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racism

Dialogues on Educational Justice:  Brought to you by the Repair-Ed project

What makes a just primary education in Bristol schools?

Fatima Mohamed Ali, Claire Neaves and Dr. Claire Stewart-Hall discuss their experiences of teaching in Bristol schools and opportunities to reimagine schooling differently.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt
Captioned

BHM Lecture 2023: Ann Pratt, Mary Seacole, and Questioning British History

Dr Christienna Fryar, writer and independent historian of Britain and the Caribbean, tells the stories of two mixed-race Jamaican women and questions the fraught relationship between British history and Black British history.
Their Finest Hour

Under Fire: Black Britain in Wartime - Interview with Stephen Bourne

Interview with Stephen Bourne about the contribution of black men and women in wartime Britain during the Second World War.
Science with Sanjula
Captioned

Tackling racism and inequalities in healthcare - Dr Mehrunisha Suleman

Dr Mehrunisha Suleman talks about why tackling racism and inequalities in health and healthcare is so important, drawing on her research and experiences.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt
Captioned

Medical Racism: Protecting ourselves, our families and our communities

A joint panel discussion organised by the University of Oxford and the University of Kent BME/BAME Staff Networks.
Wolfson College Podcasts
Captioned

Looking back; Moving Forwards: The History of Black Lives Matter

Wolfson College marks Black History Month 2020 with an engaging discussion with Britain's foremost experts on the history of black lives and communities in Britain.
Thinking Out Loud: leading philosophers discuss topical global issues

Fair Access to Covid-19 Treatment in Mexico

Philosopher César Palacios-González talks about how corruption and racism in Mexico created serious hurdles for developing federal guidelines for deciding who gets to access scarce medical resources.
The Disability Lectures
Captioned

2019 Disability Lecture: The Triple Cripples... creators, educators, rule breakers, and the personification of empowerment

Jay Abdullahi and Kym Oliver, a team of two black disabled women, reclaim the word ‘cripple’ in their fight against three layers of discrimination.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Ethnicised Religion and Sacralised Ethnicity in the Past and the Present

An expert panel discusses the phenomenon of ethnicisation of religious identifications focussing especially on the nexus of religious, ethnic and national identifications in colonial, anti-colonial and postcolonial settings from Ireland to South Asia.
Oxford LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) History Month Lectures

What does it mean to be LGBT+ today?

2018's annual lecture, organised by the LGBT+ Staff Network, will be delivered by Asad Dhunna, a London based marketing and communications director. Asad has written for various publications including the Guardian and the Huffington Post.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Authority, Expertise and Race in the South African TRC

Deborah Posel, Professor of Sociology at UCT, gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar Series.
Rothermere American Institute

Joining the Revolution

Lyndon Johnson, the modern presidency and the Civil Rights Movement.
Uehiro Oxford Institute

Implicit Bias and Racism

Paper presented by Neil Levy at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop.
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)

How can far-right extremism be tackled through policy? Lessons from 10 EU countries

In recent years, many European countries have been grimly reminded of the threat from far-right violence motivated by hatred towards migrants and minorities. This talk explores how 10 European countires are attempting to address this.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century

Elleke Boehmer and Imaobong Umoren talk about their research network which is investigating how twentieth-century activists, artists and intellectuals challenged racially oppressive hierarchies and sought to achieve equality.
Interviews on Great Writers

Joseph Conrad and Postcoloniality - Part 2: Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim

Professor Peter McDonald talks to Great Writers Inspire about the Post/Colonial aspects of Joseph Conrad's writing.
Interviews on Great Writers

Joseph Conrad and Postcoloniality - Part 1: Conrad and Chinua Achebe

Professor Peter McDonald talks to Great Writers Inspire about the Post/Colonial aspects of Joseph Conrad's writing. In this first part, Peter takes Chinua Achebe's 1975 critique of Conrad as a starting point.
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)

Where's your bloody pigtail?: Liberalism, Empire, and the Chinese Labour Question

Professor Glover outlined the moral panic around aliens and Chinese labour in the 1906 election, relating the debate to the 1905 Aliens Act and to Chinese indentured layout to South Africa.
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)

Civic Stratification and Migrants Rights

Lydia Morris discusses the stratification of rights as a way to explain rights given or constrained by the state, in the migration context.
Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)

Between welfare states and markets: the migrant-policy nexus in comparative perspective and reflections on social rights and antidiscrimination law

Virginie Guiraudon takes an interdisciplinary look at social and human rights and anti-discrimination laws, giving a historical, legal and sociological perspective, as well as considering the European situation.

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