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Memoir and Memory: Aminatta Forna in Conversation with Elleke Boehmer

Series
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation
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Launch event for the Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Series. Aminatta Forna, OBE (novelist and memoirist, Lannan Visiting Professor of Poetics at Georgetown University) in conversation with Elleke Boehmer (Professor of World Literature in English, Oxford).
In this conversation, which took place on 20 October 2017 at the University of Oxford, award-winning novelist and memoirist Aminatta Forna and Elleke Boehmer discuss the ways in which Forna's work (which includes her novel The Memory of Love and memoir about Sierra Leone, The Devil That Danced on the Water) has portrayed situations of conflict and post-conflict, and how literature can offer new perspectives on commemoration, reconstruction and reconciliation.

Episode Information

Series
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation
People
Aminatta Forna
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
literature
war
post war
sierra leone
memory
commemoration
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 20/11/2017
Duration: 01:11:59

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Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation

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Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation is a Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Series running in 2017-18 at the University of Oxford and Oxford Brookes University. It brings together academics from many different fields, politicians and leading figures from cultural policy and the charitable sector. They are joined by novelists, poets, artists and musicians whose work has marked war in some way. The Series is divided into three strands - Textual, Monumental, and Aural Commemoration - and is guided by three overarching questions: Who is commemoration for and why? How does commemoration lead to reconstruction and reconciliation? What is the future of commemoration?

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The State of the Universe

Series
Oxford Physics Public Lectures
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Our Universe was created in 'The Big Bang' and has been expanding ever since. Professor Schmidt describes the vital statistics of the Universe, and tries to make sense of the Universe's past, present, and future.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Physics Public Lectures
People
Brian Schmidt
Keywords
Physics
universe
big bang
hintze nobel prize winner
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 20/11/2017
Duration:

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Book Colloquium: ‘Voting Rights of Refugees’

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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Ruvi Ziegler (Reading) discusses his new book with Kirsten McConnachie (Warwick), Matthew Gibney (Oxford), and Liora Lazarus (Oxford) at a joint OTJR/RMLDG event.
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/book-colloquium-voting-rights-refugees

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Ruvi Ziegler
Kirsten McConnachie
Matthew Gibney
Liora Lazarus
Keywords
elections
refugees
voting rights
post-conflict
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 20/11/2017
Duration: 01:10:56

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Seeking a 'Just Justice': Discursive Strategies of Resistance in Côte d'Ivoire

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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Briony Jones, Assistant Professor at the Politics and International Studies department of the University of Warwick, gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar Series.
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/seeking-just-justice-discursive-strategies-resistance-cote-divoire

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Briony Jones
Keywords
transitional justice
Côte d'Ivoire
African politics
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 20/11/2017
Duration: 00:37:48

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Transitional Justice in Brazil and the Jurisprudence of Inter-American Court of Human Rights

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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Bruno Galindo, Associate Professor at the Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE) (Brazil), gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar Series.
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/events/transitional-justice-brazil-and-jurisprudence-inter-american-court-human-rights

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Bruno Galindo
Keywords
brazil
transitional justice
human rights
Inter-American Court Of Human Rights
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 20/11/2017
Duration: 00:54:25

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Governing Divided Egypt

Series
Middle East Centre
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Professor Robert Springborg (Italian Institute of International Affairs, Rome), gives a talk for the Middle East Centre seminar series.
Robert Springborg is a non-resident Research Fellow of the Italian Institute of International Affairs, Rome. Until October 2013, he was Professor of National Security Affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School, and Program Manager for the Middle East for the Center for Civil-Military Relations. From 2002 until 2008, he held the MBI Al Jaber Chair in Middle East Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, where he also served as Director of the London Middle East Institute. Before taking up that Chair, he was Director of the American Research Center in Egypt, University Professor of Middle East Politics at Macquarie University in Sydney Australia; and assistant professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania. He has also taught at King’s College, London; University of California, Berkeley; the College of Europe; the Paris School of International Affairs of Sciences Po; and the University of Sydney. In 2016, he was Kuwait Foundation Visiting Scholar, Middle East Initiative, Kennedy School, and Harvard University.

His publications include Mubarak’s Egypt: Fragmentation of the Political Order; Family Power and Politics in Egypt; Legislative Politics in the Arab World (co-authored with Abdo Baaklini and Guilain Denoeux); Globalization and the Politics of Development in the Middle East first and second editions, (co-authored with Clement M. Henry); Oil and Democracy in Iraq; Development Models in Muslim Contexts: Chinese, ‘Islamic’ and Neo-Liberal Alternatives and several editions of Politics in the Middle East (co-authored with James A. Bill). He co-edited a volume on popular culture and political identity in the Gulf that appeared in 2008. He has published in the leading Middle East journals and was the founder and regular editorialist for The Middle East in London, a monthly journal that commenced publication in 2003. His new book -‘Egypt’ has just been published in October 2017 by Polity Press.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Robert Springborg
Keywords
middle east
egypt
politics
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 17/11/2017
Duration: 00:43:29

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Lessons From a Study in Failure - The Force Intervention Brigade and the United Nations Mission in Congo, 2012-2017

Series
Changing Character of War
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This seminar is concerned with the broad issues raised by the UN’s long-running mission in the DRC and what it tells us about the deeper challenges facing the UN as it continues to grapple with civil war and protection crises in different parts of Africa.

In November 2012, the city of Goma in eastern Congo, whose population had recently swollen to nearly 1 million following the influx of refugees fleeing fighting and mass atrocities in neighbouring territory, fell to a Rwanda-backed armed group, the Mouvement du 23 mars (M-23). Some 1,500 UN peacekeepers were based in the city when it was overrun. The fall of Goma, more than a decade after the first arrival of blue helmets in the DRC and eerily reminiscent of earlier protection crises facing the organisation, cruelly exposed the bankruptcy of UN efforts to protect civilians and bring stability to the country. Responding to what was seen as humiliating ‘moment of truth’, the Security Council decided, in March 2013, to strengthen the UN mission with the creation of a Force Intervention Brigade (FIB), entrusting it with a mandate “to carry out targeted offensive operations … in a robust, highly mobile and versatile manner”. The Council insisted that such operations would, in principle, be directed against all armed groups in eastern DRC. The establishment of the FIB was described by the then Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon, as a “milestone” in the evolution of UN peacekeeping. That view was widely shared and, in many quarters, warmly welcomed as evidence of a wholly different approach to the use of force and the protection of civilians by UN forces operating in conditions of civil war.

The presentation examines the actual record of the FIB and draws wider lessons from its experience. It is concerned, in particular, with the broader issues raised by the UN’s long-running mission in the DRC: to wit, what it tells us about the political economy of conflict in the DRC and, more generally, the dynamics of contemporary civil wars; about the inherent challenges of third-party intervention and the use of force in civil-war like situations; and, finally, about the deeper challenges facing the UN as it continues to grapple with civil war and protection crises in different parts of Africa.

Mats Berdal is Professor of Security and Development at the Department of War Studies, King’s College London.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Mats Berdal
Keywords
Foreign policy; international relations; hegemons; power; war; united nations; africa; drc; congo
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 16/11/2017
Duration:

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Wall Street Goes to War

Series
Changing Character of War
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In this provocative seminar, Dr Sean McFate, author, novelist and expert in foreign policy and national security strategy, looks at the neglected area of the economics of war.

Episode Information

Series
Changing Character of War
People
Sean McFate
Keywords
economics
war
strategy
Foreign policy; international relations; hegemons; power; war
Department: Pembroke College
Date Added: 16/11/2017
Duration:

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The Seduction of Curves: The Lines of Beauty That Connect Mathematics, Art and The Nude - Allan McRobie

Series
The Secrets of Mathematics
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Allan McRobie explains how the key to understanding the language of curves is Rene Thom’s Catastrophe Theory, and how remarkably the best place to learn that language is perhaps in the life drawing class.
There is a deep connection between the stability of oil rigs, the bending of light during gravitational lensing and the act of life drawing. To understand each, we must understand how we view curved surfaces. We are familiar with the language of straight-line geometry -- of squares, rectangles, hexagons. But curves also have a language -- of folds, cusps and swallowtails that few of us know.

Sharing its title with Allan's new book, the talk will wander gently across mathematics, physics, engineering, biology and art, but always with a focus on curves.

Warning: this talk contains nudity.

Allan McRobie is Reader in Engineering, University of Cambridge

Episode Information

Series
The Secrets of Mathematics
People
Allan McRobie
Keywords
curves
folds
cusps
swallowtail
Department: Mathematical Institute
Date Added: 16/11/2017
Duration: 00:46:31

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