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The Polish Italian Royal Wedding of 1518: Dynasty, Memory & Language

Series
History Faculty
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Natalia Nowakowska (Tutor and Fellow in History, Somerville College and Principal Investigator 'The Jagiellonians Project') gives a talk for the History Faculty.
In 1518, the Milanese Neapolitan princess Bona Sforza travelled to Krakow to marry King Sigismund I of Poland, in one of the most celebrated weddings seen in Renaissance Central Europe. The wedding is remembered today as bringing Italian food and culture to Poland. However, this lecture marking the 500th anniversary of the wedding, explores how it also generated new kinds of political ideas and language.
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
History Faculty
People
Natalia Nowakowska
Keywords
jagiellonians
poland
dynasty
memory
Department: Faculty of History
Date Added: 16/05/2018
Duration: 00:53:37

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Value-based healthcare: Health economics re-packaged or re-packaging health economics?

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Sir Muir Gray and Lucy Abel debate: Is value-based health care nothing more than health economics re-packaged or is health economics nothing more than only one of the six contributors to value-based healthcare?
Health economics is concerned with how to allocate resources in healthcare to optimise outcomes. Health economists have developed a variety of methods to evaluate whether the cost of providing healthcare interventions is worth the benefits. In other words, whether they are good value. These are based on preferences expressed by wider society relating to the value of increasing the length and quality of life. These values can be applied to an intervention by linking them via clinical outcomes.


Sir Muir Gray is now working with both NHS England and Public Health England to bring about a transformation of care with the aim of increasing value for both populations and individuals and published a series of How To Handbooks for example, How to Get Better Value Healthcare, How To Build Healthcare Systems and How To Create the Right Healthcare Culture.


Lucy Abel is a health economist working within the field of primary care and is part of the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford. She collaborates with research groups to bring the tools of economic evaluation to primary care health science research.



Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Muir Gray
Lucy Abel
Keywords
EMB
Evidence-Based Medicine
Primary Care
Health Sciences
EBHC
Evidence-Based Health Care
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 16/05/2018
Duration: 00:25:33

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Reading Bass Culture

Series
Great Writers Inspire at Home
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On 26 April 2018, Linton Kwesi Johnson read from a selection of his poetry and discussed with Professor Paul Gilroy the inter-generational and transatlantic relationships that had nurtured it.
This special gathering of the Postcolonial Writing and Theory seminar explored the formation and development of Linton Kwesi Johnson’s poetry and the inter-generational and transatlantic relationships that nurtured it and shaped its political underpinnings. In particular, we considered the special significance of music in his development, the lyricism of ‘dub poetry’ and the distinctive approaches to recording and performance that he has developed in the forty years since the release of Dread Beat and Blood.
Linton Kwesi Johnson is an acclaimed Jamaican-born British poet and performer. He coined and popularised the term dub poetry, a form of performance-based oral poetry inspired by reggae music. In 2002, he became only the second living poet published in the Penguin Modern Classics series. As well as having released several commercially successful and classic albums as a reggae artist, Johnson’s volumes of poetry include Voices of the Living and the Dead (1974), Dread Beat and Blood (1975), and Inglan’ is a Bitch (1980). Paul Gilroy is Professor of American and English Literature at King’s College London, a foundational figure in the field of Black Atlantic Studies, and a world-leading scholar in cultural studies and the music of the black diaspora.
Dr Louisa Layne, the chair of the discussion, is a lecturer in English and Comparative literature at the University of Oslo.

Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire at Home
People
Linton Kwesi Johnson
Paul Gilroy
Louisa Layne
Keywords
reggae
music
dub poetry
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 16/05/2018
Duration: 01:35:15

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Exploring Needs, Costs and Outcomes of Services Provided to Vulnerable Children and their Families

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
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This seminar will explore the relationship between the needs, services received and outcomes for children and families supported by children’s social care (CSC) services.
Drawing on evidence from a programme of research, the presentation will explore the development of a standardised, nationally applicable conceptual framework to follow a child’s journey through different parts of the CSC system, as well as an examination of how practitioners use their time, and whether this should, and can be reconfigured.
The seminar will also consider the application of the conceptual framework and use of 'time use data' to estimate unit costs for CSC and relate these to needs and outcomes.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
People
Lisa Holmes
Keywords
children's social care
social care
education
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 15/05/2018
Duration: 00:42:45

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Higher Education and the Sustainable Development Goals: The Case of the Intercultural Universities in Mexico

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
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This seminar will present findings of an exploratory study of the Intercultural University of Veracruz, one of a number of institutions created in Mexico to ensure access for indigenous populations, promote local development and to provide...
In the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals, higher education has been given a key role in addressing societal challenges, reducing poverty, ensuring sustainable livelihoods and protecting the natural environment. Yet there has been a singular lack of imagination as regards the institutional forms that might help support this vision. This presentation reports on the findings of an exploratory study of the Intercultural University of Veracruz, one of a number of institutions created in Mexico to ensure access for indigenous populations, to promote local development and to provide a space for intercultural dialogue. The findings show a number of ways in which this innovative institution provides opportunities for supporting the SDGs that go beyond conventional universities. However, it also presents challenges to the global framework, highlighting the lack of attention to culture, language, identity and knowledge traditions. Finally, the presentation reflects more broadly on the relationship between higher education and international development in the contemporary era.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Education Public Seminars
People
Tristan McCowan
Keywords
higher education
Mexico
intercultural
university
sustainable development
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 15/05/2018
Duration: 00:53:08

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The Ralph Walter History Lecture: Keble, Oxford, Britain, and the World

Series
Keble College
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The Different Scales of Modern History.
William Whyte (Professor of Social & Architectural History, St John's College) delivers a lecture about the legacy of Ralph Walter.
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
Keble College
People
William Whyte
Keywords
social history
architectural history
Britain
modern history
Department: Keble College
Date Added: 15/05/2018
Duration: 01:01:36

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Why people who need counselling don’t come for counselling (Is this you?)

Series
Student Life at Oxford
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This podcast addresses some of the worries and pre-conceptions that can get in the way of accessing student counselling services.
This podcast acknowledges and addresses some of the worries and pre-conceptions that can get in the way of accessing counselling, even for those who are on some level aware that they could really benefit. We hope that listening to this podcast will give you some useful encouragement, and will help you across the threshold and into our service. By Maureen Freed.

Episode Information

Series
Student Life at Oxford
People
Oxford University Counselling Service
Keywords
counselling
student
Department: Undergraduate Admissions and Outreach
Date Added: 14/05/2018
Duration: 00:09:36

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Facing finals - some psychological tips

Series
Student Life at Oxford
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This podcast episode offers a selection of the messages and tips our counsellors offer to finalists.
This podcast episode offers a selection of the messages our counsellors offer to finalists who come to see us as they enter the home straight. Finalists are individuals, with different stories, academic ambition levels, and circumstances, and it is impossible to offer advice that is helpful to all. However, most listeners will find at least one thing on this list that feels relevant and helpful. We invite you to listen for that one thing and to commit yourself to making use of it. By Maureen Freed.

Episode Information

Series
Student Life at Oxford
People
Oxford University Counselling Service
Keywords
stress
exams
anxiety
Department: Undergraduate Admissions and Outreach
Date Added: 14/05/2018
Duration: 00:14:06

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Offensive Cyber, Ecology and the Competition for Security in Cyberspace: The UK’s Approach

Series
Changing Character of War
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The Strategic Cyber Security model illustrates how offensive cyber capability has been operationalised as a critical component in the delivery of the UK's cyber security strategy

The 2013 public announcement by the then Secretary of State for Defence, Phillip Hammond stating that the United Kingdom was creating an offensive cyber capability as part of its national cyber security strategy moved the debate on the use of offensive cyber into the public policy sphere. While this debate has continued, little detail has emerged as to how offensive cyber will be integrated as a tool into the United Kingdom's cyber security strategy and more broadly its national security structure. The Strategic Cyber Security (SCS) model seeks to answer these questions by illustrating how offensive cyber capability has been operationalised as a critical component in the delivery of the United Kingdom's cyber security strategy. Drawing upon elements of ecological theory the model demonstrates how different cyber security effects are generated to deliver an holistic response to achieving security in the increasingly competitive environment of cyberspace. Development of the model is based upon a series of elite interviews with senior military and civilian policy makers and key stakeholders within the United Kingdom’s cyber security and national security communities.

Graham Fairclough is a former soldier now attempting to become an academic in the field of cybersecurity. His research is focused on the operationalisation of national cyber security strategy, in particular the integration of offensive cyber capability and how cyber security incidents are understood by decision makers with limited cyber security knowledge. He advises NATO and the UK's MOD on operational cyber security matters.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Graham Fairclough
Keywords
cyber
strategy
security
war
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 14/05/2018
Duration:

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Cyber Strategy: The Evolution of Cyber Power and Coercion

Series
Changing Character of War
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Brandon Valeriano examines cyber strategies in their varying forms through quantitative analysis and questions their level of impact

This project examines the changing character of cyber strategies in the digital domain. We develop a theory that cyber operations are a form of covert coercion typically seeking to send ambiguous signals or demonstrate resolve. Cyber Coercion from this perspective is neither as revolutionary nor as novel as it seems when evaluated with evidence. We examine cyber strategies in their varying forms through quantitative analysis, finding that cyber disruptions, short-term and long-term espionage, and degradation operations all usually fail to produce political concessions. When states do compel a rival, which is measured as a change in behaviour in the target that is strategically advantageous to the initiator, the cyber operation tends to occur alongside more traditional coercive instruments such as diplomatic pressure, economic sanctions, and military threats and displays. Our findings suggest that before we develop recommendations for sound foreign policy responses to state-backed cyber intrusions or craft international frameworks that constrain the proliferation of politically-motivated malware, we should theoretically and empirically investigate cyber strategies and their efficacy.

Brandon Valeriano is the Donald Bren Chair of Armed Conflict at the Marine Corps University. He has published five books and dozens of articles. His two most recent books are Cyber War versus Cyber Reality (2015) and Cyber Strategy (2018), both with Oxford University Press. Ongoing research explores cyber coercion, biological examinations of cyber threat, repression in cyberspace, and the influence of video games on foreign policy outlooks.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Brandon Valeriano
Keywords
cyber
attacks
espionage
war
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 14/05/2018
Duration:

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