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Opening plenary. The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America

Series
The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities
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Guillermo Perry (University of the Andes) gives the opening plenary for the The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities conference. Chaired by Timothy Power (Oxford).

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Series
The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities
People
Guillermo Perry
Timothy Power
Keywords
Latin America
class
politics
economics
middle class
Department: Latin American Centre
Date Added: 18/11/2014
Duration: 00:52:41

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Welcome panel

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The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities
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Andrew Hamilton (University of Oxford), Enrique García (CAF-Development Bank of Latin America), Margaret MacMillan (St Antony’s College) introduce the Emerging Middle Class in Latin America Conference

Episode Information

Series
The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities
People
Andrew Hamilton
Enrique García
Margaret MacMillan
Keywords
Latin America
class
politics
law
society
Department: Latin American Centre
Date Added: 17/11/2014
Duration: 00:22:38

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The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities

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The Emerging Middle Class in Latin America: Causes, Challenges and Opportunities
Conference held in St Antony's College, Oxford, on the 31st October 2014. Looking at the emerging middle class in Latin America

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Has European Integration Reached the End of the Road? - 2014 Cyril Foster Lecture

Series
Politics and International Relations Podcasts
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Professor Loukas Tsoukalis, Professor of European Integration at the University of Athens, gives the 2014 Cyril Foster Lecture.
Professor Loukas Tsoukalis, is also the President of the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP), and Visiting Professor at King’s College, London and the College of Europe, Bruges. The transformation of Western Europe during the second half of the twentieth century was a remarkable success story, and regional integration was part and parcel of it. After the collapse of the Soviet empire, Pax Europaea gradually spread to the eastern part of the continent. The European project became much bigger, more intrusive and less inclusive, while external competition intensified in a rapidly globalising world. And then, a big international financial crisis transformed itself into an existential crisis of the European currency union. Was the euro a terrible mistake? And what lessons can be drawn from the way Europe has so far (mis)managed the crisis? Centrifugal forces have been growing between and within countries. Trust is low. Economic factors often push for more integration, but politics resists. Meanwhile, Europe’s ‘soft power’ is too weak to deal with an increasingly unstable neighbourhood, not to mention global challenges. Or, does collective weakness have more to do with internal divisions? More differentiation and flexibility will be necessary to deal with heterogeneity and growing divergence within the EU, although this may not stop the UK from exiting. Has European integration reached the end of the road, and if so, what would be the implications for peace and prosperity in Europe and beyond? And what are the pre-conditions for a new European grand bargain?

Episode Information

Series
Politics and International Relations Podcasts
People
Loukas Tsoukalis
Keywords
europe
politics
EU
european union
economic
recession
banking
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 17/11/2014
Duration: 01:00:02

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The Lives of Harold Macmillan and Roy Jenkins

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The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
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Political biographers D R Thorpe and John Campbell speak about their subjects' careers culminating in the role of Chancellor of the University of Oxford. The discussion was chaired by Lord Patten of Barnes.

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Series
The Bodleian Libraries (BODcasts)
People
D R Thorpe
John Campbell
Chris Patten
Keywords
politics
Macmillan
Roy Jenkins
Department: Bodleian Libraries
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 01:00:33

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Other Worlding

Series
Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation (OCCT)
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A talk given by Peter Hitchcock from the OCCT strand "Intercultural Literary Practises."

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Series
Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation (OCCT)
People
Peter Hitchcock
Katrin Kohl
Mohamed-Salah Omri
Jane Hiddleston
Keywords
interculturalism
politics
world literature
postcolonialism
Thomas Piketty
capitalism
Department: St Anne's College
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 01:00:08

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Kirmen Uribe - Reading and in discussion with Daniela Omlor and Xon de Ros

Series
Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation (OCCT)
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A reading and discussion from the Translation and Criticism strand, Cultures of Mind-Reading: The Novel and Other Minds Intercultural Literary Practices.

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Series
Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation (OCCT)
People
Kirmen Uribe
Daniela Omlor
Xon de Ros
Keywords
Basque literature
translation
Department: St Anne's College
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 01:14:12

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The Rhetoric of 'The Roman Revolution'

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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A lecture given by Professor Christopher Pelling, Oxford Regius Professor of Greek, is the first annual Syme Lecture to address the work of the great historian of Ancient Rome himself.
Professor Pelling took a literary historiographical approach to Syme’s work; an approach that he agreed was contrary to Syme’s own opinions on biography (which he claimed was "so much easier than history"). Pelling defended his methodology by suggesting that Syme’s authorial presence was so evident throughout the book, “he wrote much as he talked”, that a ‘death of the author’ stance could never work with the manuscript.
Pelling masterfully led the audience through an exploration of the changes made by Syme to the manuscript throughout the drafting process. He showed how some of the most “famous and controversial sentences were added at the end”, often as scribbles in the margins, and he continually rewrote key sentences, settling on the most provocative phrases, even if they did not make perfect grammatical sense. For example, the phrase ‘Caesar lay dead, striken by 23 wounds’, was originally drafted as ‘Caesar lay dead in the Senate House, bleeding from 23 wounds’, but Syme reworded it to startling effect.
Professor Pelling also entertained the audience with anecdotes of his own interactions with the book and with Syme himself. He met Syme half a dozen times throughout his career, and confessed the appropriation of a sentence spoken by Syme at a Trinity Feast for the opening sentence of one of his books.
Professor Lee articulated the thoughts of all present by thanking Professor Pelling for a fascinating lecture that “led brilliantly into the mindset of the writer”.

Episode Information

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Christopher Pelling
Keywords
Ronald Syme
roman history
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 01:06:42

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Pakistan is a viable and not a failed state if...?

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Wolfson College Podcasts
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Mehmood Khan Achakzai, Leader and the Chairman of Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, delivered the inaugural Sarfraz lecture on October 30th 2014, at Wolfson College, Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Mehmood Khan Achakzai
Keywords
Pakistan
South Asia
asian politics
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 00:54:57

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Bioethics and the Burden of Proof

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Uehiro Oxford Institute
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In this paper we critique a kind of argument very common in bioethical debates, in which a proponent provides a prima facie case for a particular conclusion, then claims that the burden of proof is on those that object to that conclusion.

Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Michael Selgelid
Keywords
bioethics
burden of proof
methodology
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 14/11/2014
Duration: 00:47:16

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