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Translational neuroscience of the developing cerebral cortex

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
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Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences Seminar

Episode Information

Series
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
People
Zoltan Molnar
Keywords
neuroscience
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
Date Added: 30/06/2015
Duration: 00:47:32

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Education and Childhood in Africa

Series
Children and Youth in a Changing World
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A seminar by David Johnson of the University of Oxford Education Department delivered on 22 January 2013

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Series
Children and Youth in a Changing World
People
David Johnson
Keywords
education
schooling
childhoods
Africa
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 30/06/2015
Duration: 00:39:50

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When Lawyers Lie: Forging an English Constitution in 1399

Series
Law Faculty Podcasts
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Professor David Seipp, Boston University School of Law, gives a talk on 'Forging the English Constitution in 1938. The talk was recorded on 10th March 2015.

Episode Information

Series
Law Faculty Podcasts
People
David Seipp
Keywords
English Constitution
constitution
legal history
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 26/06/2015
Duration: 00:57:28

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Learning how to feel: Spiritual knowledge and emotionally-based narratives of social transformation amongst Nigerian and Congolese pastors in diaspora

Series
International Migration Institute
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IMI Trinity term Visiting Fellow Rafael Cazarin gives an exceptional seminar on narratives of social transformation amongst Nigerian and Congolese pastors in diaspora
The celebration of conferences, the articulation of visions with spiritual gifts and the teachings on everyday life orientate Pentecostal migrants to develop personal skills, frame interpersonal challenges and ‘tune’ their minds to understand sentiments and emotions. Either in Africa or outside Africa, Pentecostal churches affect congregants though a set of multi-level activities in which transformation is the effect of rules of which obedience must be acknowledged.

As part of an ongoing doctoral research carried out in Bilbao, Spain, and, Johannesburg, South Africa this research engages with the current debates on emotions and social transformation exploring their places within church leaders’ narratives within a migratory milieu. Moreover, Cazarin analyses here the modus operandi of Nigerian and Congolese church leaders on articulating congregants’ emotional responses (hope, fear, love, suffering, etc) with everyday life in a foreign city by presenting and exploring three scales in which this process takes place. In doing so, Cazarin intends to related these geographically distant cases by a mutual, recognisable set of emotionally-based interactions, narratives and practices that frames the Pentecostal discourse on transformation.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
International Migration Institute
People
Rafael Cazarin
Keywords
Nigeria
congo
pastor
diaspora
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 26/06/2015
Duration: 00:32:19

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Rumors, riots, and taxis: The politics of Myanmar's new media infrastructure

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Southeast Asia Seminar Trinity Term 2015
In early July 2014, Myanmar's second largest city became the site of anti-Muslim riots, extending a pattern of violence that has developed in the shadow of a much-heralded transition away from military rule. State authorities responded by blocking access to Facebook, locating the riot’s cause in rumours circulating on social media. This explanation for the violence -- riots as the result of rumours and new technology -- has been echoed in journalistic and academic treatments of the issue. This emphasis on technology is understandable. The dissolution of authoritarian ordering of everyday life has been strikingly abrupt, felt daily in the relaxation of censorship and the arrival of telecommunications infrastructure. Mobile phones, Internet, and media technologies previously inaccessible to all but less than 10% of the population are becoming commonplace, and contemporary Myanmar cannot be understood without accounting for their significance. Yet any project to understand events such as the July riots that prefigures the centrality of these technologies risks replicating the deterministic or apolitical explanations offered by state authorities. Accordingly, this talk will argue for attentiveness to those sedimented histories of embodied practice through which cultural and political mobilization is enacted: How are the discourses and affective fields that constitute the mobilization of mass violence such as the July riots being produced, circulated, and received? And how are these cultural and political processes mutating to incorporate new technological infrastructure? This talk will consider these questions, drawing on long-term participant observation in Myanmar and initial findings from the Myanmar Media and Society Research Project, under the Programme in Modern Burmese Studies at St Antony's College.

Matt Schissler has lived and worked in Myanmar and Thailand since 2007. He is based in Yangon, where he manages the Myanmar Media and Society Research Project for St Antony's College, Oxford University. From 2012-2014 he was the Advisor to Paung Ku, a local organization that provides mentoring, financial, and technical assistance to strengthen civil society across Myanmar. Prior to joining Paung Ku in early 2012, Mr Schissler spent nearly five years working with ethnic human rights and media organizations, where he focused on strengthening local capacities to document human rights violations, advocate for human rights, and work as independent journalists in Myanmar. He holds an MSt in International Human Rights Law from Oxford (New College), and earned distinction for a dissertation on the relationship between responses to forced labour demands in villages across eastern Myanmar and transnational efforts to enforce the ILO Forced Labour Convention. He graduated magna cum laude from Whitman College (USA), where he earned BAs in Politics and in Rhetoric/Film Studies. He speaks Burmese.

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Matt Schissler
Keywords
southeast asia
burma
Nyanmar
St Antony's College
oxford
Matt Schissler
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 23/06/2015
Duration: 00:44:26

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The New Madhyamaka

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The New Madhyamaka
This series, hosted by the faculty of Theology at Oxford University, looks at the Indian Buddhist philosophy.
In the past the study of Asian philosophical traditions has often been approached by asking how the theories developed within these non-Western cultures would help us to solve problems in contemporary Western thought. While this approach has its merits, and has produced various interesting instances of "fusion philosophy", this workshop attempted to advance the dialogue between different philosophical traditions in an alternative way. Rather than asking what Asian philosophy can do for us, it set out to investigate which theories, approaches and models from contemporary Western philosophy can used to support, analyze, refine and advance insights into the "big questions" developed during the last three millennia of Asian thought.

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Children and Youth in a Changing World

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Children and Youth in a Changing World
This University of Oxford inter-departmental seminar series is a collaboration between researchers from the Department of Education, the School of Geography and the Environment, the Department of Social Policy and Intervention, and Oxford Department of International Development. It takes place on most Tuesday evenings in two terms.

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Refugees – what’s wrong with history?

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
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Peter Gatrell gives a talk for the Refugee Studies Centre podcast series.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Peter Gatrell
Keywords
refugees
history
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 23/06/2015
Duration: 00:45:07

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UNHCR's protection guidelines: what role for external voices?

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
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Guy Goodwin-Gill gives a talk for the Refugee Studies Centre podcast series.
In 1977, as national refugee status determination procedures were gaining new life, State members of UNHCR’s Executive Committee asked the Office to provide guidance on the interpretation and application of the 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol. The outcome was the 1979 UNHCR Handbook, still widely cited in courts around the world, but substantially unchanged notwithstanding successive ‘re-issues’. Following adoption of its Agenda for Protection in 2000, UNHCR sought to keep up with jurisprudential developments and emergent issues by publishing supplementary guidelines, for example, on exclusion, gender, social group, and children; these were mostly drafted in-house, like the original Handbook, and without any formal input from States or other stakeholders. Following criticism of its 2013 guidelines on military service, however, UNHCR began to consider how external input could be usefully and effectively managed, for example, through the circulation of drafts for comment. Authoritative and influential guidelines will need a solid methodology when it comes to synthesizing best practice and pointing the way ahead, and UNHCR cannot just rely on its statutory and treaty role in ‘supervising the application’ of the 1951 Convention. In some respects, its task is analogous to that of the International Law Commission, incorporating both codification (identifying where States now see the law) and progressive development (showing how the law should develop consistently, if protection is to keep in step with need). So, what are the issues on which further guidance is needed today? What, if any, are the limits to interpretation, and when are new texts required? In drafting guidelines, who should be consulted? And how should others’ views and analysis be taken into account?

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Guy Goodwin-Gill
Keywords
refugees
unhcr
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 23/06/2015
Duration: 00:54:55

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Understanding global refugee policy: the case of naturalisation in Tanzania

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
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Dr James Milner gives a talk for the Refugee Studies Centre seminar series.
Despite the attention paid to new examples of ‘global refugee policy’, we know surprisingly little about the process by which it is made and implemented. Building on the December 2014 special issue of the Journal of Refugee Studies, this seminar introduces the concept of ‘global refugee policy’ and argues for a more critical and systematic examination of the interests and actors that shape the process of making and implementing policy. Drawing on efforts to implement global policy with respect to protracted refugee situations in the context of Tanzania, the seminar considers the range of national and local factors that limited efforts to realise naturalisation for Burundian refugees, and outlines an approach to the future study of global refugee policy.

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
James Milner
Keywords
refugees
burundi
tanzania
naturalisation
asylum seekers
global refugee policy
unhcr
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 23/06/2015
Duration: 00:45:01

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