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south africa

Conversations in Med Ed

Chatting with Luzaan Kock on innovative interprofessional education (IPE), Indigenous Knowledge Systems, and finding where you are meant to be

Luzaan honestly and passionately shares her journey from physiotherapy into interprofessional education, including details on how to innovatively embed IPE within health professions education for education and health impact
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Fellowship Takeaways Episode 1 – How to cover democratic regression

Bite-sized insights from Reuters Institute’s fellowship seminars: what can we learn from experts in Indonesia, South Africa and Argentina about political coverage in times of democratic regression?
CSAE Research Podcasts

Locked Down and Locked Out: Repurposing Social Assistance in South Africa

Researchers examine how an established social assistance system - not originally designed to support informal workers - can be re-purposed to provide emergency relief to support workers and their household in South Africa.
Conversations on Kafka
Captioned

J. M. Coetzee and Kafka

Nobel-prize winning author J. M. Coetzee has continued to reflect on and respond to Kafka in different ways throughout his life and work.
Middle East Centre
Captioned

Genocide and Accountability in Gaza: The Limits and Potential of International Law

Prof Noura Erakat explores the significance of South Africa's application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip before the International Court of Justice, and the Court's decision to hear the case.
CSAE Research Podcasts
Captioned

Cash Transfer Grants in South Africa during the Covid-19 Pandemic: Work Behind the ESRC Outstanding Public Policy Impact Award 2023

The CSAE's Kate Orkin has won the ESRC award for Outstanding Public Policy Impact 2023. Stefan Dercon talks to Kate about the work behind the cash grant programme in South Africa during the Covid-19 pandemic that reached an extra 26.2 million people.
The Oxford Colloquy

The Pandemic People: Shabir Madhi

Shabir Madhi Professor of Vaccinology at the University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg, South Africa discusses the effect of the global pandemic on Africa and his work on COVID-19 vaccines.
History of Art: Slade Lecture Series
Captioned

Slade Lecture Series 2023: To speak in Parables: Dumile Feni in Hendrik Verwoerd’s South Africa, 1960s

Chika Okeke-Agulu examines art & politics in 1960s South Africa paying particular attention to Hendrik Verwoerd, the self-styled “Great Induna,” & architect of Apartheid, whose assassination in 1966 slowed the triumphant march of Afrikaner racist ideology
OxPeace Conference 2022: Who Builds Peace?

OxPeace 2022 Session 2: Part 1

Dr Liz Carmichael presents "Implementing peace: South Africa’s Peace Structures 1991-1994."
CSAE Research Podcasts

Under the Hood: Randomised Control Trials on Distance Education During Covid-19 in Botswana

A discussion about some of the first experimental evidence on distance education during the covid-19 pandemic in Botswana.
African Studies Centre
Captioned

Being and Becoming African as a Permanent Work in Progress: Inspiration from Chinua Achebe’s Proverbs

In this seminar we hosted Professor Francis Nyamnjoh as he presented his lecture titled Being and Becoming African as a Permanent Work in Progress: Inspiration from Chinua Achebe’s Proverbs.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

The Justice of Visual Art - Creative State-Building in Times of Transition

This talk was given as part of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) Seminar Series. Art is a radical form of political participation in times of transition.
Narrative Futures

Episode 1 - Pandemic writing: How close is too close?

Lauren Beukes discusses the proximity of her recent novel Afterland to the current pandemic and how collective action and art are the only way through these difficult times.
African Studies Centre
Captioned

Ruth First's Red Suitcase: In and Out of the Strongroom of Memory Book launch of Written Under the Skin: Blood and Intergenerational Memory in South Africa

Carli Coetzee discusses her book and surrounding themes in this talk. Ideas of femininity and issues about Ruth First regarding her time in prison are central to this interesting discussion.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

State Capture: What It Is and What It Means for the Constitutional Order

Legal researchers Katarina Sipulova and Nick Friedman describe corruption in politics and the judiciary in the post-transitional states of Eastern Europe and South Africa
Bonavero Institute of Human Rights

Citizenship and Accountability Conference Session 2: What is Living Customary Law? And how should the courts identify it and apply it?

It is twenty-five years since the transition to democracy in South Africa. Some of the most enduring challenges have concerned the role of customary law and traditional leadership in the new democratic state.
Africa Oxford Initiative

Is Africa a Dissimilar System? Oxford Africa Society 2019 Annual Lecture Discussion

The discussion after the lecture, with an international guest panel on decolonising education and reimagining the higher education space in Africa and the Diaspora.
Anthropology

Trials of the everyday: spaces of global health in South Africa

Michelle Pentecosts, King's College London, presented the Anthropology Departmental Seminar on 2 November 2018
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Literacy and Democracy: Transitional Justice in South Africa

The paper explores the work of several intellectuals reflecting on South Africa’s transition to democracy, considering how the question of literacy precedes any discussion about literature and democracy.
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation

Chrissie Steenkamp speaks to Johana Musalkova

Dr Chrissie Steenkamp talks to Johana Musalkova about community-based and nationally-driven practices of commemoration in South Africa and Northern Ireland.

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