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Leading Transformation:Women at the Cutting Edge of Research and Practice

Series
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
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Plenary session on Leading Transformation: Women at the Cutting Edge of Research and Practice from the International Women's Leadership Symposium.
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
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
People
Catherine Mitchell
Ana Brito e Melo
Olive Heffernan
Monika Wehrle-MacDevette
Keywords
social science
gender
social change
Environment
science
climate change
Department: Oxford University Centre for the Environment
Date Added: 31/08/2010
Duration: 01:10:04

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Inspiring Women - Inspiring Change

Series
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
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Jane Butcher, Assistant Director of the UK Resource Centre for Women in Science, Engineering and Technology gives a talk for the International Women's Leadership Symposium.
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
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
People
Jane Butcher
Keywords
science
gender
engineering society
technology
entrepreneurship
Department: Oxford University Centre for the Environment
Date Added: 31/08/2010
Duration: 00:24:20

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Welcome to the International Women's Leadership Symposium

Series
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
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Cynthia Chang, Preseident of Females in Engineering, Science and Technology introduces the International Women's Leadership Symposium.
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
Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
People
Cynthia Chang
Keywords
Environment
gender
entrepreneurship
climate change
Department: Oxford University Centre for the Environment
Date Added: 31/08/2010
Duration: 00:04:17

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Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender

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Energy, Climate Change, Social Entrepreneurship and Gender
International Women's Leadership Symposium. Celebrating the exceptional work and contributions of women's research and entrepreneurial endeavours - on some of our most critical challenges of climate change, sustainable energy and equity. Held on the 16th of June 2010 at the Said Business School, Oxford. Organised jointly by the UK Research Centre (UKERC) and the Females in Engineering, Science and Technology (FEST) organisation.

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An Africanist's Legacy: Responsibilised citizens? - Discourses and practices around care of the self among HIV positive people in Tanzania

Series
Anthropology
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Presented by Dr Nadine Beckmann (Leeds) at 'An Africanist's Legacy - A Workshop in Celebration of the Work of David Parkin', held at the School of Anthropology, Oxford, 8-9 July 2010.

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Nadine Beckmann
Keywords
tanzania
Africa
anthropology
Health
HIV/AIDS
An Africanist's Legacy
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 24/08/2010
Duration: 00:32:47

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An Africanist's Legacy: Performing fragmentary movements - perspectives on the life-history of a Muslim dancer-choreographer

Series
Anthropology
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Presented by Asst. prof. Zulfiker Hirji (University of York, Toronto) at 'An Africanist's Legacy - A Workship in Celebration of the Work of David Parkin', held at The School of Anthropology, Oxford, 8-9 July 2010.

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Zulfiker Hirji
Keywords
life-history
dance
muslim
anthropology
An Africanist's Legacy
South Asia
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 24/08/2010
Duration: 00:29:00

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An Africanist's Legacy: Credit societies and the search for school fees in Uganda

Series
Anthropology
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Presented by Dr David Mills (Oxford) at 'An Africanist's Legacy - A Workshop in Celebration of the Work of David Parkin' held at Oxford, 8-9 July 2010. Co-authored by Richard Vokes.

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
David Mills
Keywords
anthropology
An Africanist's Legacy
education
Africa
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 24/08/2010
Duration: 00:21:20

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Credit societies and the search for school fees in Uganda

Series
Kellogg College
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Presented at 'An Africanist's Legacy - A Workshop in Celebration of the Work of David Parkin' held at Oxford, 8-9 July 2010. Co-authored by Richard Vokes.

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
David Mills
Keywords
anthropology
education
Africa
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 24/08/2010
Duration: 00:21:20

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The Effect of Maternal Stress on Birth Outcomes: Exploiting a Natural Experiment

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Florencia Torche, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Faculty Affiliate at the Steinhardt School of Education, NYU and Research Affiliate at INSPIRES, NYU School of Medicine.
A growing literature highlights that in-utero conditions are consequential for individual outcomes throughout the life cycle, but research assessing causal processes is scarce. This paper examines the causal effect of one such condition (maternal stress) on one such outcomes (birth weight). Birth weight is a key outcomes because it has been shown to affect cognitive, educational, and socioeconomic attainment throughout the individual lifecycle. Using a major earthquake as a natural experiment and a difference in difference methodology, we show that maternal stress has a substantial detrimental effect on birth weight. This effect is focused on the first trimester of gestation, and it is mediated by reduced gestational age rather than intra-uterine growth restriction. Several robustness checks reject the hypothesis that the association is driven by unobserved selectivity of mothers. The findings highlight the relevance of understanding the early emergence of unequal opportunity and of investing in maternal wellbeing since the onset of pregnancy.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Florencia Torche
Keywords
stress
sociology
maternal
birth
pregnancy
babies
socioeconomic
baby
cognitive
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:54:43

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School Racial Composition and Racial Preferences for Friends among Adolescents

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Jennifer Flashman (University of Oxford).
Adolescents experience different levels of exposure to individuals of other races. Their exposure may shape their racial preferences for friends in important ways, with serious implications for school integration, bussing, and tracking policies. A small body of work studies the impact of school racial composition on racial preferences for friends using discrete choice models. This work uniformly shows that preferences for friends of a particular racial group decline as the size of that group increases within a school. However, the validity of these estimates rests on the assumption that the odds of choosing one possible friend over another remain constant regardless of the other friend alternatives included in or excluded from the set of possible choices. This assumption is known as the IIA assumption (independence of irrelevant alternatives). Violations of IIA can dramatically affect estimations of individuals? preferences. Given that adolescents have a racial preference for friends, if racially identical friend alternatives are included in the choice set, the preference an individual has for friends of that race are distributed across those identical alternatives. If IIA is violated, choice models will provide an underestimate of preferences for black friends when there are many black students within a school and an overestimate of preferences for black friends when there are few black students within a school. Consequently, results from past research suggesting that blacks have stronger preferences for black friends when there are few blacks in a school may be an artifact of violations of the assumption inherent in the modeling strategy. Through a careful analysis of both simulated and actual data, this presentation provides a corrective to past research on friendship choice by showing 1) that key model assumptions are violated when discrete choice analysis is used to model friendship choice, 2) that results are extremely sensitive to violations of model assumptions, and 3) that after correcting models, estimations show that increased contact between racial groups leads to stronger preferences for cross-race friends.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Jennifer Flashman
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:40:14

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