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Zaib un Nisa Aziz

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Evidence in Women's Health: Coil contraceptive - what is it and what are the potential harms for women?

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
Embed
In this episode EBHC DPhil Director, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Dr. Anne Marie Boylan discuss intrauterine contraception commonly known as the coil.
Given the uncertainty around who feels pain, they speak with Dr Neda Taghinejadi, a sexual and reproductive health doctor and academic clinical fellow, who specialises in fitting coils for those who have had problems having them fitted by their GP or who have experienced trauma and require a highly trained specialist.

This podcast series on evidence in women's health is brought to you by the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine and the postgraduate programme in evidence based health care. Dr. Anne-Marie Boylan, a senior researcher and lecturer in the programme, and Associate Professor Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, interview relevant experts discussing the strengths and limitations of different sources of evidence as they relate to women's health and considering their implications for future research. In this episode EBHC DPhil Director, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Dr Anne Marie Boylan discuss intrauterine contraception commonly known as the coil. Given the uncertainty around who feels pain, they speak with Dr Neda Taghinejadi, a sexual and reproductive health doctor and academic clinical fellow, who specialises in fitting coils for those who have had problems having them fitted by their GP or who have experienced trauma and require a highly trained specialist.
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
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce
Anne-Marie Boylan
Neda Taghinejadi
Megan Carter
Keywords
coil
twitter
contraception
pain relief
women's health
cervix
qualitative research
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration: 00:20:17

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Book Launch: Locked Out of Development: Insiders and Outsiders in Arab Capitalism

Series
Middle East Centre Booktalk
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Dr Hertog presents the key arguments of his new short monograph “Locked Out of Development: Insiders and Outsiders in Arab Capitalism” published by Cambridge University Press.
The book argues against the received wisdom that neo-liberal reforms are the main culprit explaining slow growth, corruption and inequality across low- to mid-income Arab countries. It instead proposes that it is the uneven presence of the state – over-protecting some while neglecting others – that accounts for the region’s lopsided development and creates deep insider-outsider divides in Arab economies. On the labour market these divides run between protected public sector workers on one hand and precarious workers in the informal private sector on the other; among firms, the divides run between crony insider companies and small, unconnected firms in the informal economy. Uneven state intervention and insider-outsider divisions reinforce each other and together contribute to an equilibrium of weak productivity and skill formation, which in turn deepens insider-outsider divides.

While some of these features are generic to developing countries, others are regionally specific, including the relative importance and historical ambition of the state in the economy and, closely related, the relative size and rigidity of the insider coalitions created through government intervention. Insiders and outsiders exist everywhere, but the divisions are particularly stark, immovable and consequential in the Arab world. They undermine the negotiation of a more equitable social contract between state, business and labour.
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
Middle East Centre Booktalk
People
Steffen Hertog
Neil Ketchley
Keywords
modern middle eastern studies
Gulf states
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration: 01:01:38

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Nations Ascendant: Towards a Global Intellectual History of Self Determination

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Zaib un Nisa Aziz (University of South Florida, Tampa) speaks at the Oxford South Asian Intellectual History Seminar on 13 March 2023. For queries, please contact seminar convenor at saih@history.ox.ac.uk
At the turn of the twentieth century, the global imperial order was in peril. In cities across the world, revolutionary factions emerged where nationalists deliberated radical, even violent paths to a post- imperial world. Vladimir Ilyich Lenin belonged to and wrote of this world – a world primarily defined by the crisis of the imperial order and the looming question of the future of national communities. As Lenin along with his compatriots seized power in Moscow in October 1917, he announced the dawn of a new era where the empires of the world would eventually fall in the throes of the impending world revolution. My talk, based on my first book project, shows how that his call resonated with all sorts of imperial decriers who saw, in his victory, the possibility of a new world. From Rio Grande to River Ganges, anti-colonialists turned to Moscow to help realize their own political visions. Encouraged by the triumph of Lenin and his party, anti-colonialists tied the end of imperialism to the revolutionary end of global socioeconomic hierarchies. This historical narrative responds to recent scholarly provocations to study decolonization in connected rather than discrete terms and to employ the methodological tools of global history to write new historical accounts, which attend to the ends of empire as a global phenomenon. One of my key intellectual objectives is to think of Asian, African, and Caribbean anti-colonialists not only as itinerant revolutionaries and campaigners but as intellectuals, thinkers, and writers. I demonstrate the many ways in which anti-colonialists interpreted, built on, modified, and otherwise responded to Lenin’s critique of imperialism. For many, anti-imperialism now not only meant opposition to foreign rule but also a wholesale rejection of the prevalent global economic order. Hence, inequality and development became an inextricable part of visions of a postcolonial global order. Moreover, this presentation highlights how the inter-war period marks a decisive shift in the intellectual history of decolonization.
Zaib un Nisa Aziz is a historian of global and imperial history, with a focus on the British Empire and Modern South Asia. She is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at the University of South Florida, Tampa. In her past and present research, she seeks to push the geographic, temporal and thematic boundaries of the historical study of the end of empire and its aftermath, and is particularly interested in histories of decolonisation, labour and internationalism. Her current book project, tentatively titled ‘Nations Ascendant: The Global Struggle Against Empire and The Making of our World’, traces the origins and politics of an international community of colonial activists, thinkers and campaigners, and shows how they came to share ideas about universal decolonisation and the end of empires.
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
Asian Studies Centre
People
Zaib un Nisa Aziz
Keywords
South Asia
india
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration: 00:37:01

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Building the digital archive

Series
Their Finest Hour
Embed
A short interview with the project's technical lead, Catherine Conisbee, on building the digital archive.
A short talk by the project's technical lead, Catherine Conisbee, on building the digital archive. In this Catherine covers a brief outline of crowd-sourcing at Oxford, digital humanities, and the platforms we are building the project on.

Episode Information

Series
Their Finest Hour
People
Catherine Conisbee
Keywords
digital
digital humanities
history
Second World War
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration:

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Anat Scolnicov - The Israel Supreme Court Religion and the Relationship of State and Religion in Israel

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
Embed
On judicial independence in Israel
Israel was originally to have a Constitution, but it never did as the issue proved divisive on religious grounds, among others. An unwritten constitution developed in its place. This is the legal context of current constitutional debates, including on the constitutional status of religion in Israel. The solution was the adoption of chapters or Basic Laws, that together would form a constitution. What are the Basic Laws – an exercise of a constitutional authority of the Knesset, if such existed? An exercise of legislative authority?
The status of religion in the state is a constitutional matter which directly affects religious freedom, and the establishment of religious is a pivotal constitutional matter. Religious courts derive their legal powers from the statutes enacted by the Knesset and must abide by the laws of the Knesset as interpreted by the Supreme Court, even if it conflicts with their religious interpretation. The religious courts, however, view their authority as emanating from a religious normative system. Attempts to rectify inequalities in religious law through state law directed at religious courts, are destined for a clash of normative hierarchies.
The talk will draw on the speaker’s experience as a constitutional law barrister representing litigants in the Supreme Court, as well as on her academic research.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Anat Scolnicov
Keywords
law
judicial independence
Israel
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration:

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Amos Morris-Rich - The Fusion of Zionism and Science: The First Two Decades - And the Present Day?

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
Embed
On Zionism's relation to Science
Focusing on the relationship between Zionism and science in the first two decades of the Zionist movement, the argument of this paper is threefold. First, that a relationship was established with the very inception of the Zionist movement. Second, it is characterized by a duality, a tension between a highly pragmatic scientific attitude, on the one hand, namely science conceived as ‘engineering,’ as the principal instrument of national construction, and simultaneously, on the other hand, science understood as working with the most fragile and inaccessible ‘materials’ or ‘building blocks.’ I will suggest that the Zionist movement was characterized by the quintessential place of programmatic and detailed planning and of striving towards pragmatically defined goals; at the same time, however, Zionism’s ultimate goal, idealistic, utopian, and always just out of reach, remained unstated. While focusing on the first two decades of the Zionist movement, I suggest, thirdly, that because this intellectual structure was embedded in the socialization processes of Zionism from its very earliest phase, it remains critically important, in spite of the many additional historical events that followed, for the understanding of key facets of Jewish, and later Israeli, society to this day.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Amos Morris-Reich
Keywords
zionism
science
politics
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 23/03/2023
Duration: 00:39:12

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Cara Addleman

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Zoe Campbell

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#8 Social Justice & Desire | with Cara Addleman

Series
Wadcast
Embed
PPE Student, Cara Addleman, discusses her prize-winning essay.
What does it take for us to be free people? How should we think about our desires when those desires are formed by oppressive social structures? Cara Addleman, a third-year Wadham student studying Philosophy, Politics & Economics won the College's Cheney Prize for her essay addressing these questions.

We discuss the ideas and themes of her essay, explore her own doubts about her conclusions, and have a friendly philosophical back-and-forth.

Do note that the episode contains some references to sexual assault and abuse.

Episode Information

Series
Wadcast
People
Martin Dunkley Smith
Cara Addleman
Keywords
essay
philosophy
freedom
desire
Department: Wadham College
Date Added: 22/03/2023
Duration: 00:31:12

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