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The Emerging Agro-Industrial Complex in Burma: the Politicis of Land Reform, Land Grabs and Resistances, and the Chinese Presence

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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This talk examines Land Politicis in Burma
Kevin Woods has been engaged in research and activism on land politics in Burma for over a decade. His initial research focused on the Burma-China timber trade, but since then has expanded to include research on the country's emerging agribusiness sector as the frontline of land grabs and conflict. Most of his work has focused on examining Chinese agribusiness in northern Burma as part of China's opium substitution programme, and its entanglements with drug militias, counterinsurgency and land grabs. Most recently Kevin has conducted participatory action research on farmers' resistances to land grabs during the current reform period under the new military-backed government. Kevin's land reform research at the national scale, supported by specific cases studies in contested ethnic resource-rich territories, allows him to go beyond the veneer of 'the new Myanmar' to understand how Burma's infamous military institution and crony capitalism begin to merge with neoliberal development, this time backed by western development aid and finance institutions.
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
Asian Studies Centre
People
Kevin Woods
Keywords
Southasia; St Antony's; Asian Stdies Centre; land reform
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 30/05/2014
Duration: 01:32:05

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Histories of the Self

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
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A roundtable discussion with Lynn Hunt (Humanitas Visiting Professor in Historiography), Lyndal Roper (Regius Professor of History) and Elleke Boehmer (Professor of World Literature in English).

Episode Information

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
People
Lynn Hunt
Lyndal Roper
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
literature
history
self-representation
Global history
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 29/05/2014
Duration: 00:46:26

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The French Revolution in a Global Perspective

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
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A lecture by the Humanitas Visiting Professor in Historiography, Lynn Hunt.

Episode Information

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
People
Lynn Hunt
Keywords
french revolution
historiography
Global history
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 29/05/2014
Duration: 00:52:20

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Do Human Rights Need a History?

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
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Lynn Hunt (Humanitas Visiting Professor in Historiography) in discussion with Sandra Fredman (Rhodes Professor of Law & Co-Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Human Rights for Future Generations)

Episode Information

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
People
Lynn Hunt
Sandra Fredman
Keywords
human rights
history
historiography
Global history
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 29/05/2014
Duration: 00:56:36

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Some atoms I have known - origins, development and applications of atom probe tomography

Series
Department of Materials
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Professor George Smith FRS Emeritus Professor of Materials, University of Oxford delivers the Hume-Rothery Lecture 2014.
Professor George Smith is a materials scientist who, with Alfred Cerezo and Terry Godfrey, invented the Atom-Probe Tomograph in 1988. He is currently a Professor and was formerly head of the Department of Materials at the University of Oxford.
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
Department of Materials
People
George Smith
Keywords
atom
materials
Tomograph
Department: Department of Materials
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 01:07:47

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Michael Govan lecture - "A View from the Pacific: Re-envisioning the Art Museum"

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
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The Director of the Los Angeles County Museum gives a talk for the Humanitas Visiting Professorship in Museums, Galleries and Libraries. Chaired by Christopher Brown (Director, Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology, Oxford).

Episode Information

Series
Humanitas - Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge
People
Michael Govan
Christopher Brown
Keywords
art
museums
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 00:57:02

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The First Fall of the Roman Empire

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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Walter Scheidel, Professor of Classics & History at Stanford University, gave the 2013 annual lecture held in memory of eminent Roman historian Sir Ronald Syme Lecture. The lecture was introduced by College President, Hermione Lee.

Episode Information

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
walter scheidel
Keywords
roman empire
ancient history
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 01:06:00

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Who buried the bodies?

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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Kamila Shamsie, the Pakistani-born author of books including In the City by the Sea and Burnt Shadows, gives a talk as part of the 2014 Wolfson Lecture series on 'New Challenges for South Asian Writing in the 21st Century'.
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
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Kamila Shamsie
Keywords
contemporary fiction
women writers
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 00:43:50

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Janus: At the mirror wall

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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Romesh Gunesekera, the celebrated British/Sri Lankan author of the Booker-prize nominated 'Reef', presents the first of the 2014 Wolfson Lecture series on 'New Challenges for South Asian Writing in the 21st century'.
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
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
romesh gunesekera
Keywords
sri lanka
contemporary fiction
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 00:40:26

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DNA USA: a genetic portrait of America

Series
Wolfson College Podcasts
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Based on his latest book, Bryan Sykes, professor of human genetics at Oxford University, gave a public lecture at Wolfson College exploring the rich ancestral tapestry of the American nation.
From the moment that our DNA fingerprints could be profiled, genes have served as invaluable forensic tools to settle legal matters, exonerate the innocent, and identify the dead. But, as geneticists like Bryan Sykes have revealed in recent groundbreaking work, they can also help answer larger existential questions: Where do we hail from? How did we get here? And in what ways are we all related? In DNA USA, Sykes, a professor of human genetics at the University of Oxford, delivers the most comprehensive genetic portrait yet of our country. Genealogy is big business in America because we crave links to an illustrious past, whether to Mayflower passages, Native American chieftains, or African queens. But it also reflects our insatiable curiosity about forebears who fled, by necessity or by force, countries and continents far away. In a land of new starts and reinventions, American family trees can be frustrating for their shallow roots. However, to Bryan Sykes that’s merely a pretext to dig deeper.
In his best-selling work The Seven Daughters of Eve, Sykes showed how our mitochondrial DNA pointed to global matrilineal ancestors. In DNA USA he also utilizes the Y (or male) chromosomes and the new technique of “Chromosome Painting” to help settle arguments over lineage in our relatively young society. Though we are all born with surnames that tell one part of the story, those names fragment and mutate (and flat-out lie) with far more regularity than the DNA we inherit. Can a MacDonald in Houston rightly claim Gaelic ancestry? Is a Cohen in Milwaukee actually the descendant of Moses’s brother? Are African Americans with European surnames largely free of European chromosomes? Even more intriguingly, Sykes uses genetic analysis to ponder other long-unsolved mysteries such as when and how humans first inhabited the Americas, whether it was only by foot and across the Bering land bridge, and the unusual implications of Polynesian chromosomes “jumping” across Siberia and into the pre-Columbian Native American population. Like de Tocqueville with a DNA kit, Sykes travels across the country meeting (and swabbing) genealogists, anthropologists, celebrities, and average Americans to paint a fascinating genetic portrait of our nation. For fans of Henry Louis Gates’s series African American Lives or NBC’s Who Do You Think You Are?, DNA USA suggests an even richer American tapestry than we could ever imagine.
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
Wolfson College Podcasts
People
Bryan Sykes
Keywords
population genetics
ancestry
DNA
native americans
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 28/05/2014
Duration: 01:06:34

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