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Young Lives 7th survey round: Seven headline findings and what the future holds for this 20+ year study

Series
The Young Lives Podcast
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Young Lives has just published results from the study’s 7th survey round. Director Marta Favara reflects on this latest data collection, highlights seven key findings, and shares the next steps for this unique longitudinal study.
Young Lives, the longest running survey of poverty and inequality ever conducted in the Global South, has evolved over 20 + years, tracking 12,000 children as they have grown up in low -and middle- income countries. Marta Favara discusses innovations introduced in Round 7 to capture the experiences of young adults navigating multiple crises. Delighted to release the results, she talks through seven key findings across three areas: education and learning; health, nutrition and well-being; and work and family lives. Looking ahead she explains what is next for this unique study, including shaping policies in each study country and internationally.

Episode Information

Series
The Young Lives Podcast
People
Marta Favara
Julia Tilford
Keywords
young lives
climate change
Covid-19
Longitudinal research
crises
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 18/03/2025
Duration: 00:15:26

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Naima Nasir - Contextual Considerations in Global Health

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
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Naima Nasir discusses the importance of understanding and considering context in the determination of global health policies and health systems.
Naima Nasir is a health researcher and teacher on the MSc in IHTM with a wealth of experience working in global health in Africa and Asia.
In this podcast Naima talks about the need to develop comprehensive and context specific global health solutions. We are always working
within complex health systems and this means recognising that many of the global health challenges we are trying to solve are
interconnected and they are influenced by different factors, social, economic, political and environmental.

Episode Information

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
People
Naima Nasir
Carine Asnong
Keywords
global health
tropical medicine
international health and tropical medicine
Department: Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health
Date Added: 17/03/2025
Duration: 00:13:47

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Ellen Nohle

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Eitan Diamond

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Humanitarian Displacement? The (mis)appropriation of Humanitarian Principles to Justify Mass Displacement

Series
Public International Law Part III
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Eitan Diamond and Ellen Nohle explore the application of the prohibition of forcible displacement in armed conflict and the extent to which the non-consensual relocation of civilians may be prohibited under the IHL rules on the conduct of hostilities.
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
Public International Law Part III
People
Eitan Diamond
Ellen Nohle
Keywords
international law
pil
prohibition of forcible displacement
armed conflict
international humanitarian law
Department: Faculty of Law
Date Added: 14/03/2025
Duration: 00:32:07

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Why social media is the new frontier for misinformation, and what we can do about it: Professor Mohsen Mosleh and Cameron Martel

Series
The Human Interface: An OII Podcast
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The link between misinformation and polarisation on social media, what's being done to combat misinformation and disinformation, the role of social media platforms and regulators, and where the research gaps are.
In the sixth episode of the OII Podcast, our experts discuss topics such as:
* The real world impacts that arise when people increasingly identify with their political tribes online
* What role governments are playing in combating misinformation, and what more should be done to tackle this problem at a policy level
* What the future holds for misinformation on social media, in the wake of generative AI, deepfakes and ever-evolving algorithms

Professor Mohsen Mosleh is Associate Professor of Social Data Science at the Oxford Internet Institute. His research focuses on how misinformation and disinformation spread on social media, and how ties are formed on social networks.

Cameron Martel is a PhD candidate at MIT Sloan School of Management and an incoming assistant professor at John Hopkins Carey Business School, focusing on why people believe and share misinformation, what forces shape the online social networks through which misinformation may spread, and which content moderation interventions are effective for improving online information quality.

Veena McCoole is Media and Communications Manager for the Oxford Internet Institute.

The OII Podcast looks at issues and developments in the digital world that matter to us all, and explores them through thought-provoking conversations with experts and practitioners.

To keep up with forthcoming episodes, follow the OII on social media where new episodes will be announced. Our social media links can be found on our website: https://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/ (see end of page).

Episode Information

Series
The Human Interface: An OII Podcast
People
Cameron Martel
Mohsen Mosleh
Veena McCoole
Keywords
social media
misinformation
policy
generative ai
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 12/03/2025
Duration: 00:25:27

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Jérôme Drevon

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From Jihad to Politics: How Syrian Jihadis Embraced Politics

Series
Middle East Centre Booktalk
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In this Friday seminar, Jérôme Drevon discusses his book ‘From Jihad to Politics: How Syrian Jihadis Embraced Politics’ (OUP 2024).
Bio
Jérôme Drevon is senior analyst on Jihad and Modern Conflict at the International Crisis Group (ICG). Jerome studies the evolution of non-state armed groups with a special emphasis on Jihadis, especially how they can become more pragmatic overtime. For the past few years, he has also focused more thoroughly on how other actors - including states and humanitarians - can engage some of these groups, who now rule millions of civilians worldwide. Jerome has conducted extensive field research in conflict zones, including Syria, where he interviewed hundreds of Jihadi militants and foreign fighters from their military, political, and religious leaders to their foot soldiers – to gain a deeper understanding of their changing political views in armed conflicts.

Abstract
The Syrian regime unleashed unprecedented violence to suppress large-scale non-violent protests amid the Arab uprisings. Hundreds of armed groups formed throughout the country to defend the protesters and fight back. However, in contrast to other conflicts previously dominated by al-Qaeda and Islamic State, the two largest Syrian Jihadi groups, Ahrar al-Sham and then Jabhat al-Nusra, rejected global jihad and began to cultivate new ties with the population, other armed opposition groups, and even foreign states. This strategic shift is a response to the Jihadi paradox--a realization that while Jihadis excel at leading insurgencies, they fail to achieve political victories.

In From Jihad to Politics, Jérôme Drevon offers an examination of the Syrian armed opposition, tracing the emergence of Jihadi groups in the conflict, their dominance, and their political transformation. Drawing upon field research and interviews with Syrian insurgents in northwestern Syria and Turkey, Drevon demonstrates how the context of a local conflict can shape armed groups' behavior in unexpected ways. Further, he marshals unique evidence from the Arab world's most intense conflict to explain why the trajectory of the transnational Jihadi movement has altered course in recent years.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre Booktalk
People
Jérôme Drevon
Neil Ketchley
Keywords
syria
Turkey
international relations
Jihad
politics
conflict zones
Arab world
middle east
insurgencies
al-qaeda
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 11/03/2025
Duration: 00:46:02

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Privacy, Verification, Robustness: A Cryptographer's perspective on ML

Series
Strachey Lectures
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Strachey Lecture: Privacy, Verification, Robustness: A Cryptographer's perspective on ML
Cryptographic tools enable the safe use of technology platforms controlled by worst case computationally bounded adversaries.In this talk I will show how cryptographic paradigms and tools can be used to address trust issues in various phases of the machine learning pipeline. We will touch on approaches for achieving privacy, correctness, and robustness in presence of adversaries.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Shafi Goldwasser
Keywords
robustness
cryptographic
machine learning
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 11/03/2025
Duration: 01:04:18

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Patrice Sandrin

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

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