| Virtue Ethics |
First of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
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| The Kosova Liberation Army - a Living Inheritance? |
ELAC/CCW Seminar Series with Professor James Pettifer (Oxford) on 15 May 2012. |
James Pettifer |
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| Taking Soldiers Seriously |
ELAC/CCW Seminar Series podcast with Professor Cheyney Ryan (Oregon/ ELAC Visiting Fellow) on 22 May 2012. |
Cheyney Ryan |
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| The ICC at 10 |
ELAC Panel Discussion with Professor Jennifer Welsh, Dr David Rodin, Janina Dill and Dapo Akande (ELAC)on 20th May 2012. |
Jennifer Welsh, David Rodin, Dapo Akande, Janina Dill |
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| Religion in War and Peace |
Professor Nigel Biggar (Oxford), Professor Tony Coady (CAPPE) and Dr Rama Mani (Oxford) discuss the issue of religion in war and peace as part of the ELAC/CCW lecture series. Moderated by Jennifer Welsh (Oxford). |
Nigel Biggar, Tony Coady, Rama Mani, Jennifer Welsh |
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| Literature and Form 4: What is "Comparative Literature"? |
Dr Catherine Brown gives the fourth and final lecture in the Literature and Form lecture series. With a philosophical discussion on what Comparative Literature is and how we can study 'literature in comparison'. |
Catherine Brown |
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| Literature and Form 3: Multiple Plotting |
Dr Catherine Brown gives the third lecture in the Literature and Form lecture series. Including the differing ways writers plot their work; from multi-plotted works like Ulysses (Joyce) to double plotted works like Daniel Deronda (George Eliot). |
Catherine Brown |
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| Literature and Form 2: Chapters |
Dr. Catherine Brown offers a series of talks introducing different writing forms and their use in great novels: In the second lecture, Brown talks about the ways in which writers choose to break up their works into chapters, parts, and volumes. |
Catherine Brown |
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| Literature and Form 1: Unreliable Narrators |
Dr. Catherine Brown offers a series introducing different writing forms and their use in great novels: In the first lecture, Brown discusses the use of the unreliable narrator, particularly in Nabokov's Lolita and McEwan's Atonement. |
Catherine Brown |
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| Delegation of Powers and Authority in International Criminal Law |
Dr Shlomit Wallerstein (Oxford) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 8th May 2012. Introduced by Dr David Rodin. |
Shlomit Wallerstein |
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| Intervention in Libya: A Humanitarian Success? |
Professor Alan Kuperman (Texas) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 24th April 2012. |
Alan Kuperman |
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| 07. 'Old Europe' - pensions, taxes and alternatives |
Professor David Coleman from Dept of Social Policy, University of Oxford, gives a talk from his "Demographic Trends and Problems of the Modern World" series talking about the issue of population ageing. |
David Coleman |
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| 06. Demographic behaviour of immigrant and minority populations |
Professor David Coleman from Dept of Social Policy, University of Oxford, gives a talk from his "Demographic Trends and Problems of the Modern World" series talking about immigrant and minority populations. |
David Coleman |
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| 05. International migration: guest workers, dependents, asylum and others |
Professor David Coleman from Dept of Social Policy, University of Oxford, gives a talk from his "Demographic Trends and Problems of the Modern World" series talking about international migration. |
David Coleman |
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| 04. The retreat of mortality - 20th and 21st century trends |
Professor David Coleman from Dept of Social Policy, University of Oxford, gives a talk from his "Demographic Trends and Problems of the Modern World" series talking about trends in mortality. |
David Coleman |
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| 03. The 'Second Demographic Transition' - new forms of family |
Professor David Coleman from Dept of Social Policy, University of Oxford, gives a talk from his "Demographic Trends and Problems of the Modern World" series talking about the 'Second Demographic Transition'. |
David Coleman |
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| DH Lawrence 7. Reception History |
Catherine Brown gives the Seventh and final lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| DH Lawrence 6. Birds, Beasts and Children |
Catherine Brown gives the sixth lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| Iran's Nuclear Programme and International Law |
Professor Daniel Joyner (University of Alabama School of Law) gievs a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 6th March 2012. Introduced by Professor Dapo Akande. |
Daniel Joyner |
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| UN Conflict Management in East Timor |
Olav Ofstad (ELAC Visiting Fellow 2011), gives a talk for the ELAC Discussion Event on 28 Feb 2012. |
Olav Ofstad, Jennifer Welsh |
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| Alan Turing: The One Who Became a Zero |
Andrew Hodges (author of Alan Turing: The Enigma) delivers a lecture on Alan Turing, the founder of modern computer science. This is the third annual lecture for LGBT history month. |
Andrew Hodges |
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| DH Lawrence 5. The Alps |
Catherine Brown gives the fifth lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| DH Lawrence 4. The World at Large |
Catherine Brown gives the fourth lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| DH Lawrence 3. Christianity |
Catherine Brown gives the third lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| King Lear |
Showing how generations of critics - and Shakespeare himself - have rewritten the ending of King Lear, this sixteenth Approaching Shakespeare lecture engages with the question of tragedy and why it gives pleasure. |
Emma Smith |
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| Gendering Counterinsurgency |
Dr Laleh Khalili (SOAS) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 21 Feb 2012. |
Laleh Khalili |
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| Building a Business: Marketing and Product Development |
Patrick Mawhood (Head of Product Manufacturing at Sky IQ) discusses marketing and developing your product or service. |
Patrick Mawhood |
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| Building a Business: Managing People, Managing Teams |
Tim Cook (Non-Executive Director of Isis Innovation) discusses managing people and teams. |
Tim Cook |
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| Living With the Enemy: The Ethics of Belligerent Military Occupation |
Professor Cecile Fabre (Fellow in Philosophy, Lincoln College Oxford) gives a talk for the ELAC seminar series on 14th February 2012. |
Cecile Fabre |
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| Targeted Killing: Exploring its Legality, Morality and Effectiveness |
Professor Amos N. Guiora (University of Utah) with respondent Professor Jeremy Waldron (New York University School of Law and Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory, Oxford) give a talk for the ELAC seminar series on 6 Feb 2012. |
Amos Guiora, Jeremy Waldon |
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| DH Lawrence 2. Humour |
Catherine Brown gives the second lecture in the DH Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| DH Lawrence 1. Consciousness |
Catherine Brown gives her first lecture in the D.H. Lawrence series. |
Catherine Brown |
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| King John |
At the heart of King John is the death of his rival Arthur: this fifteenth lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series looks at the ways history and legitimacy are complicated in this plotline. |
Emma Smith |
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| The People's Planet: Reconnecting climate science, climate policy and reality |
Myles Allen (Professor of Geosystem Science, School of Geography and the Environment and Department of Physics) delivers his inaugural lecture on 28 Nov 2011. |
Myles Allen |
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| Neuroscience Can Tell Us About Morality |
What can science tell us about morality? Many philosophers would say, 'nothing at all'. Facts don't imply values, they say. you need further argument to move from facts about us and about the world to conclusions about what we ought to do. |
Patricia Churchland |
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| Is Nothing Sacred? Free Speech and Religion |
Professor A C Grayling delivers the 2011 Ralf Dahrendorf Memorial Lecture, with responses by Charles Moore and Dr. Usama Hasan. Filmed on 10 June 2011. |
A.C. Grayling, Charles Moore, Usama Hasan, Timothy Garton Ash |
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| Pericles, Prince of Tyre |
Pericles has been on the margins of the Shakespearean canon: this fourteenth lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series shows some of its self-conscious artistry and contemporary popularity. |
Emma Smith |
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| Targeted Killing in War and Peace: A Philosophical Analysis |
Professor Fernando Teson (Florida State University College of Law) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW Seminar Series on 31 Jan 2012. Introduced by Dr David Rodin. |
Fernando Teson |
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| Ending Wars in a Wilsonian World: Sovereignty at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 |
Professor Leonard Smith (Oberlin) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW Seminar Series on 24 Jan 2012. |
Leonard Smith |
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| Richard III |
In this thirteenth lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series the focus is on the inevitability of the ending of Richard III: does the play endorse Richmond's final victory? |
Emma Smith |
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| The Comedy of Errors |
Lecture 12 in the Approaching Shakespeare series asks how seriously we can take the farcical exploits of Comedy of Errors, drawing out the play's serious concerns with identity and selfhood. |
Emma Smith |
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| Humanitarian Ethics in Armed Conflict: Aid Agency Dilemmas and Responsibility |
Dr Hugo Slim (Visiting Fellow, ELAC) gives a talk for the Ethics, Law and Armed conflict seminar series on 17 Jan 2012. |
Hugo Slim |
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| Brain Chemistry and Moral Decision-Making |
Answers to moral questions, it seems, depend on how much serotonin there is flowing through your brain. In the future might we be able to alter people's moral behaviour with concoctions of chemicals? |
Molly Crocket |
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| Not Vital: Art is Global |
International artist, Not Vital, gives a talk about his art and his work. |
Not Vital |
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| Guided Meditation |
Professor Mark Williams offers a brief guided meditation in the last of four short videos in this series. |
Mark Williams |
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| Supporting Mindfulness |
Professor Mark Williams explains how you can support the work of the Oxford Mindfulness Centre in the third of four short videos. |
Mark Williams |
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| The Science of Mindfulness |
Professor Mark Williams examines the neuroscience of mindfulness in the second of four short videos. |
Mark Williams |
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| Introduction to Mindfulness |
Professor Mark Williams introduces Mindfulness in the first of four short videos in this series. |
Mark Williams |
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| Mindfulness and the brain |
In this final episode Professor Mark Williams and Danny Penman discuss how imaging studies show that Mindfulness may have numerous profoundly positive effects on the brain. |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| Responsibility |
If someone caught me shoplifting, and I was later diagnosed with kleptomania, should I be held responsible? Should I be blamed? |
Hanna Pickard |
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| Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy on trial |
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) is especially good for people who have suffered the most debilitating forms of depression. The evidence for its effectiveness is overwhelming and continues to grow. |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| Permissible Preventive Cyberwar |
Professor George Lucas (United States Naval Academy), gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW Seminar Series on 22 Nov 2011. |
George Lucas |
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| Rights, Liability, and the Moral Equality of Combatants |
Professor Uwe Steinhoff (University of Hong Kong) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW Seminar series on 9th Nov 2011. |
Uwe Steinhoff |
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| Henry IV part 1 |
Like generations of theatre-goers, this lecture concentrates on the (large) figure of Sir John Falstaff and investigates his role in Henry IV part 1. Lecture 11 in the Approaching Shakespeare series. |
Emma Smith |
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| Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy: A new approach to treating depression |
Mindfulness therapy is an extremely effective treatment preventing relapse in depression. But what does it entail and how does it work? |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| The Tempest |
That the character of Prospero is a Shakespearean self-portrait is a common reading of The Tempest: this tenth Approaching Shakespeare lecture asks whether that is a useful reading of the play. |
Emma Smith |
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| Does War Have a Meaning? |
Professor Michael Boylan (Marymount) gives a talk for the Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict/Changing Character of War Seminar Series. |
Michael Boylan |
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| The Shadow of the ICC: Positive Complementarity and the Situation in Kenya |
Professor Chandra Sriram (SOAS) gives a talk for the Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict/Changing Character of War Seminar Series. Introduced by Jennifer Welsh (Oxford). |
Chandra Sriram |
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| Antony and Cleopatra |
What kind of tragedy is this play, with its two central figures rather than a singular hero? The ninth lecture in the Approaching Shakespeare series tries to find out. |
Emma Smith |
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| Realism |
Dr Catherine Brown, English Faculty, Oxford, gives a lecture exploring the nature of realism in verbal and visual art. |
Catherine Brown |
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| Can treatments such as Cognitive Therapy help? |
Depression tends to return even if it has been successfully treated. Scientists now understand why this happens and have developed therapies that reduce the risks of relapse and help lift the burden of depression should it return. |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| Richard II |
Lecture eight in the Approaching Shakespeare series asks the question that structures Richard II: does the play suggest Henry Bolingbroke's overthrow of the king was justified? |
Emma Smith |
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| Selling Organs |
Everyday people die in hospitals because there aren't enough organs available for transplant. In most countries of the world - though not all - it is illegal to sell organs. |
Tim Lewens |
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| Strategy for Action: Using Force Wisely in the 21st Century |
Commodore Steve Jermy (Royal Navy) gives a talk for the Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict seminar series. |
Steve Jermy |
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| None of Us Were Like This Before: American Soldiers and Torture |
Josh Phillips, journalist, gives a talk for the Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict seminar series. |
Josh Phillips |
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| The Legacy of 9/11 |
Panel discussion from the oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict on The Legacy of 9/11. |
Jennifer Welsh, David Rodin, Dapo Akande |
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| How is depression treated? |
Doctors and psychiatrists once believed that patterns of thinking played little or no role in depression, but this is now known to be wrong. Professor Williams and Dr Danny Penman discuss how the treatment of depression has evolved in recent years. |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| What is depression? |
Depression is expected to impose the second biggest health burden globally by 2020; greater even than heart disease, arthritis and many forms of cancer. Professor Mark Williams and Dr Danny Penman discuss the driving forces behind this startling trend. |
Mark Williams, Danny Penman |
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| Twelfth Night |
The seventh Approaching Shakespeare lecture takes a minor character in Twelfth Night - Antonio - and uses his presence to open up questions of sexuality, desire and the nature of romantic comedy. |
Emma Smith |
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| Titus Andronicus |
Focusing in detail on one particular scene, and on critical responses to it, this sixth Approaching Shakespeare lecture on Titus Andronicus deals with violence, rhetoric, and the nature of dramatic sensationalism. |
Emma Smith |
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| Bio-Ethics Bites |
Demand for health care is infinite, but money is finite. So how should we distribute resources? Whom should we help, and why? |
Jonathan Wolf |
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| Trust |
Radically new techniques are opening up exciting possibilities for those working in health care - for psychiatrists, doctors, surgeons; the option to clone human beings, to give just one example. |
Onora O'Neill |
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| Pre-Emptive Strikes - Israel and Iran |
Dr Tamir Meisels, Tel Aviv University, gives a seminar for the Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict Seminar Series. |
Tamir Meisels |
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| Migration, Digital Images and the Future of Insurgency |
Dr John Mackinlay (King's College London) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW lunchtime seminar series. |
John Mackinlay |
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| Status Quo Bias |
Suppose a genetic engineering breakthrough made it simple, safe and cheap to increase people's intelligence. |
Nick Bostrom |
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| History of Oxford's Experimental Psychology Department |
Professors Oliver Braddick and Larry Weiskrantz give a talk on the history of Oxford University's Experimental Psychology Department as part the department's 113th anniversary. |
Larry Weiskrantz, Oliver Braddick |
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| Life and Death |
If a patient decides she doesn't want to live any longer, should she be allowed to die? Should she be allowed to kill herself? |
Peter Singer |
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| 2nd St Cross Special Ethics Seminar TT11: Museum Ethics |
Museum Ethics. |
Nick Mayhew |
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| Human Rights vs Religion? |
Professor Roger Trigg gives the St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Trinity Term 2011. |
Roger Trigg |
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| Morality and Law in War |
Dr Seth Lazar (Research Associate, ELAC, Oxford) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 7th June 2011. |
Seth Lazar |
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| Intervention in Libya and Implications for European and Transatlantic Defence Cooperation |
Camille Grand (Director Fondation pour la Recherche Strategique (FRS, Paris) gives a talk for the ELAC/OHG (Oxford Humanitarian Group) on 31st May 2011. |
Camille Grand |
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| Humanitarianism and History: Rethinking the Neutrality Debate |
Tom Smith (QEH, Oxford), gives a talk for the ELAC/Oxford Humanitarian Group seminar series on 6th June 2011. Introduced by Urvashi Aneja. |
Tom Smith, Urvashi Aneja |
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| Intervening to Protect Civilians: Debating the NATO-led mission in Libya |
Professor Jennifer Welsh, Dr David Rodin, Dr Cheyney Ryan and Dapo Akande (ELAC) debate the recent NATO led mission in Libya. |
Jennifer Welsh, David Rodin, Dapo Akand, Cheyney Ryan |
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| Targeted Killings: A Modern Strategy of the State (partial) |
Please note this is only a partial recording, we apologise for the inconvenience. William F. Owen (Cranfield Defence and Security, UK Defence Academy) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on. |
William F Owen |
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| Designer Babies |
The term 'designer baby' is usually used in a pejorative sense - to conjure up some dystopian Brave New World. There are already ways to affect what kind of children you have - most obviously by choosing the partner to have them with. |
Julian Savulescu |
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| Moral Status |
A stone on the beach, we assume, has no moral status. We can kick or hammer the stone, and we have done the stone no harm. Typical adult human beings do have moral status. We shouldn't, without a very good reason, kick a man or woman. |
Jeff McMahan |
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| Sovereign Equality and Moral Disagreement: Premises of a Pluralist International Legal Order |
Professor Brad Roth, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Wayne State, Detroit, gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 17th May 2011. Introduced by Dr David Rodin. |
Brad Roth |
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| Stabilisation, Security and Capacity Building - What the Business Schools and Sociologists might tell the Military |
Colonel Duncan Barley, British Army (Retired) gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW seminar series on 10th May 2011. |
Duncan Barley |
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| Killing in Humanitarian Wars |
Professor Cecile Fabre, Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy, Lincoln College Oxford University, gives a talk for the ELAC/CCW lunchtime seminar series on the 3rd May, 2011. Introduced by Dr David Rodin. |
Cecile Fabre |
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| After "Returning to Europe": Divides and Challenges in the Enlarged European Union |
Professor Claus Offe (Professor of Political Sociology, Hertie School of Governance, Berlin) delivers the 2011 European Studies Centre Annual Lecture on 4th March 2011. |
Claus Offe, Margaret MacMillan |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 1: Automatism and chance: Surrealist strategies and their legacies in contemporary art and film |
Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University, gives the first Slade lecture in Surrealism and Art History on 20th January 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 2: Beyond painting: collage, objects, installations |
Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University gives the second Slade lecture in Surrealism and Art History on 27th January 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 3: Beyond art: 'the enemy within', Georges Bataille and Documents |
Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University, gives the third lecture in the Slade lecture series on Surrealism and Art History. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 4: The experimental demonstration of critical paranoia: Salvador Dalí's The Tragic Myth of Millet's Angelus |
Fourth Slade lecture from Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University, given on 10th February 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 5: Poetry, politics, and sexuality: Surrealism in Latin America |
Fifth lecture in the Slade lecture series given by Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University in Surrealism and Art History on 17th February 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 6: Monuments and ruins: Surrealism and archaeology in the New World |
Sixth lecture in the Slade lecture series on Surrealism and Art given by Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University on 24th February 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 7: Transnational Surrealism: Tropiques and the role of the little magazine |
Seventh lecture in the Slade lecture series on Surrealism and Art History given by Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University on 3rd March 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| Slade Lectures 2010: Week 8: Walking distance from the studio: cities, maps, and myths |
Eighth and final Slade Lecture in Surrealism and Art History given by Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History and Theory at Essex University on 10th March 2010. |
Dawn Ades |
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| New Imaging Evidence for the Neural Bases of Moral Sentiments: Prosocial and Antisocial Behaviour |
2nd Annual Wellcome Lecture in Neuroethics, given by Professor Jorge Moll on 18th January 2011 on the subject of new evidence for Neural bases for moral sentiments. |
Jorge Moll |
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| Prioritarianism, Levelling Down and Welfare Diffusion |
Lecture and discussion from Professor Ingmar Persson (Gothenburg University), the discussant is Derek Parfit (Oxford). |
Ingmar Persson, Derek Parfit |
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