Politics and International Relations Podcasts
Education Podcasts
Podcasts from the Department of Politics and International relations and its centres.
Location:
United States
Genres:
Education Podcasts
News & Politics Podcasts
Arts & Culture Podcasts
Philosophy Podcasts
History Podcasts
Description:
Podcasts from the Department of Politics and International relations and its centres.
Language:
English
Episodes
Fear and Loathing International Relations - Cyril Foster Lecture 2017
3/16/2017
Although the 2003 Iraq War was linked to the "War on Terror" the case for the war was presented, at least in the UK, within the terms of the established framework of international relations, with the UN at the centre. The aftermath of the war pushed the UK into an arena in which terrorist methods were regularly employed and it struggled to cope. The lecture will explore what this might mean for future British interventions.
Duration:00:55:20
The Responsibility to Protect in a Time of Trump: Can Human Protection Weather the Storm?
12/9/2016
Professor Alex Bellamy (University of Queensland) discusses new challenges for implementing Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principles in the current age. Bellamy, who is also Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, outlines his view that R2P has gained normative acceptance throughout the international community at a much higher level that in previous decades. Significant progress has been achieved such as putting North Korean human rights on the table. With...
Duration:00:48:07
Twenty-five Years in the Search for Peace: Reflections on the Nobel Peace Prize
8/22/2016
Geir Lundestad, a Norwegian historian, who until 2014 served as the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute, delivered the 2016 Cyril Foster Lecture, 'Twenty-five Years in the Search for Peace: Reflections on the Nobel Peace Prize', on 3rd March 2016. The Cyril Foster Lecture is the University's principal annual guest lecture in the field of International Relations. It has attracted a most distinguished group of lecturers. The Cyril Foster bequest specifies that the lectures are to deal...
Duration:00:52:48
'A Feminist Voyage Through International Relations'
6/22/2016
Professor Emerita J. Ann Tickner (University of Southern California) delivers a lecture on the role of feminist theory in the field of international relations. Tickner's talk covers the genesis of the feminist approach to IR, which she herself pioneered some 25 years ago. She details how the feminist approach is methodologically distinct as most of IR relies on state-centric approaches while feminist theory is inherently sociological. One of Tickner's examples is the investigation of how...
Duration:00:44:22
'Poland: Internationalism, Nationalism and Challenges of the International Environment'
5/16/2016
President of the Stefan Batory Foundation Aleksander Smolar discusses nationalism and internationalism in contemporary Poland
Duration:00:41:38
Text in the Social Sciences Session 3: Scaling and Dictionary Approaches
4/18/2016
Félix Krawatzek and Andy Eggers discuss methods to analyse large bodies of text in more systematic and reliable ways.
Duration:00:47:30
Text in the Social Sciences Session 2: Text as Discourse
4/18/2016
Félix Krawatzek and Andy Eggers discuss methods to analyse large bodies of text in more systematic and reliable ways.
Duration:00:48:11
Text in the Social Sciences Session 1: Getting Started
4/18/2016
Félix Krawatzek and Andy Eggers discuss methods to analyse large bodies of text in more systematic and reliable ways.
Duration:01:05:05
Book Launch: 'Emotional Diplomacy: Official Emotion on the International Stage'
4/12/2016
Professor Todd Hall discussed his recently published book, 'Emotional Diplomacy: Official Emotion on the International Stage.'
Duration:00:22:03
Challenging charisma: constructing grievance and the limits of legitimacy in post-Crimea Russia
2/4/2016
Samuel Greene talks about outbreak of protests in Russia and political events after the annexation of Crimea
Duration:00:34:52
Geopolitics of Fear: South East Europe in a dangerous neighbourhood
2/4/2016
The seminar series addresses some of the acute problems affecting Europe, as seen especially from a South Eastern European perspective, and combine the thematic (refugee, economic and political crises) with the country specific approaches.
Duration:01:10:05
Divergences between the law of marriage and its social meaning: are same-sex marriages unique?
2/1/2016
In 2013, the UK Parliament legalized same-sex marriage in England and Wales. Dr Scot Peterson discusses whether this is the first time there has been a divergence in the general understanding of marriage and the definition enshrined in law.
Duration:00:52:58
Intimate Rivals: Japanese Domestic Politics and a Rising China
2/1/2016
Sheila A. Smith, a senior fellow for Japan studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, discusses her new book, "Intimate Rivals: Japanese Domestic Politics and a Rising China."
Duration:00:44:48
Incorporating Ethnicity: Ethnodevelopment Policy in Latin America, 1985-2005
2/1/2016
Professor Sarah Chartock discusses ethnodevelopment policies, illustrated with the cases of Peru, Ecuador and Guatemala.
Duration:00:35:45
Oxford Women in Politics with Dr Anne-Marie Slaughter
1/28/2016
Dr Slaughter discusses workplace policies and the value we place on care of children and other loved ones.
Duration:00:29:56
War and Ecology in China: Henan Province, the Yellow River and beyond
11/25/2015
Dr Micah Muscolino discusses his new book entitled "The Ecology of War in China: Henan Province, the Yellow River, and Beyond, 1938–1950." This book explores the interplay between war and environment in Henan Province, a hotly contested frontline territory that endured massive environmental destruction and human disruption during the conflict between China and Japan during World War II. In a desperate attempt to block Japan's military advance, Chinese Nationalist armies under Chiang Kai-shek...
Duration:00:50:46
Migration, Protection and Reception: The 'crisis' in the Mediterranean
10/25/2015
How Europe's external border controls that limit and monitor the entry of non-Europeans relates to the reception of migrants in the European Union
Duration:00:57:16
'Examinations and Gender Gaps' Panel 2: Experiences from Oxford
10/19/2015
Both undergraduate degrees in Politics, Philosophy and Economics, as well as History and Politics have a gender discrepancy in finals results. This workshop addresses the reasons for these differences. This workshop organised by the Oxford Q-Step Centre* (OQC) brings together key speakers from Oxford and beyond to discuss gender differences in examinations in the context of courses that include quantitative methods.
Duration:00:59:08
'Examinations and Gender Gaps' Panel 1: Best Practices for Examination and Ways of Combatting Gender Gaps
10/19/2015
Both undergraduate degrees in Politics, Philosophy and Economics, as well as History and Politics have a gender discrepancy in finals results. This workshop addresses the reasons for these differences. This workshop organised by the Oxford Q-Step Centre (OQC) brings together key speakers from Oxford and beyond to discuss gender differences in examinations in the context of courses that include quantitative methods.
Duration:01:13:51
Making Sovereign Finance and Human Rights Work
10/14/2015
Discussion of 'Making Sovereign Finance and Human Rights Work,' a recently-published collection that introduces novel legal theories and analyses the links between sovereign debt and human rights from a variety of perspectives. Poor public resource management and the global financial crisis curbing fundamental fiscal space, millions thrown into poverty, and authoritarian regimes running successful criminal campaigns with the help of financial assistance are all phenomena that raise...
Duration:01:25:40