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Next steps? Mixed use, walkable cities

Series
Kellogg College
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Healthy Cities - Next steps? Mixed use, walkable cities
‘Next steps? Mixed use, walkable cities’ will be a stimulating debate and discussion on how approaches to planning and development can influence health and wellbeing in communities. The panel of speakers will each provide a five-minute provocative pitch to deliver their perspective on the importance (or otherwise) of walkable, mixed-use urban neighbourhoods.
This is the first of a series of public seminars on the theme of ‘Healthy Cities’, launched as part of the new Global Centre on Healthcare and Urbanisation at Kellogg. The Centre has been established to promote opportunities for students, researchers, practitioners, and members of the public to engage with the pressing global issues of healthcare and urbanisation.

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
Karen Barrass
Daniel Elsea
Joanne Murraybrown
Ben Murphy
David Howard
Keywords
Health
climate
Urban Development
Sustainable Transport
development
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 24/10/2019
Duration: 00:37:34

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Litigating Rights - Wolfgang Kaleck in Conversation

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
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Litigating Rights Series - Wolfgang Kaleck 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.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Wolfgang Kaleck
Ben Wizner
Annelen Micus
Keywords
Litigation
human rights
impact
supranational
national
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 24/10/2019
Duration: 01:10:56

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David Nicholls Memorial Trust Annual Lecture 2019, Apocalypse now? Climate violence and sacrifice in and for the Caribbean

Series
David Nicholls Memorial Trust
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Apocalypse now? Climate violence and sacrifice in and for the Caribbean by Dr Leon-Sealey Huggins (YPCCS and Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick)
The lecture will be delivered by Dr Leon Sealey-Huggins who will provide a challenging look at the social and political relations of climate change, with a particular focus on the Caribbean region. Dr Sealey-Huggins is at the forefront of exploring the societal implications of climate change, and his engagement with communities in the Caribbean resonates closely with David Nicholls’ concerns about social justice in the context of global historical, and present, inequalities.

Episode Information

Series
David Nicholls Memorial Trust
People
Leon-Sealey Huggins
Keywords
Carribean
community
climate change
social justice
political relations
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 23/10/2019
Duration: 01:07:33

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‘Arriving before us’: seeing, ingenuity and imagination in Dante: Simon Gilson's Inaugural lecture

Series
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures
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During his inaugural lecture, Professor Gilson will show how ideas about vision and cognate faculties such as the wits and the imagination are central to Dante’s masterpiece, the Commedia.
Understanding these concerns helps us to appreciate not only how his narrative is structured and enlivened but also raises fundamental questions about the poem’s status, ultimate themes and messages.

Simon Gilson Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian Studies at the University of Oxford and a fellow of Magdalen College. He works on Dante and Renaissance Italian literary, cultural and intellectual history. He has published widely on Dante, literary criticism in Renaissance Italy, and the relations between science, philosophy and literary culture in medieval and Renaissance Italy.

Episode Information

Series
Modern Languages Inaugural lectures
People
Simon Gilson
Keywords
Dante
literature
italien literature
poetry
religion
divine comedy
language
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 22/10/2019
Duration: 01:07:38

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Martyrs and Tricksters: An Ethnography of the Egyptian Revolution

Series
Middle East Centre
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Professor Walter Armbrust (St. Antony's College, Oxford) gives a talk for the Middle East Studies Centre seminar series. Chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan (St. Antony's College, Oxford).
Dr Walter Armbrust is Hourani Fellow and Associate Professor in Modern Middle Eastern Studies. He is a cultural anthropologist, and author of Mass Culture and Modernism in Egypt (1996); Martyrs and Tricksters: An Ethnography of the Egyptian Revolution (2019); and various other works focusing on popular culture, politics and mass media in Egypt. He is editor of Mass Mediations: New Approaches to Popular Culture in the Middle East and Beyond (2000).

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Walter Armbrust
Keywords
middle east
egypt
Arab Spring
politics
revolution
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 22/10/2019
Duration: 01:07:25

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Safe and effective drugs: The need to use all the available evidence to inform the effectiveness of commonly used medicines

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Carl Heneghan, Professor of Evidence-Based Medicine, employs evidence-based methods to research diagnostic reasoning, test accuracy and communicating diagnostic results to a wider audience.

Professor Carl Heneghan will talk about his involvement in Tamiflu research that led to the discovery of 170,000 pages of clinical study reports, the subsequent development of Alltrials he was involved in and the current epidemic of publication and reporting bias that plagues much of the current research evidence.
This talk was held as part of the Practice of Evidence-Based Health Care module which is part of the MSc in Evidence-Based Health Care and the MSc in EBHC Systematic Reviews.

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Carl Heneghan
Keywords
EMB
Evidence-Based Medicine
Primary Care
Health Sciences
EBHC
Evidence-Based Health Care
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 21/10/2019
Duration:

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Surviving the cash crunch: Bhekisisa's road to non-profit health and social justice journalism

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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Mia Malan, journalist, gives a talk for the Reuters Institute seminar series.

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Mia Malan
Keywords
journalism
economics
politics
cash crunch
Health
justice
social justice
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 18/10/2019
Duration: 00:34:09

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Zaharoff Lecture 2018: Je n'ai pas la tentation du silence

Series
The Zaharoff Lecture
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Pierre Michon, writer, gives the 2018 Zaharoff lecture. Introduced by Catriona Seth.

Episode Information

Series
The Zaharoff Lecture
People
Pierre Michon
Keywords
literature
french
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 18/10/2019
Duration: 01:00:40

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Climate Change and the Rule of Law

Series
Public International Law Part III
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Despite three decades of legal development, existing systems of law fail to provide effective foundations for limiting climate change.
The inadequacy of existing systems of law is thrown into relief and compounded by ongoing debates centered around who we are, and how we should relate to one another as national and international citizens. Even as climate law emerges and evolves based on notions of shared responsibility, and intra- and inter-generational equity, these norms are challenged by swelling populist and nationalist movements worldwide. This presentation explores the relationship between ongoing efforts to address climate change and evolving discourse on political identity and the rule of law focusing on two background questions, these being the degree to which there exists an 'international community', as such, that underlies and advances collective climate goals; and the extent to which shared understandings of the meaning and substantive content of the rule of law provide a foundation for addressing climate change.

Episode Information

Series
Public International Law Part III
People
Cinnamon Carlarne
Keywords
climate change
public international law
rule of law
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 18/10/2019
Duration: 00:34:35

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2019 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (3/3): Improving Political Discourse (2): Communicating moral concern beyond blaming and shaming

Series
Uehiro Lectures: Practical solutions for ethical challenges
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Lies, propaganda, and fake news have hijacked political discourse, distracting the electorate from engaging with the global problems we face. These Uehiro Lectures suggest a pathway for democratic institutions to devise solutions to the problems we face t
People often resist facts because accepting facts exposes them to shame and blame. Yet, when the point of raising facts is to orient others to moral concerns, how can we communicate these concerns without resorting on blaming and shaming those who resist? Without denying that sometimes we must resort to these practices, I suggest alternative ways in which testimony and empathy can be mobilized to communicate moral concern so that those who resist shame and blame can come to share such concern.
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
Uehiro Lectures: Practical solutions for ethical challenges
People
Elizabeth Anderson
Keywords
political discourse
communication
propaganda
lies
fake news
populist politics
moral concern
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 17/10/2019
Duration: 00:58:42

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