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Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 4: Traditional Leaders and Communities, Money and Accountability

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
Embed
It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state.
This conference draws together scholars, practitioners and judges to discuss these challenges.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Jonny Steinberg
Sonwabile Mnwana
Wilmien Wicomb;
Keywords
Human rights; South Africa; Customary Law; Traditional Leadership; Litigating Rights
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 17/06/2019
Duration: 00:51:49

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Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 3: Mining and Resources: issues arising from recent litigation

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
Embed
It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state.
This conference draws together scholars, practitioners and judges to discuss these challenges.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Nolundi Luwaya
Johan Lorenzen
Michael Bishop
William Beinart
Keywords
Human rights; South Africa; Customary Law; Traditional Leadership; Litigating Rights
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 17/06/2019
Duration: 01:03:55

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Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 2: What is Living Customary Law? And how should the courts identify it and apply it?

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
Embed
It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state.
This conference draws together scholars, practitioners and judges to discuss these challenges.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Nick Barber
Thandabantu Nhlapo
Nolundi Luwaya
Kate O'Regan
Keywords
human rights
south africa
customary law
Traditional Leadership
Human rights; South Africa; Customary Law; Traditional Leadership; Litigating Rights
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 17/06/2019
Duration: 00:59:27

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Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 1: Where are we now? The Constitution, Traditional Leaders and Customary Law

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
Embed
It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state.
This conference draws together scholars, practitioners and judges to discuss these challenges.

Episode Information

Series
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
People
Tembeka Ngcukaitobi
Peter Delius
Aninka Claassens
Keywords
Human rights; South Africa; Customary Law; Traditional Leadership; Litigating Rights
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 17/06/2019
Duration: 00:46:00

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Lecture and Book Launch- The politics of family law reform in Jordan and Morocco: Two seemingly similar monarchies, two different approaches

Series
Middle East Centre
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Dr Dorthe Engelcke (Max Planck Institute, Hamburg) gives a discussion Chair: Dr Michael Willis (St Antony's College).
Family law – the law regulating marriage, divorce, custody, polygyny and guardianship among others - is one of the most sensitive areas in Muslim-majority countries. Morocco and Jordan both issued new family codes in the 2000s, but there are a number of differences in the ways these two states engaged in reform. These include how the reform was carried out, the content of the new family codes, and the way the new laws are applied. In Morocco, the process of reform became less dominated by actors who had received religious training, whereas in Jordan the da'irat qadi al-qudat, the shariʿa court administration, retook control over family law reform. In Morocco it was King Muhammad VI who took the lead. By contrast, in Jordan King Abdullah II was largely absent from the reform process. The 2004 Moroccan code proclaims international law as one of its sources, whereas the preamble of the Jordanian 2010 law states that the law is based entirely on Islamic sources. Whereas international actors like UN Women were engaged in the implementation of the 2004 family code in Morocco, they did not play a similar role in Jordan. This talk investigates why similar states varied in their engagement with family law reform. It demonstrates that the structure of the legal systems, shaped by colonial policies, had an effect on how reform processes were carried out, and on the content and the application of the law. The talk draws attention to why and how certain inequalities have developed over time and how they impact on women’s and children’s rights today.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Dörthe Engelcke
Keywords
politics
law
family law
jordan
middle east
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 14/06/2019
Duration: 00:38:49

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Changing technology, changing economics

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
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Prof Diane Coyle discusses how digital technologies are changing economics.

Digital technologies are changing economics in two ways. The characteristics of an increasingly digital economy raise questions about economic analysis in domains ranging from competition policy to corporate finance, while new data sources and methodologies challenge economists to develop new empirical approaches.

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
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Diane Coyle
Keywords
economics
digital technologies
digital age
finance
competition policy
public policy
economic policy
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 14/06/2019
Duration:

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Is the human species slowing down?

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
Embed
Prof Danny Dorling discusses the idea that that humanity is slowing down in almost everything that we do, and what this means for our future.

Date
30 May 2019, 5:00pm - 6:00pm

Location
Lecture Theatre, Oxford Martin School
34 Broad Street (corner of Holywell and Catte Streets), Oxford, OX1 3BD

Event Recording:


In Origin of Species, Charles Darwin described how a population explosion occurs and called the time of population explosion “ favourable seasons", he was not to know it, but such circumstances arose for his own species at around the time of his own birth...

However, the favourable seasons for human population growth were not experienced favourably, with times of great social dislocation from small scale enclosure to global colonisation. Now those seasons are over, we have experienced the first ever sustained slowdown in the rate of global human population growth. This has been the case for at least one human generation. However, we are not just slowing down in terms of how many children we have, but in almost everything else we do, other than in the rise in global temperatures that we are recording and that we have to live with. It can be argued that there is even a slowdown in such unexpected areas as debt, publishing, and in the total amount useful information being produced.

If this is true - that humanity is slowing down in almost everything that we do – what does this mean? What measurements suggest that slowdown is true? And if so much is still rising, albeit at slower and slower rates - is that such a great change? Finally how might the slowdown impact on economic thought. In many ways economics was the science of the great acceleration; a science that makes most sense when markets are expanding and demand is rising. What kind of an economics is needed in a world where enormous and accelerating growth has stopped being the normality?

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
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Danny Dorling
Keywords
population
humans
society
economics
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 14/06/2019
Duration:

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Episode 8: Death Leaves Signs

Series
Staying Alive: Poetry and Crisis
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This episode, the final one of this season, features the work of Palestinian poet Yousif M. Qasmiyeh, author-in-residence at Refugee Hosts.
Qasmiyeh is currently a DPhil candidate at the University of Oxford, where he is writing about conceptualisations of time and containment in Arabic and English “Refugee Literature.” His poems and translations in both English and Arabic have appeared in numerous journals, including Modern Poetry in Translation and An-Nahar, one of Lebanon’s leading daily newspapers.

As writer-in-residence for the Refugee Hosts Project, he contributes poetry, translations, and essays that draw from his childhood in and visits to Baddawi camp. Located in North Lebanon, Baddawi camp has been home to Palestinian refugees since the 1950s and in more recent years to refugees from Syria. In this episode, recorded in Oxford, we discuss writing the camp, poetry’s ways of seeing, and the signs that death leaves in the camp to remember, revisit, and translate.

This episode features the poem “In arrival, feet flutter like dying birds,” which was featured in the 2017 Venice Biennale and can be read, along with other poems and translations by Qasmiyeh, on refugeehosts.org. Staying Alive is an original podcast series produced and hosted by Adriana X. Jacobs, with editing by Danielle Beeber and Danny Cox, and music by The Zombie Dandies. Support for this podcast comes from the John Fell Fund. For more information about this episode, including materials that didn’t make it into the final cut, visit the podcast website www.stayingalive.show.

Episode Information

Series
Staying Alive: Poetry and Crisis
People
Yousif M. Qasmiyeh
Adriana X Jacobs
Keywords
poetry
crisis
refugees
palestine
translation
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 14/06/2019
Duration: 00:24:24

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FMR 61 - Tribute to Barbara Harrell-Bond - From a critique of camps to better forms of aid

Series
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)
Embed
What insights can the pre-eminent critic of camp-based aid provision, Barbara Harrell-Bond, offer contemporary practitioners?

Episode Information

Series
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)
People
Alyoscia D’Onofrio
Keywords
barbara harrell-bond
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
refugee camps
forcd migrant
asylum seeker
camp-based aid provision
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 13/06/2019
Duration: 00:12:40

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FMR 61 - Tribute to Barbara Harrell-Bond - Resist injustice

Series
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)
Embed
The assistance that I, as a refugee, received from Barbara Harrell-Bond shows that her defence of refugees went far beyond the preparation of asylum applications.

Episode Information

Series
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)
People
Olivier Rukundo
Keywords
barbara harrell-bond
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
forced migrant
asylum seeker
asylum detention centre
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 13/06/2019
Duration: 00:04:19

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