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El-Iza Mohamedou

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Fabian Stephany

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Underwater photography and maritime archaeology

Series
Maritime Archaeology: Research from the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology (OCMA)
Embed
Fascinating images that offer a glimpse into ancient Egypt: Photographer Christoph Gerigk talks about his work in the sunken ancient cities off the coast of Egypt and the challenges and developments in underwater photography.
Fascinating images that offer a glimpse into ancient Egypt: Photographer Christoph Gerigk talks about his work in the sunken ancient cities off the coast of Egypt and the challenges and developments in underwater photography.
Since the early 1990s Franck Goddio and the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM), in cooperation with the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities and the Hilti Foundation, have explored the submerged remains of the ancient sunken cities of Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus off the coast of Egypt and the Portus Magnus of Alexandria and its sunken royal quarter.
Photographer Christoph Gerigk has been collaborating with the IEASM for more than 25 years. In this episode, he talks about his work in the sunken ancient cities and the challenges and developments in underwater photography. Christoph has been honored twice at the World Press Photo Contest.
This lecture was recorded as part of the 2021 online seminar series "Alexandria and the Sea" held by the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology. 3.

For more information about the work of the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM):
https://www.ieasm.org/
https://www.franckgoddio.org/
https://www.youtube.com/@Franck_Goddio
For more information about the OCMA: https://ocma.web.ox.ac.uk/
For more information about the Hilti Foundation: https://www.hiltifoundation.org/

Episode Information

Series
Maritime Archaeology: Research from the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology (OCMA)
People
Christoph Gerigk
Damian Robinson
Keywords
maritime archaeology
egypt
photography
Department: Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology (OCMA)
Date Added: 16/12/2024
Duration: 00:41:37

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The digital lives of children: Professor Vicki Nash and Professor Katya Hertog

Series
The Human Interface: An OII Podcast
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How digital technologies impact young children, and new ways to think about the ethical and safety measures that govern their use of technology, with Professor Vicki Nash and Professor Katya Hertog (Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford)
In the third episode of the OII Podcast, our experts discuss topics such as:

- The evolving nature of digital technologies in childrens' lives, and how these tools offer both opportunities for social connection, and potential exposure to harmful content.
- The unintended consequences of parental controls of children's technology use, and children's perspectives on parental monitoring tools.
- How regulatory measures are protecting children from online threats and preparing them for life online, and where the gaps in policy may be.

Vicki Nash is the Oxford Internet Institute's Director and a Senior Policy Fellow. Her research focuses on the opportunities and risks experienced by children using digital technologies; she also leads OII engagement on Internet regulation and digital policy issues. She holds several digital policy advisory roles, including membership of the UK Government’s multi-stakeholder UK Council on Internet Safety (UKCIS) Evidence Group, and serves on the Advisory Board of COADEC. She is frequently called on to give expert evidence in UK and EU policy consultations on broader issues such as platform governance.

Professor Katya Hertog is Associate Professor in AI and Society at the Oxford Internet Institute. Her research interests lie at the intersection of digital sociology and family sociology. She leads the ESRC-funded DomesticAI project that scopes new technologies’ potential to free up time now locked into unpaid domestic labour and measures how willing people are to introduce these technologies into their private lives.

Veena McCoole is Media and Communications Manager for the Oxford Internet Institute.

The OII Podcast looks at issues and developments in the digital world that matter to us all, and explores them through thought-provoking conversations with experts and practitioners.

To keep up with forthcoming episodes, follow the OII on social media where new episodes will be announced. Our social media links can be found on our website: https://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/ (see end of page).

Episode Information

Series
The Human Interface: An OII Podcast
People
Vicki Nash
Katya Hertog
Keywords
digital technologies
children
children's health
parental controls
online safety
ai
social media
parenting
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 12/12/2024
Duration: 00:29:22

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To follow

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Menashe Anzi

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Living through multiple crises: Young Lives’ latest qualitative research uncovering the lived experience of young Ethiopians

Series
The Young Lives Podcast
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Young Lives Country Director Alula Pankhurst launches the study’s latest wave of qualitative research in Ethiopia, exploring young people’s experiences and resilience through the multiple crises of recent years
Young Lives is a mixed methods study. In this latest episode of our podcast series, Alula Pankhurst explains the unique value of combining a quantitative and qualitative approach to both understanding young people’s lives, particularly as they experience multiple crises, and shaping policies to best support them.  He details how this latest wave of Young Lives qualitative research in Ethiopia has been set up, it’s specific focus on aspects of young people’s health and well-being, what he hopes the research will find out, and how the findings will be shared to shape policies.

Episode Information

Series
The Young Lives Podcast
People
Julia Tilford
Alula Pankhurst
Keywords
qualitative
Mixed Methods
Ethiopia
young lives
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 06/12/2024
Duration: 00:10:44

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Trade Networks Bridging Yemen, Israel, and Ethiopia: The Ḥibshūsh Family and Jewish-Muslim Commercial Relations in the 20th Century

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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This lecture examines the commercial legacy of the Ḥibshūsh family, a prominent Yemenite Jewish dynasty that played a pivotal role in the Red Sea basin trade from the 1880s to the 1970s
Utilizing a rich archive of primary sources, this global micro-historical study illuminates the intricate Jewish-Arab commercial networks that flourished across geopolitical boundaries, encompassing Yemen, Mandatory Palestine, Israel, Ethiopia, and beyond.

By analyzing the Ḥibshūsh family's extensive business operations, particularly in coffee trade and textile imports, we gain novel insights into Jewish-Muslim relations from a transnational, commercial perspective. This approach reveals the nuanced interactions between Arab-Asian, Israeli, and African communities in the Red Sea region, offering a fresh historical perspective within the contexts of colonial rule (Italian and British) and the Yemenite monarchy.

While existing scholarship on Israel's engagement with the Red Sea region and Africa has predominantly focused on political, and security dimensions, this study shifts the lens to long-established Jewish business networks. It explores how Yemenite Jewish entrepreneurs, exemplified by the Ḥibshūsh family, maintained and adapted trade routes connecting Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti, and Israel before and after the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.

This research contributes significantly to our understanding of Israel's economic history and its commercial ties in the region. By examining how the Ḥibshūsh family navigated shifting political landscapes while sustaining cross-cultural business relationships, we gain deeper insights into the role of Yemenite Jews in shaping Israel's early economic connections in the region; the continuity and adaptation of pre-state Jewish trade networks in the post-1948 era; and the interplay between Israel's diplomatic efforts and private commercial initiatives in Africa.

Through this focused study, we illuminate a crucial yet often overlooked aspect of Israeli-African relations, demonstrating how commerce served as a bridge between cultures and nations in this strategically vital region.

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Menashe Anzi
Keywords
yemen
Israel
trade networks
Yemeni Jews
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 06/12/2024
Duration: 01:04:40

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Ashmolean Museum and University of Exeter

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Doctoral Researcher

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