffield Clinical Neurosciences Department about her pioneering work studying chronic and acute pain through neuroimaging as well as some of her more recent projects on Aneasthetic depth. We also discuss how she approaches both being a scientist and taking on executive roles such as head of department and her life outside of science.

Episode Information

Series
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast
People
Irene Tracey
Paula Kaanders
Lukas Krone
Alex von Klemperer
Keywords
science
podcast
cortex
neuron
pain
chronic pain
neuroimaging
mri
neuroscience
perception
Department: Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG)
Date Added: 02/01/2020
Duration: 01:15:08

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Mark Carney on Climate Change

Series
Futuremakers
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Professor Millican travels to the Bank of England to interview its Governor, Mark Carney.
In this special bonus episode, originally recorded on 25th November, Professor Millican travels to the Bank of England to interview its Governor, Mark Carney. This episode was recorded before it was announced that Mark Carney will become the UN Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance in 2020.
The interview covered a range of topics, but focused in particular on the challenges that markets may need to overcome if we hope to restrict global warming to the 1.5 degrees C, how federal banks are working to prepare for these, and if an even more fundamental change to our economic and political system is needed.
Can markets provide a tool to promote necessary action? Is it possible to find a middle ground of sustainable economics? Can we be green, and capitalist?

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Mark Carney
Keywords
Bank of England
finance
markets
economy
Mark Carney
economics
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 20/12/2019
Duration: 00:24:28

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Solving climate change - nature or technology?

Series
Futuremakers
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Solving climate change can involve either mitigation – reducing the greenhouse gases we're putting into the atmosphere – or adaptation – the process of adjusting to our changing environment.
Solving climate change can involve either mitigation – reducing the greenhouse gases we're putting into the atmosphere – or adaptation – the process of adjusting to our changing environment. In the last episode of series two, we wanted to learn more about how these solutions are developing, what form they take, and where we should be applying them. We were particularly interested in the contrast between two climate change solutions: engineering approaches (such as technical methods of carbon capture, novel methods of building, or physical climate defences), and natural approaches (such as reforestation, changes in farming patterns, or restoring wetlands). With the stakes so high, how far can we harness nature to help tackle climate change, or will technology provide a solution?
With Peter to discuss this are; Nathalie Seddon, who having trained as an evolutionary ecologist is now Professor of Biodiversity and Director of the Nature-based Solutions Initiative, Jim Hall, originally an engineer and now Professor of Climate and Environmental Risks, who is an expert on climate risks to infrastructure, and who for ten years sat on the UK independent Committee on Climate Change, and Dr Helen Gavin, Oxford Martin Fellow, an environmental scientist and sustainability professional bringing 18 years of experience in both industry and education.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Nathalie Seddon
Jim Hall
Helen Gavin
Keywords
mitigation
greenhouse gases
atmosphere
 adaptation
nature
natural solutions
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 20/12/2019
Duration: 00:58:40

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UK Supreme Court: R (Privacy International) v Investigatory Powers Tribunal [2019] UKSC 22

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
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Session 3 of the Law and Politics in Three Courts conference Friday 8th November 2019
This workshop brings together scholars studying the courts in Kenya, the United Kingdom, and the International Criminal Court. The seminars will focus on three cases in which law and politics have sharply intersected, and will consider the ways in which the judges have sought to meet the challenges that have been raised.
From the International Criminal Court, the seminar will focus on the Decision of the ICC Appeals Chamber in Jordan’s appeal against the decision under article 87(7)of the Rome Statute on the non-compliance by Jordan with the request by the Court for the arrest and surrender of Omar Al-Bashir (ICC-02/05-01/09 OA2) decided on 6 May 2019. The appeal is one of a series of ICC decisions concerning the immunity of sitting heads of state from arrest and surrender under the Rome Statute.
Turning to the Kenyan system, the 2017 presidential elections case (Raila Odinga and Another v IEBC and Others) will be analysed. This case offers one of the rare examples of a supreme court overturning the results of a presidential election and requiring fresh elections, within the narrow timeline required by the constitution. It raises questions about the role courts play in democracies, and particularly, their role in supervising elections.
Finally, from the UK system, R (Privacy International) v Investigatory Powers Tribunal [2019] UKSC 22 will provide the focus for discussion. In Privacy International the Supreme Court was faced with a statutory ouster clause that appeared to prevent the court from judicially reviewing the decisions of a tribunal. In their judgments, the Supreme Court was compelled to consider the competing values of democracy and the rule of law, and the constitutional relationship of the courts and the legislature.
These three contrasting cases drawn from contrasting systems will allow us to examine and assess the strategies and devices used by judges to navigate politically loaded disputes. Not only will the seminars provide a close analysis of these important cases, we hope that they will also lead to broader reflection about the purpose and possibilities of courts within constitutional orders.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Nick Barber
Richard Ekins
Jeff King
Helen Mountfield
Keywords
law
bonavero
Supreme Court
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 20/12/2019
Duration: 01:00:17

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Kenyan Supreme Court: Raila Odinga and Another v IEBC and Others, 2017

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
Embed
Session 2 of the Law and Politics in Three Courts conference Friday 8th November 2019
This workshop brings together scholars studying the courts in Kenya, the United Kingdom, and the International Criminal Court. The seminars will focus on three cases in which law and politics have sharply intersected, and will consider the ways in which the judges have sought to meet the challenges that have been raised.
From the International Criminal Court, the seminar will focus on the Decision of the ICC Appeals Chamber in Jordan’s appeal against the decision under article 87(7)of the Rome Statute on the non-compliance by Jordan with the request by the Court for the arrest and surrender of Omar Al-Bashir (ICC-02/05-01/09 OA2) decided on 6 May 2019. The appeal is one of a series of ICC decisions concerning the immunity of sitting heads of state from arrest and surrender under the Rome Statute.
Turning to the Kenyan system, the 2017 presidential elections case (Raila Odinga and Another v IEBC and Others) will be analysed. This case offers one of the rare examples of a supreme court overturning the results of a presidential election and requiring fresh elections, within the narrow timeline required by the constitution. It raises questions about the role courts play in democracies, and particularly, their role in supervising elections.
Finally, from the UK system, R (Privacy International) v Investigatory Powers Tribunal [2019] UKSC 22 will provide the focus for discussion. In Privacy International the Supreme Court was faced with a statutory ouster clause that appeared to prevent the court from judicially reviewing the decisions of a tribunal. In their judgments, the Supreme Court was compelled to consider the competing values of democracy and the rule of law, and the constitutional relationship of the courts and the legislature.
These three contrasting cases drawn from contrasting systems will allow us to examine and assess the strategies and devices used by judges to navigate politically loaded disputes. Not only will the seminars provide a close analysis of these important cases, we hope that they will also lead to broader reflection about the purpose and possibilities of courts within constitutional orders.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Anne Makena
John Ambani
Nic Cheeseman
Luis Franceschi
Keywords
bonavero
law
human rights
Kenya
presidential elections
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 20/12/2019
Duration: 00:45:46

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