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Fadi Issa

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Holly Reeve

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Sara Falcone

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James Dilley

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Gaza Genocide as a Symptom: Fragile World Order and Regional Impacts

Series
Middle East Centre
Embed
The MEC’s opening Thursday seminar of the 2025-26 academic year was delivered by the former Prime Minister of Türkiye, Ahmet Davutoğlu, and chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan
The MEC’s opening Thursday seminar of the 2025-26 academic year was delivered by Ahmet Davutoğlu, former Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Türkiye. Davutoğlu has authored a number of books on foreign policy, including ‘Systemic Earthquake’ and ‘Alternative Paradigms’, which have been translated into several languages. The seminar was chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan, Director of the Middle East Centre.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Ahmet Davutoğlu
Eugene Rogan
Keywords
international relations
Turkey
politics
Gaza
Israel
palestine
middle east
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 20/10/2025
Duration: 01:00:57

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Making Replicas in the Museum

Series
Making the Pitt Rivers Museum
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One of the UK’s few professional flint knappers, Dr James Dilly, speaks about the importance of replica making for modern museums, tells us what we can learn from objects of the ancient past, and introduces the team to the ‘sexy hand axe’ theory!
Dr James Dilley is an experimental archaeologist and flintknapper, specialising in the British Stone Age & Bronze Age. James founded the company AncientCraft in 2009, through which he and Emma Jones aim to engage individuals and communities in prehistory through the creation and delivery of interactive experiences, using quality replicas and experienced specialists. James’ work is displayed at The British Museum and Stonehenge and he has worked with several high-profile media companies such as the BBC, National Geographic, New Scientist and Dorling Kindersley Publishing.
He is working with the Making the Museum project to inform our knowledge of making practices for the Museum’s collection of stone tools. In September 2024, he delivered a flint knapping workshop for museum staff and other object history experts as part of a workshop titled ‘Makers and fakers: How copies, replicas, casts and fakes ‘make’ the museum’.
In this episode, James speaks to us about connecting with human ancestors through the frustration of making, what we can learn from knobbly lumps of stone in the museum, and how he is going about making archaeology and pre-history more accessible through costumes and demonstrations. Join us to learn some flabbergasting facts about deep time and find out what the ‘sexy hand axe’ theory is!
See more about the work James does with AncientCraft at: www.ancientcraft.co.uk
Find out about AncientCraft’s upcoming events via their social media pages:
https://x.com/ancientcraftUK
https://www.youtube.com/user/ancientcraftUK
https://www.facebook.com/AncientCraftUK
https://www.instagram.com/ancientcraftuk/?hl=en
Want to follow along when we’re talking about collections items? For examples of the kinds of items we’re talking about in this episode, take a look at:
Example of a stone hand axe (1947.6.29): https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/collections-online#/item/prm-object-120008
Example of a scraper (1884.140.1277): https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/collections-online#/item/prm-object-245839
Forged stone hand axe by Edward Simpson (aka Flint Jack) (1884.122.598): https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/collections-online#/item/prm-object-152997

See some of the objects that we examined as part of the ‘Makers and fakers’ workshop, discussed in this episode, here: https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/collections-online#/item/prm-objectgroup-86017
You can see video footage from our ‘Makers and fakers’ workshop on the Making the Museum playlist on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E3Y01FKCfEs&list=PLRD32d5F72a1LM-AtxvFQScpehl_EOIFq&index=9
This episode features sounds recorded during the flint knapping session, run by Dr Dilley, at this workshop.
You will hear from (in order of appearance):
Dr. Rebecca (Becky) Martin (she/her) – Research Project Officer, Making the Museum project
Dr. James Dilley (he/him) – Experimental archaeologist and flint knapper, AncientCraft
Dr. Beth Hodgett (they/them) – Postdoctoral Researcher, Making the Museum project

Episode Information

Series
Making the Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Rebecca Martin
James Dilley
Beth Hodgett
Keywords
replicas
forgeries
stone age
hand axe
museums
oxford
pitt rivers
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 20/10/2025
Duration: 01:06:35

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Regulatory T cell therapy is associated with distinct immune regulatory lymphocytic infiltrates in kidney transplants

Series
To Immunity and Beyond
Embed
A conversation with Fadi Issa about his recent article on regulatory T cell therapy in kidney transplants.
In this episode of To Immunity and Beyond, Paul Klenerman talks with surgeon and immunologist Fadi Issa about pioneering regulatory T-cell therapy in kidney transplantation. Fadi shares his journey from reconstructive surgery to immune tolerance research and discusses the groundbreaking, first-in-human ONE Trial of T reg therapy in kidney transplantation. The trial showed promising graft survival rates, and found B cell-enriched focal lymphocytic infiltrates in the T reg treated group. Paul and Fadi also explore how current work with spatial transcriptomics will enable further insights into this mechanism.
Full article: Oliver McCallion, Amy R. Cross, Matthew O. Brook, Conor Hennessy, Ricardo Ferreira, Dominik Trzupek, William R. Mulley, Sandeep Kumar, Maria Soares, Ian S. Roberts, Peter J. Friend, Giovanna Lombardi, Kathryn J. Wood, Paul N. Harden, Joanna Hester, Fadi Issa, Regulatory T cell therapy is associated with distinct immune regulatory lymphocytic infiltrates in kidney transplants, Med, Volume 6, Issue 5, 2025, 100561, ISSN 2666-6340, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medj.2024.11.014.

Episode Information

Series
To Immunity and Beyond
People
Fadi Issa
Paul Klenerman
Keywords
Regulatory T cell therapy; T regs; kidney transplant; spatial transcriptomics
Department: Oxford Immunology Network
Date Added: 20/10/2025
Duration: 00:25:34

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Extra - 2024-25: the year in review

Series
Centre for Personalised Medicine
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We discuss the highlights for the CPM in 2024-25, and look forward to the next year.

Episode Information

Series
Centre for Personalised Medicine
People
Rachel Horton
Anneke Lucassen
Susie Weller
Ali Kay
Sarah Briggs
Nishtha Bharti
Keywords
genomic medicine
personalised medicine
personalised treatment
bioethics
Department: St Anne's College
Date Added: 14/10/2025
Duration: 00:17:12

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Felix M. Simon

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Episode 3 - Doing the social rounds and reflecting on loneliness

Series
How to Find Your People
Embed
Doing the social rounds and reflecting on loneliness
In the third and final podcast, we’ll talk about how to circulate and network at social events, reflect on loneliness versus solitude, the pros and cons of being on your own, what makes us feel lonely, and how you might address these kinds of feelings if you experience them. We’ll also have a brief think about how to start addressing some of the trickier areas of friendship, and what you might do if, over a longer period of time, you begin to notice negative patterns in how you relate to others.

Episode Information

Series
How to Find Your People
People
Elizabeth Edginton
Keywords
students
socialising
Department: University Counselling Service
Date Added: 13/10/2025
Duration: 00:19:13

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