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Welcome and opening remarks and Introduction to Open Space

Series
Wildlife Trade Symposium: Evolving Perspectives on the demand for illegal wildlife products
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E.J. Milner-Gulland, Co-Director of Oxford Martin Programme on the Illegal Wildlife Trade welcomes delegates to the programme's first symposium, co-hosted by San Diego Zoo Global and TRAFFIC.
Introduction to Open Space: Jenny Glikman

Open Space is a convening facilitation process to create dialogue and bring together people with common interests, questions, ideas etc. Throughout the symposium, there will be 3 different areas designated for Open Space, each based on a different component or theme from the first day. Jenny Glikman introduces this technique and explains to delegates how to participate, to make the most out of this opportunity.

Episode Information

Series
Wildlife Trade Symposium: Evolving Perspectives on the demand for illegal wildlife products
People
Jenny Glikman
E J Milner-Gulland
Keywords
wildlife
illegal wildlife trade
society
politics
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 27/11/2017
Duration: 00:06:15

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Wildlife Trade Symposium: Evolving Perspectives on the demand for illegal wildlife products

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Wildlife Trade Symposium: Evolving Perspectives on the demand for illegal wildlife products
The Oxford Martin Programme on the Illegal Wildlife Trade aims to provide an international hub for interdisciplinary research on the illegal wildlife trade, and foster strong partnerships across sectors, particularly through its Wildlife Trade Symposia. Evolving Perspectives on the Demand for Illegal Wildlife Products is our first symposium to be held in Oxford, on the 25th-27th September 2017.

The illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade is a major and growing threat to biodiversity, contributing to severe population declines. Annually, hundreds of millions of plants and animals are traded and derived into numerous products, consumed for different motivations and values, such as medicinal, food, gifting and cultural. The symposium will share approaches to better understand and address this challenge, present case studies to highlight the complexities of this work and how the consumer demand side of the trade links to the supply side of the trade, and offer opportunities to discuss practical and pragmatic possibilities to move forward.

This three-day event will be an opportunity for people with a common interest, but from different disciplines, backgrounds and institutions to connect with one another, facilitating knowledge exchange, raising awareness of potential synergies and collaborations, and catalyse new initiatives and partnerships.

Our symposium is aimed at providing a much-needed opportunity for people to work together more effectively within the wildlife trade field, helping to build a cohesive network of individuals and organisations and to bridge the gap between academia and practice.

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Transition(s), Justice and Normality: Everyday experiences from Post-Conflict Sierra Leone

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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Laura S. Martin (University of Birmingham) gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar Series.
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/transitions-justice-and-normality-everyday-experiences-post-conflict-sierra-leone

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Laura S. Martin
Keywords
transitional justice
post-conflict
sierra leone
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 27/11/2017
Duration: 00:29:48

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Competing Memories: Truth and Reconciliation in Sierra Leone and Peru

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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Rebekka Friedman (King’s College London) gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar Series.
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/competing-memories-truth-and-reconciliation-sierra-leone-and-peru

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Rebekka Friedman
Keywords
memory
truth
reconciliation
sierra leone
peru
transitional justice
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 27/11/2017
Duration: 00:56:40

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Where have all the cicada’s gone?

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
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In this episode for the Big Questions podcast we went to the New Forest and met up with Professor Alex Rogers, from the department of Computer Sciences from the University of Oxford, to ask: Where have all the cicada’s gone?
The New Forest Cicada is the only cicada native to the UK. During May to July it sings with a very characteristic high-pitched song, which is at the limits of human hearing, and is particularly difficult for most adults to hear. Sightings of the cicada within the New Forest date back to 1812, but the last unconfirmed sighting was in 2000!
That’s why a team of computer scientists from the University of Oxford equip the millions of visitors to the forest with a smart phone app that can detect and recognise the song of the cicada, and hopes to rediscover it in 2013.
The Big Question we asked Professor Alex Rogers, who leads the experiment, is: Where have all the cicada’s gone?

Episode Information

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
People
Alex Rogers
Keywords
computer science
circada
new forest
Department: Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences (MPLS)
Date Added: 27/11/2017
Duration: 00:09:51

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Imagining the Divine: Art and the Rise of World Religions

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Book at Lunchtime held on 8th November 2017.
Exploring Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam and Judaism, this major exhibition will be the first to look at the art of the five world religions as they spread across continents in the first millennium AD.

On display will be remarkable objects created when the iconography of each religion was still being developed. Art and imagery were central to the spread of these systems of belief, and the visual identity of each religion was formed by encounters and interactions between different faiths and other traditions.

Accompanying the exhibition will be the 'Imagining the Divine: Art and the Rise of World Religions' catalogue. Editor Georgi Parpulov and contributor Stefanie Lenk are joined by an expert panel to discuss the catalogue and the exhibition at Book at Lunchtime. They will be joined by:

Gervase Rosser (History, University of Oxford)

Kate Cooper (History, Royal Holloway, University of London)

This event will be chaired by Mallica Kumbera Landrus (Eastern Art, Ashmolean Museum)

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Gervase Rosser
Georgi Parpulov
Stefanie Lenk
Kate Cooper
Mallica Kumbera Landrus
Keywords
literature
art
religion
world religion
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 27/11/2017
Duration: 00:45:02

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Conflict and Community: Panel-led Workshop 2

Series
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation
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Mobilising the wide-ranging expertise of the speakers, this workshop explored questions of narrative, community and the special commemorative needs that arise in the wake of civil war and terrorism.
The second workshop in our Textual Commemoration strand took place on Saturday 11th November 2017. Panellists included: Rachel Seiffert (novelist); Professor Lyndsey Stonebridge (Professor of Modern Literature and History, University of East Anglia); Professor Harvey Whitehouse (Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Oxford; Fellow of CRIC); Professor Elleke Boehmer (Professor of World Literature in English, University of Oxford); Chair: Professor Helen Small (Professor of English Literature, University of Oxford).

Episode Information

Series
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation
People
Rachel Seiffert
Lyndsey Stonebridge
Harvey Whitehouse
Helen Small
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
literature
fiction
war
conflict
post war
commemoration
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 24/11/2017
Duration: 00:36:16

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John Major

Series
Prime Ministers and Europe since Thatcher - The Hertford lectures
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Lord Patten of Barnes discusses John Major's term in office in the latest episode in this series

Episode Information

Series
Prime Ministers and Europe since Thatcher - The Hertford lectures
People
Lord Patten of Barnes
Keywords
politics
conservatives
prime ministers
Department: Hertford College
Date Added: 24/11/2017
Duration: 01:05:15

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And then the magic happens! Can realist synthesis really be systematic?

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Dr Andrew Booth gives a talk for the Realist Reviews and Realist Evaluations short course.

Realist synthesis has positioned itself as a potentially valuable tool within health services research and evaluation. Opportunistically, it now inhabits the shadowy borderland between the messy domain of real world evaluation and the perceived rigorous scientific method of systematic review and evidence synthesis. Occupying this methodological demilitarised zone is not without its challenges; offering ongoing friction, perceptible tensions but not, at least to date, incandescent light! In this presentation Dr Booth will explore the extent to which realist synthesis can be seen as a bona fide member of the review family or, alternatively, as a rogue claimant syphoning off time, expertise and resources from the systematic reviews movement. He will explore his own experience on over half-a-dozen funded and unfunded realist syntheses against a backdrop of developments and current controversies within synthesis methods. Underpinning mechanisms will include conflict, rapprochement and, ultimately, reconciliation.

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Andrew Booth
Keywords
evidence based medicine
realist reviews
Medicine
healthcare
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 24/11/2017
Duration:

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The Materiality of the Divine: Aniconism, Iconoclasm, Iconography

Series
History Faculty
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Professor Salvatore Settis, an archaeologist and art historian, presents a special lecture on the The Materiality of the Divine.
Is the essence of the divine representable? Apparently, sharp border lines separate aniconic from iconic representations of gods; and nothing can be more opposed than iconography and iconoclasm. Yet, iconoclasm can be, and indeed was, conceived as an act of cult; its practices imply not only the power of images, but specific strategies of attention in the eye of beholders. Aniconism only makes sense within a wider context where iconic and/or narrative representations of divine entities are the norm. Religious iconographies focusing on death and rebirth allude not only to the story or myth they tell, but to the cultural practices of recollecting and indeed revitalising tradition in devotional activity such as ritual, prayer, and belief. The very status of ruins, as defined in late antiquity and the Middle Ages, can be described as a cultural formation that acts as a bridge between iconic and aniconic, meaning and destruction, iconoclasm and rebirth, “classical” and “renaissance”.
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
Salvatore Settis
Keywords
art
archaeology
icons
Department: Faculty of History
Date Added: 23/11/2017
Duration: 01:13:23

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