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Digital trace data (part 2)

Series
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
Embed
One in a series of talks from the Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS), which took place in Oxford, 2019.
Tools and techniques for working with digital trace data. Challenges of ethics and access with digital traces.

The full programme, downloadable slides & data, and more details about the institute can be found at https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2019/oxford/

SICSS-Oxford received financial support from the University of Oxford’s Van Houten fund, the Social Sciences Division’s Teaching Development and Enhancement Project (TDEP) award, Nuffield College, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Russell Sage Foundation.
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
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
People
Ridhi Kashyap
Keywords
oxford
computing
social science
sicss
Department: Nuffield College
Date Added: 08/11/2019
Duration: 01:02:48

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Digital trace data (part 1)

Series
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
Embed
One in a series of talks from the Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS), which took place in Oxford, 2019.
What is digital trace data? Pros and cons of digital trace data. Research designs involving digital data.

The full programme, downloadable slides & data, and more details about the institute can be found at https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2019/oxford/

SICSS-Oxford received financial support from the University of Oxford’s Van Houten fund, the Social Sciences Division’s Teaching Development and Enhancement Project (TDEP) award, Nuffield College, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Russell Sage Foundation.
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
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
People
Ridhi Kashyap
Keywords
oxford
computing
social science
sicss
Department: Nuffield College
Date Added: 08/11/2019
Duration: 01:19:23

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Litigating Rights : The Right to Health

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
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Litigating Rights : The Right to Health – Mark Heywood and Maya Foa in Conversation
Litigation as a tool for the promotion and protection of human rights has been employed in jurisdictions all over the world in recent decades. Yet the question when litigation will be an apt tool for promoting human rights continues to be debated, as does the question what impact that litigation has. This conversation series will invite legal practitioners who have litigated human rights in different jurisdictions around the world, including national and supranational courts, to explore in a public conversation a range of questions relating to the role and value of litigation in the promotion and protection of human rights.
In convening this new series of conversations, the Bonavero Institute of Human Rights hopes to foster robust and open conversations about some of the most important questions for constitutional and human rights lawyers everywhere. It seeks as well to foster conversations between scholars engaged in human rights research and practitioners engaged in litigating rights.
Mark Heywood, renowned HIV-AIDS and human rights activist and former executive director of SECTION27, South Africa, and Maya Foa, death penalty abolitionist and director of Reprieve UK, discuss the Right to Health.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Mark Heywood
Maya Foa
Keywords
Health
human rights
Litigation
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 08/11/2019
Duration: 00:59:51

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Mapping human populations and mobility in low and middle income countries for malaria elimination.

Series
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
Embed
One in a series of talks from the Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS), which took place in Oxford, 2019.
The full programme, downloadable slides & data, and more details about the institute can be found at https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2019/oxford/

SICSS-Oxford received financial support from the University of Oxford’s Van Houten fund, the Social Sciences Division’s Teaching Development and Enhancement Project (TDEP) award, Nuffield College, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Russell Sage Foundation.
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
Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) 2019
People
Nick Ruktanonchai
Keywords
oxford
computing
social science
sicss
Department: Nuffield College
Date Added: 08/11/2019
Duration: 01:08:45

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What did the Paris Climate Agreement change?

Series
Futuremakers
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What did the Paris 2015 Climate Agreement change? what did the politicians at Paris actually achieve?
On the 12th December 2015, at the 21st COP in Paris, representatives of 196 states reached an agreement to combat climate change that was celebrated around the world. With the long-term goal of keeping global temperature to below two degrees centigrade above pre-industrial levels, and covering areas such as nationally determined contributions and global stocktakes, Paris was heralded as a huge break-through. But four years on, and against the backdrop of the United States announcing its intention to withdraw from the agreement, what did the politicians at Paris actually achieve?
 
Join our host, philosopher Peter Millican, as he explores this topic with Fredi Otto, Acting Director of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute and a lead scientist on the World Weather Attribution project; Richard Miller, a Senior Analyst for the Committee on Climate Change, whose research spans the physical and economic consequences of climate policy; and Sugandha Srivastav, a researcher on the post carbon transition, who’s previously worked at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations.

Episode Information

Series
Futuremakers
People
Peter Millican
Fredi Otto
Richard Miller
Sugandha Srivastav
Keywords
weather
paris
Paris agreement
united states
temperature
trump
Department: Oxford University Development Office
Date Added: 07/11/2019
Duration: 01:04:03

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Jonathan Leslie - Fear and Insecurity: Competing Narratives of the Iran-Israel Relationship

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Jonathan Leslie considers the history of Iran's "becoming" and existential threat in Israel
Years after the Islamic Republic of Iran resumed its nuclear development program, Israeli leaders began constructing a narrative aimed at instilling in their polity the fear of Iran as an existential threat to the Jewish State. Building upon Israel’s geopolitical insecurity, politicians, assisted by societal elites, repeatedly claimed that the imminent acquisition of a bomb by Iran’s religious fundamentalist regime undermined Israel’s security and threatened the stability of the world order. This project examines how Israeli leaders crafted a narrative in which Iran’s rulers sought the destruction of Israel; how the Israeli public internalized this perception of Iran as an enemy; and how Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu incorporated this message into his foreign policy agenda and used it in efforts to secure the support of international allies. Through the lens of securitization theory, this project analyzes primary source documents to show the divergence between the narrative’s content and historical facts. In doing so, it highlights how perception eclipses reality when a powerful securitizing actor claiming exclusive access to material information identifies a threat source and publicly promotes its danger. It then examines how Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu strategically embraced populist strategies to advocate for extraordinary action against Iran and to bolster his status as a leader and national protector. Taking advantage of Israel’s failure in the Second Lebanon War and Iran’s election of a radical and bombastic president, Netanyahu chose resonant tropes – misusing history, recasting Holocaust memory, and fashioning an overarching moral imperative – to create a permanent crisis and secure Israelis’ acquiescence. By 2015, however, he had failed to convince international powers that a negotiated deal suspending Iran’s nuclear enrichment program would make Israel and the world less safe. This project contributes to our understanding of current and future developments in the Israel-Iran enmity, both predictable and unanticipated.
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
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Jonathan Leslie
Keywords
Israel
iran
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 06/11/2019
Duration: 00:46:17

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Ruth First's Red Suitcase: In and Out of the Strongroom of Memory Book launch of Written Under the Skin: Blood and Intergenerational Memory in South Africa

Series
African Studies Centre
Embed
Carli Coetzee discusses her book and surrounding themes in this talk. Ideas of femininity and issues about Ruth First regarding her time in prison are central to this interesting discussion.
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
African Studies Centre
People
Carli Coetzee
Keywords
south africa
memory
prison
Department: Centre for African Studies
Date Added: 06/11/2019
Duration:

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Journalism under assault

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Meera Selva, Director of the RISJ Journalist Fellowship Programme, discusses attacks on journalists and the media in central and eastern Europe.

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Meera Selva
Keywords
Meera Selva
reuters institute
journalism
democracy
press freedom
hungary
Slovakia
poland
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 05/11/2019
Duration: 00:18:45

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When Global Players Struggle: The Political and Material Aspects of International Organisations’ Cooperation in Higher Education

Series
Centre for Global Higher Education
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University of Lyon 2's Dorota Dakowska on re-examining the transnational circulation of policy schemes relative to Higher Education governance
This contribution re-examines the transnational circulation of policy schemes relative to Higher Education governance. It focuses on the relations between international and European organisations (Council of Europe, European Commission, OECD, UNESCO), characterised by competition followed by cooperation and international division of tasks. In order to explain the conditions under which higher education / knowledge policies circulate, we need to take into account not only the political and ideational positioning of these IOs but also the material aspects of their relationships. IOs appear as paradoxical arenas of knowledge circulation. Deemed as powerful and influent, they face unequal access to resources and uncertainty. While acknowledging their role as global players, I will stress their (inter)dependence and the multiple ways they struggle to maintain their position.

Episode Information

Series
Centre for Global Higher Education
People
Dorota Dakowska
Keywords
dorota dakowska
university of lyon 2
transnational circulation
higher education governance
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 05/11/2019
Duration: 01:11:36

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Moriel Ram, 'A tale of sand and snow: Bar-Lev line and the Hermon ski site as material fantasies'

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
Embed
Moriel Ram (SOAS) discusses how sand and snow produce potent imageries and physical realities in Israeli political culture.
The talk examines how sand and snow produce potent imageries and physical realities which both solidify and undermine social hierarchies, cultural imagination and power relations. Focusing on Israel's fortification campaign in the Sinai Peninsula and touristic schemes in the Golan Heights between 1967 and 1973, Ram examine two projects which utilised sand and snow to shape contested spaces into geopolitical fantasies. First, the Bar-Lev line, built on a massive sand wall on top of the Eastern Bank of the Suez Canal and designed as the state's ultimate barrier. Second, the ski resort at the peak of Mount Hermon that was formed as a gateway to an imagined Europe. Ram argues that in both cases, the materiality of sand and snow, was mobilised to normalise the act of occupation, but at the same time challenged this very effort due to the fluidic nature of these materials which are constantly 'on the move' changing in shape, structure, and volume. Hence, an analysis of how sand and snow 'act' is also a call to read them as more than natural elements that are part of a silent landscape for human interaction, but as political matters that matter.

Moriel Ram is a political and cultural geographer. His main interest lies in exploring how matter matters in unstable environments. Past and present research include the militarization of natural resources in contested territories in the Middle East and the Mediterranean. The infrastructure of faith and religion in Israel's contested urban environments. The interaction between human lives and medical equipment in the development of clinical aid to African states and the representation of dead matter in popular culture through the figure of the zombie.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Moriel Ram
Keywords
Israel
political-geography
sand
snow
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 05/11/2019
Duration: 00:43:58

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