Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Al-Azhar and Interpretation of Sharia in the New Egyptian Constitution

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
Embed
Dr Masooda Bano, University Research Lecturer, Oxford Department of International Development, gives a talk for the Law, Religion and Social Order: Unpacking the Promise of Sharia workshop held on 17th May 2013.

Episode Information

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Masooda Bano
Keywords
sharia
politics
law
islam
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 03/06/2013
Duration: 00:09:10

Subscribe

Download

Implementing "Sharia" in Syria's liberated areas

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
Embed
Dr Thomas Pierret, Lecturer in Contemporary Islam, University of Edinburgh, gives a talk for the Law, Religion and Social Order: Unpacking the Promise of Sharia workshop held on 17th May 2013.
This is part of Panel 3: Who Interprets the Sharia.
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
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Thomas Pierret
Keywords
sharia
politics
law
islam
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 03/06/2013
Duration: 00:20:45

Subscribe

Download

Pro-Women Legal Reform in Morocco: Is Religion an Obstacle?

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
Embed
Dr Imane Chaara, Departmental Lecturer in Development Economics, Oxford Department of International Development, gives a talk for the Law, Religion and Social Order: Unpacking the Promise of Sharia workshop held on 17th May 2013.
This is part of Panel one: Sharia and Social Reform.

Episode Information

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Imane Chaara
Keywords
sharia
politics
law
islam
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 03/06/2013
Duration: 00:29:10

Subscribe

Download

Comparing Sharia with the Modern Constitutions

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
Embed
Siraj Khan, Research Fellow, Max Planck Foundation for International Peace and the Rule of Law, gives a talk for the Law, Religion and Social Order: Unpacking the Promise of Sharia workshop held on 17th May 2013.
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
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Siraj Khan
Keywords
sharia
politics
law
islam
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 03/06/2013
Duration: 00:22:24

Subscribe

Download

Sharia law and Muslim legal mythology

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
Embed
Professor Robert Gleave, Professor of Arabic Studies at Exeter University, will be opening a workshop on Sharia Law with a lecture; Sharia law and Muslim legal mythology.
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
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Robert Gleave
Keywords
sharia
politics
law
islam
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 03/06/2013
Duration: 00:42:02

Subscribe

Download

Folk Psychology, the Reactive Attitudes and Responsibility

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
Embed
In this talk we first argue that the reactive attitudes originate in very fast non-voluntary processes involving constant facial feedback. In the second part we examine the supposed constitutive relation between the reactive attitudes and responsibility.
This talk explores the connections between the folk psychological project of interpretation, the reactive attitudes and responsibility. The first section argues that the reactive attitudes originate in very fast and to a significant extent, non-voluntary processes involving constant facial feedback. These processes allow for smooth interaction between participants and are important to the interpretive practices that ground intimate relationships as well as to a great many less intense interactions. We will examine cases of facial paralysis (Moebius Syndrome and Botox studies) to support the argument that when these processes are interrupted or impaired, the interpretive project breaks down and social relationships suffer. But do failures of interpretation lead, as Strawson suggests, to the suspension of the reactive attitudes relevant to responsibility assessments? We suggest that in many important instances they do not. Here we consider the cases of children who murder, alien cultures, and psychopaths. In the second part we examine the supposed constitutive relation between the reactive attitudes and responsibility.
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
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Jeanette Kennett
Keywords
social relationships
facial paralysis
interpretation
psychopaths
facial feedback
Moebius Syndrome
reactive attitudes
Botox
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 30/05/2013
Duration: 00:52:04

Subscribe

Download

Feeling like a citizen, living as a denizen: deportees' sense of belonging

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Embed
In the United States, the right to territorial belonging is the only inalienable right U.S. citizens have, and this right is exclusive to U.S. citizens.
Most scholarship on citizenship examines how rights are distributed within a polity, yet rarely considers how citizenship can function as a barrier to territorial rights - the right to live in a particular place. This talk draws from interviews with 30 Jamaican deported former legal permanent residents of the United States to address the question: What can we learn about the construction of citizenship in the 21st century through a consideration of people denied territorial rights? Addressing this question enhances our understanding of citizenship in two ways: 1) Tanya Golash Boza calls into question the assumption that citizenship rights are hierarchical and argue that social, cultural, and legal citizenship rights are non-convergent; and 2) she provides evidence that alienage is not always a salient aspect of the lives of non-U.S. citizens. Instead, it becomes relevant at certain points, and facing deportation is one of those points.
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
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Tanya Golash Boza
Keywords
politics
law
migration
compas
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 29/05/2013
Duration: 00:28:59

Subscribe

Download

Lives in Limbo; Immigration, Schooling, and the and the Transition to Illegality

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Embed
The recent political debates in the United States have raised awareness of the untenable situation facing more than 2.1 million undocumented immigrant children and young adults who have lived in the U.S. since childhood.
Each year, tens of thousands of undocumented youngsters leave American high schools to embark upon uncertain futures. But until now, very little has been known about the ways in which these young people come of age and how legal barriers shape their adolescent and adult trajectories. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in Greater Los Angeles, and 150 life history interviews with 20-34 year old, Mexican-origin, undocumented young adults, this study finds that conflicting and contradictory laws uncomfortably position undocumented immigrant youth between spaces of belonging and illegality. As laws begin to narrowly circumscribe their everyday lives they must learn to be illegal. Ultimately, through their transition to illegality, immigration status emerges as a master status.
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
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Roberto G Gonzales
Keywords
politics
law
migration
compas
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 29/05/2013
Duration: 00:31:30

Subscribe

Download

Campzenship: rethinking the camp as a political space

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Embed
Nando Sigona, University of Birmingham, gives a talk for the COMPAS seminar series.
Drawing on ethnographic research in Italian refugee/nomad camps where forcibly displaced Roma from former Yugoslavia were sheltered, this talk reflects on the spatial dimension of social relations and the social construction of spaces in camps and camp-like institutions. It argues that Agamben conceptualisation of the camp as a space of exception fails to grasp the complexity of social relations in camps. Focusing on the resources, entitlements, and rights of camp residents and their interactions with the state apparatus, the paper explores what Nando Sigona term the comfort of exceptionality, and proposes the concept of campzenship to capture the specific form of citizenship produced in/by the camp, and the legacy of the camp on former inhabitants.
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
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Nando Sigona
Keywords
politics
law
migration
compas
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 29/05/2013
Duration: 00:30:46

Subscribe

Download

Citizenship Shadow; Obscene Inclusion, Abject Belonging, or, the Regularities of Migrant Irregularity

Series
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Embed
This talk introduces the proposition that citizenship and alienage (or migrant status) may be best understood as two key figures of a spectrum of bordered identities.
- categorical distinctions among different sorts of people configured in relation to territorially defined states by the differences in space produced by borders. Thinking with the concept of bordered identities, it becomes possible to better appreciate how bordered exclusions do an inclusionary work that is inseparable from the systemic processes of migrant illegalization and the subordination of migrant labour. By juxtaposing the scene of exclusion to what may be called the obscene of inclusion, we likewise complicate conventional notions of belonging and various sorts of abject belonging or membership come better into view. Hence, we begin to see not only the necropolitical extremities of regulatory regimes of border policing but also the biopolitical regularities that they produce - above all, the irregularity of irregular migration. In the shadows of a bordered world, then, migrant illegality emerges as the shadow of citizenship itself.
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
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
People
Nicholas de Genova
Keywords
politics
law
migration
compas
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 29/05/2013
Duration: 00:41:51

Subscribe

Download

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 2363
  • Page 2364
  • Page 2365
  • Page 2366
  • Page 2367
  • Page 2368
  • Page 2369
  • Page 2370
  • Page 2371
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Login
'Oxford Podcasts' X Account @oxfordpodcasts | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2026 The University of Oxford