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Mapping Missionary Work: Migrant Youth and Religious Movements in Northeast India

Series
The Migration Oxford Podcast
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What does migration have to do with missionary work? We explore how Baptist and Presbyterian missionary work as socioreligious institutions have impacted and influenced mobility in Northeast India, both pre- and post-colonialism.
What does migration have to do with missionary work? How do socioreligious collective institutions (Baptist and Presbyterian missionary work) and indigenous religious cosmologies impinge on the youth of Northeast India? As they leave home and embark on arduous journeys in search of employment and education in different parts of India, we discuss how migration is experienced not just as a singular or individual experience but also as a relational experience as identities of young migrant students are mediated by community-based organisations which represent and look out for them in Delhi. What role does religio-cultural groups play in supporting migrant youth? How do relationships and friendships amongst young individuals emerge within collective spaces?
In this episode of The Migration Oxford Podcast, we question how the term ‘migrant’ gets recast in light of changing sociopolitical dynamics in Northeast India. Examining contested land claims, histories of militarization and entangled ethnic and clan relationalities, we explore the impact of missionary interventions and the struggles for citizenship in the context of Mizoram, Nagaland, and Assam.
We welcome experts Dr. Zarzosanga Pachuau, Government Serchhip College, Mizoram; Dr. Tiatemsu Longkumer, Anthropology Department of the Royal Thimphu College, Bhutan; and Shivangi Kaushik, PhD candidate at Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. Colonial and post-independence cartographic redrawing of the region continues to mediate movements of communities and individuals both within the Northeast and beyond. As individuals who have lived their lives in the region, they seek to connect mobilisations of identities back home and the entangled histories and movements that can be drawn from Mizoram, Nagaland and Assam.

Episode Information

Series
The Migration Oxford Podcast
People
Tiatemsu Longkumer
Zarzosanga Pachuau
Shivangi Kaushik
Rob McNeil
Jacqui Broadhead
Keywords
india
Identities
migrant youth
religion
christianity
migration
missionaries.
Department: Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Date Added: 20/06/2025
Duration: 00:34:45

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Rachel Brooks

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Vuyokazi Mntuyedw

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What is a student? Perspectives from across Europe

Series
Halsey Lecture
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Professor Rachel Brooks explores how students are conceptualised across six European countries, challenging assumptions of a uniform student experience and highlighting the influence of national context, discipline, institution and social background.
Assumptions are often made within policy, as well as by academics, that what it means to be a higher education (HE) student in Europe today is common across nation-states – driven by the increase in cross-border educational mobility, the development of a European Higher Education Area, and the widespread impact of marketisation and expansion of higher education. Nevertheless, cross-national empirical evidence is rarely cited in support of such assumptions.

To address this gap, Professor Rachel Brooks conducted research in six European nations (Denmark, England, Germany, Ireland, Poland and Spain) investigating how the contemporary HE student is conceptualised – drawing on perspectives from policy, the media and HE staff, as well as students themselves.

In this lecture, she outlines some key constructions of students that emerged from the project, examining the extent to which dominant constructions across and within nation-states are similar, and engaging with debates about the degree of homogenisation of HE across Europe, and the extent to which nation-states can be considered ‘coherent educational entities’.

Professor Brooks suggests that there are also other important axes of difference to consider – beyond national boundaries and type of social actors – related notably to academic discipline, HE institution, and students’ social background. Finally, she explores the impact of these constructions, maintaining that they are not merely of academic interest, but have direct and material effects.

Episode Information

Series
Halsey Lecture
People
Rachel Brooks
Keywords
sociology
higher education
student experience
student identity
europeanisation
education policy
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 17/06/2025
Duration: 00:50:49

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Halsey Lecture

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Halsey Lecture
The Halsey Lecture is an annual lecture series celebrating excellence in sociology and the wider social sciences, named in honour of Professor Albert Henry Halsey, a central figure in the post-war establishment of sociology as an academic discipline in the UK.

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Chatting with AfOx fellow Vuyokazi Mntuyedwa on digital literacies and South African Higher Education

Series
Conversations in Med Ed
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Vuyo, an AfOx fellow at the University of Oxford and academic literacies lecturer at CPUT in South Africa, reflects on digital literacies and transforming South African Higher Education.
This episode of ‘Conversations in Med Ed’ is a departure from the usual Health Professions Education conversations to look at Higher Education more broadly. In episode thirteen we chat with Dr Vuyokazi Mntuyedwa, a current AfOx fellow (in the African Oxford initiative – working with Dr Danica Sims) and academic literacies lecturer from the Cape Peninsula University of Technology in South Africa. Vuyo briefly shares her journey from a first-generation student to university lecturer before diving deeper into her AfOx research on digital literacies of first-year students transitioning from high school to university. She ends by reflecting on 16 June, Youth Day in South Africa, calling on students to be proactive in seeking educational opportunities and working with universities to transform Higher Education. Burning buildings mentality culture when there is a disagreement between the students and the management must end. If you would like to connect with Dr Mntuyedwa, you can reach out to her on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-vuyo-mntuyedwa-phd-157477b8/) or email her at: vuyo.mntuyedwa@gmail.com.

Episode Information

Series
Conversations in Med Ed
People
Vuyokazi Mntuyedw
Danica Sims
Keywords
higher education
education
research
stories
conversations
south africa
Africa
AfOx
africa oxford initiative
ai
artificial intelligence
students
technology
digital
digital literacies
academic literacies
technology-enhanced learning
student voice
transformation
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 17/06/2025
Duration: 00:21:58

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Digital News Report 2025. Episode 1: What you need to know.

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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What's happening with news media in 2025? Authors of our Digital News Report 2025 discuss the role of generative AI, trust in news, subscriptions, news avoidance, podcasts and more
What's happening with news media in 2025? Authors of our Digital News Report 2025 discuss the role of generative AI, trust in news, subscriptions, news avoidance, podcasts and more

Speakers:

Nic Newman is the lead author of the Digital News Report 2025 and is a senior research associate at the Reuters Institute.

Richard Fletcher is a co-author of the Digital News Report and is the Director of Research at the Reuters Institute.

Mitali Mukherjee is the Director of the Reuters Institute and is a political economy journalist with more than two decades of experience in TV, print and digital journalism.

Transcript: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/news/our-podcast-digital-news-report-2025-episode-1-what-you-need-know

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Mitali Mukherjee
Nic Newman
Richard Fletcher
Keywords
digital news report
generative ai
news avoidance
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 16/06/2025
Duration: 00:34:30

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Ben Fairfax

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CMV serostatus is associated with improved survival and delayed toxicity onset following anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade

Series
To Immunity and Beyond
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A conversation with Ben Fairfax about the recent article: CMV serostatus is associated with improved survival and delayed toxicity onset following anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade.
This episode discusses Milotay, G., Little, M., Watson, R.A. et al. CMV serostatus is associated with improved survival and delayed toxicity onset following anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade. Nat Med (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-03647-1.
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
To Immunity and Beyond
People
Ben Fairfax
Paul Klenerman
Keywords
cmv
melanoma
anti-pd-1
anti-ctla-4
immunotherapy
toxicity
Department: Oxford Immunology Network
Date Added: 13/06/2025
Duration: 00:34:58

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Alex Beukers

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