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Reproduction

A Good Science Read

A Good Science Read: Why Sex Matters

Professor Russell Foster and Professor Frances Ashcroft discuss The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature by Matt Ridley and Dr Tatiana's Sex Advice to All Creation by Olivia Judson.
Biology: The Whole Story
Captioned

Sexual Reproduction - Chapter 3

Almost all species use sex to reproduce, but biologists struggle to understand why; join Professor Lindsay Turnbull from the University of Oxford as she explains the costs and benefits
Anthropology

China in the global reproduction migration order

Peidong Yang (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) presented this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar series on 14 January 2019
Anthropology

Grandparenting migration: reproduction, care circulations and care ethics across borders

Elaine Ho (National University of Singapore) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 28 January 2019
Anthropology

Investment migration and social reproduction: the case of recent patterns of migration from China

Professor Gracia Liu-Farrer (Waseda University, Tokyo) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 4 February 2019
Anthropology

Birth tourism from China and Taiwan to the United States: cosmopolitan strategies and aspirations

Sean Wang (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin) delivered this seminar as part of the COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group series on 11 February 2019
Anthropology

Assisted reproductive technologies and medical travel

A COMPAS/Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group seminar delivered by Professor Andrea Whittaker (Monash University) on 18 February 2019
Anthropology

Rights and justice: reproductive politics and legal activism in India

This Anthropology departmental Seminar was delivered by Professor Maya Unnithan (University of Sussex) on 26 January 2018
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

"There’s No Place Like Home" Part 1 - Wytham Woods

Professor Ben Sheldon describes one of the World’s longest-running ecological studies, into birds in their natural environments.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

"Origins" - Complete Episode

The subject of origins is explored - from human fertilisation to the Big Bang. Includes parts 1, 2 and 3.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

"Origins" Part 3 - Origins of Human Life

Drs Suzannah Williams and Dagan Wells explore the secrets and processes behind human fertilisation. Sperm and eggs must face huge challenges before they even meet. After fertilisation, they go on to form a small ball of cells with huge potential.
Anthropology

Generational change and continuity amongst British mothers

Angela Davis of the University of Warwick discusses the sharing of beliefs, knowledge and practice amongst British mothers between 1940 and 1990 (a Fertility and Reproduction seminar from 14 October 2013)
Anthropology

Contextualising the 'new parenting culture'

Charlotte Faircloth of the University of Kent presents historical and sociological perspectives on adult-child relations (a Fertility and Reproduction seminar from 21 October 2013)
Anthropology

Caring and being cared for in north-western Amazonia

Elizabeth Rahman of the University of Oxford discusses the perinatal practices of a small group of Amazonian Indians with whom she lived (a Fertility and Reproduction seminar from 4 November 2013)
Anthropology

'I did not know how to tell my parents, so I thought I would have to have an abortion'

Ekaterina Hertog of the University of Oxford explores the negotiations between premaritally pregnant women and their parents in Japan (a Fertility and Reproduction seminar from 25 November 2013)
Anthropology

The 'down side' of assisted reproductive technologies

In this seminar for the Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group, Soraya Tremayne (Director of the FRSG) discusses 'Third party donation and the 'happy family' rhetoric in Iran'. 17 November 2011.

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