Up Close Research Talk Show
By University of Melbourne
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Podcast Description
Up Close is the weekly research, opinion and analysis talk show from the University of Melbourne, Australia.
| Name | Description | Released | Price | ||
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1 |
#196: Written in the sand: al-Qaeda and its prospects in the new Middle East | Middle East security expert Dr Norman Cigar explains how al-Qaeda’s strategic goals and military posturing are communicated within the organization through its own publications. He also speaks on the challenges al-Qaeda faces in a fast evolving Middle East. With host Jacky Angus. Download mp3 (25.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/24/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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2 |
#195: Contenders cum laude: Universities competing in the global rankings game | International higher education expert Professor Simon Marginson discusses the increasingly influential phenomenon of global ranking of universities, and what it means for students, governments, researchers, and the business of running institutions of higher learning. Presented by Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (31.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/17/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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3 |
#194: Degrees of uncertainty: Modeling the climate impact of greenhouse gases | Senior climate impact researcher Dr. Malte Meinshausen explains how climate change is modeled, and estimates the effect of timely mitigation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (26.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/10/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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4 |
#193: Freer and fairer: Nurturing political transparency in the Middle East | Charles W. Dunne, Director of Middle East and North Africa Programs for Freedom House, speaks about the efforts of his organisation and others like it to provide political education and training on the ground in the Middle East. With host Jacky Angus. Download mp3 (20.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/3/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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5 |
#192: Diagnostics overkill: Are we screening for cancer too frequently? | Epidemiologist Professor James Hanley scrutinizes the now standard practice of frequent screening for many types of cancer, and suggests optimal testing intervals may mean less screening overall. Presented by science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (22.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/26/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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6 |
#191: Blame it on their youth: Generational forces in an evolving Middle East | Political economist Professor Emma Murphy examines the social conditions that confront young Arabs in the Middle East, and argues that the youth of today will ultimately remake and redefine the region. Presented by Jacky Angus. Download mp3 (20.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/19/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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7 |
#190: Germline confidential: Hunting down genes linked to breast cancer | Genetics researchers Prof Melissa Southey and Prof David Goldgar discuss the enterprise of tracking down genes that make one susceptible to breast cancer. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (25.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/12/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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8 |
#189: Easy to say, easy to like: People's names and the impressions they make | Social psychologist Dr Simon Laham discusses his research linking the pronounceability of a person’s name with perceptions of likeability, and what this might mean for a person’s access to opportunities. Download mp3 (16.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/5/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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9 |
#188: Exiting autocracy: Democratic prospects and prerequisites in the new Middle East | Cambridge political scientist Professor George Joffé weighs the chances of representative government emerging in the Middle East, post "Arab Spring". With host Jacky Angus. Download mp3 (28.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/29/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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10 |
#187: Damned if you do: How gender colors perceptions in negotiations | Professor of Management Mara Olekalns discusses the complicated effects of gender in negotiations, how women can be disadvantaged when negotiating on their own behalf, and what they can do about it. Presented by Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (23.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/22/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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11 |
#186: I'm all ears: Improving your organization through active listening | Human resources management expert Associate Professor Avraham Kluger explains what's wrong with conventional employee appraisal methods in the corporate world, and posits that truly listening to one's workers is good for business. Presented by Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (27.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/15/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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12 |
#185: Defending the indefensible: War criminals and the right to a fair trial | International criminal law expert Dr Kevin Heller discusses the role of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and argues why even the worst of war criminals are entitled to the best defense. With host Jacky Angus. Download mp3 (22.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/8/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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13 |
#184: Double the value: How researching twins benefits everyone | Epidemiologist Prof John Hopper explains the unique advantages of medical research focusing on twins, and how findings from twins studies enormously benefit the rest of humanity. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (24.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/1/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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14 |
#183: For show only? The language of human rights in national constitutions | Sociologist Associate Professor Gili Drori explains how the vocabulary of human rights is making its way into the constitutions of nation states, and the degree to which societies actually honour the words in their own national charters. Download mp3 (22.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/23/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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15 |
#182: Greener revs: Squeezing more efficiency out of gasoline engines | Control engineer Associate Professor Chris Manzie makes the case that there's a lot of life left in the internal combustion engine, and that petrol engine technology will continue to evolve alongside its hybrid and electric counterparts. With host Dr. Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (18.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/16/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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16 |
#181: Mirages of influence: The US in the Middle East, post "Arab Spring" | Political scientist Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh joins host Jacky Angus to talk about the changing geo-political environment confronting the United States in the Middle East, post "Arab Spring". Download mp3 (23.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/9/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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17 |
#180: Diamond data mining: Quantum computing and the materials that make it possible | Physicist Professor David Awschalom discusses the powerful potential of quantum computing, and how materials such as diamond play a crucial role in the development of this emerging technology. With host Dr. Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (26.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/2/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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18 |
#179: Reaping what we sow: Agriculture's role in climate change | Assoc Prof Richard Eckard examines how modern agriculture contributes to global warming and discusses ways of mitigating the problem. Presented by Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (26.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/26/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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19 |
#178: Justifying the means: The law as accomplice in crimes against humanity | Criminologist and lawyer Dr Jennifer Balint discusses how nation-states seek to use the law in support of genocidal practices and other crimes against humanity. She also examines how, conversely, the law is also called upon to bring about reconciliation after regime change. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (25.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/19/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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20 |
#177: Delusions of certainty: Regulation through an ethical lens | Social scientists Assoc Prof Fiona Haines and Prof Nancy Reichman discuss the myths and implications behind authorities’ implementation of regulations, particularly in the wake of a disaster. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (27.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/12/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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21 |
Episode 176: Conditions of affluence and aging: fatty liver disease, macular degeneration | Physicians and doctoral students Dr Chris Leung and Dr Madeleine Adams discuss their research into unravelling the causative factors behind fatty liver disease and macular degeneration, respectively. Presented by Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (21.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/5/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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22 |
Episode 175: Healthy moves: Exercise for cancer patients, and insights into arthritis | Physiotherapist Catherine Granger talks about whether exercise is beneficial to lung cancer sufferers, and Tommy Liu explains how mice are generating insights into arthritis in humans. With science host Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (18.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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23 |
Episode 174: Peak fish: Rising human consumption of seafood, and its implications | Fisheries scientists Dr Tim Dempster and Dr Reg Watson discuss the pressures on wild fish stocks and debate the role of aquaculture in feeding an increasingly populous world. With science host Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (32.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/22/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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24 |
Episode 173: The Sea, the Selves: Poets on Poetry 2 | Australian poets Jennifer Harrison and Philip Salom read from their works, discuss how their perceptions of the world shape their poetry, and how poetry shapes their worlds. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (36.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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25 |
Episode 172: Natural and synthetic: What we're still discovering about polymers | Polymer scientist Professor Dame Julia Higgins discusses neutron scattering and other techniques used in researching polymers, the large molecules found in nature and synthesised in the manufacture of materials such as nylon and silicon. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (26.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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26 |
Episode 171: In the name of the planet: Armed intervention to protect the environment | Political scientist Professor Robyn Eckersley proposes a framework for protecting the environment that allows for armed intervention. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (21.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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27 |
Episode 170: Something in the air: Chemical communication via pheromones | Evolutionary biologist Professor Mark Elgar talks about the hidden smells that surround us – what they communicate to the animals who produce and detect them, and how this sophisticated natural messaging system evolved. With science guest host Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (25.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/24/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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28 |
Episode 169: Waves of influence: Television drama as an instrument of soft power in Asia | Sociologist Professor Chua Beng Huat explains how serial TV dramas have become a soft power currency traded among China, Korea, Japan and other countries in Asia. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (22.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/17/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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29 |
Episode 168: Lost generation: Governance gone missing in global energy security | Energy security and global governance analyst Professor Ann Florini explains the urgent need for global coordination of energy resources, and why existing institutions such as the International Energy Agency (IEA) are not up to the task. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (26.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/10/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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30 |
Episode 167: Radically new: Team values, market intelligence and creating innovative products | Technology management analyst Professor Chris L. Tucci unpacks the interaction between market intelligence and team ideology in companies that create innovative products. Presented by Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (21.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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31 |
Episode 166: Good dog, bad dog: Dispelling myths about pet behavior | Animal behaviourist Dr Gabrielle Carter explains how dogs and other pets can be made to acquire desirable behaviors and extinguish undesirable ones. With Science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (24.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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32 |
Episode 165: Early dating techniques: Determining the age of Australopithecus sediba | Australopithecus sediba, discovered in 2008 in southern Africa, is the most significant paleo-archeological find in recent years. These fossilized specimens have anatomical features lying somewhere between those found in Australopithecus africanus and Homo erectus. Geochemist Dr Robyn Pickering discusses the significance of the find, and how the age of A. sediba was determined. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (21.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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33 |
Episode 164: Secularism, applied religiously: Harmonizing a hyper-diverse India | Senior journalist and political commentator Dr Swapan Dasgupta explains how secularism is defined and applied in ethnically, linguistically and religiously diverse India. And how a sense of harmony -- and occasional lack thereof -- is wrapped up in India's unique take on being secular. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (24.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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34 |
Episode 163: It's our turn now: India's changing take on the English language | Professor of Literature Alok Rai discusses the many roles played by the English language in contemporary India - as an instrument of mobility, as a marker of privilege, as a badge of identity, and as a forge of a new caste system. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (17.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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35 |
Episode 162: Worming their way: Parasites, their larvae, and your brain | Parasitologist Professor Marshall Lightowlers explains the risk to animal and human health posed by parasitic flatworms, and how even neurological disorders like epilepsy can result from exposure to tapeworm larvae. With host Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (19.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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36 |
Episode 160: Delusions of development: Pro-market forces at work in the do-good industry | Dr Toby Carroll discusses the evolution of development programs by institutions such as the World Bank and its subsidiary the International Finance Corporation, and scrutinizes the outcomes of recent strategies involving public-private partnerships and explicitly pro-market approaches. With host Elizabeth Lopez. Download mp3 (30.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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37 |
Episode 159: Lawrence M. Krauss: Before and after the Universe | Theoretical physicist Professor Lawrence M. Krauss discusses how investigating dark matter can shed light on the geometry of our universe, and what this means for our understanding of its origins and demise. With Science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (31.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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38 |
Episode 158: X-ray renaissance: The potential and promise of coherent X-ray optics | Professor Keith Nugent explains the physics behind X-rays and crystallography, and how new research into the development of X-ray lasers could provide medical scientists with radically new insights into the structure of proteins. With Science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (24.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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39 |
Episode 156: Guanxi: Telling apart gifts from bribes when doing business in Asia | Associate Professor Peter Verhezen explains how cultural understandings of gift giving practices differs across regions, and that Western companies and people doing business in Asian countries need to be aware of the grey area that lies between the offering of gifts and the offering of bribes. Download mp3 (20.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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40 |
Episode 155: Endangered animal species: Captive breeding and genetic rescue | Geneticist Dr Andrew Weeks and animal behaviourist Dr Michael Magrath discuss diverse ways of dealing with threatened animal populations. Australia's Mountain Pygmy Possum is one such endangered species for which a combination of genetic and breeding solutions are being tried. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (29.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/11/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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41 |
Episode 154: Keeping it creative: What happens to productivity when innovative firms are acquired? | Can we predict how a firm's creators and innovators will fare when their firm is swallowed up by another company? Through the lenses of knowledge-based and incentive-based theories of business corporations, strategic management guru Assoc. Prof. Kwanghui Lim discusses what happens to inventors' productivity when there's a change of paymaster. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (28.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/4/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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42 |
Episode 153: Mosquito bytes: Fighting malaria with computational science | Parasitologist Dr Stuart Ralph explains malaria and how computational modelling developed to better understand the disease will aid the global effort to eradicate it. With host Dr Dyani Lewis. Download mp3 (27.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/28/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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43 |
Episode 152: Be not afraid of greatness: Shakespeare's vital role in the 21C classroom | Professor of education Jonothan Neelands explains why the plays of the Bard are as relevant and stimulating as e'er they were to students of all ages today. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (20.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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44 |
Episode 151: Fortune and fortitude: Stories of the Chinese diaspora | Social scientist Prof. Pookong Kee looks at the successive waves of migration from China and how Chinese identity has evolved among ethnic Chinese in their adopted homelands. With host Jennfier Cook. Download mp3 (23.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/14/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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45 |
Episode 150: Upwardly mobile: How the cell phone is changing life in India | Media historian Professor Robin Jeffrey explains how the cell or mobile phone has hugely advanced India‘s economic development and is changing the very fabric of its society. With host Elizabeth Lopez. Download mp3 (29.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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46 |
Episode 149: Out of Africa: What human genomics is revealing about us | Professor of genomic medicine Vanessa M. Hayes discusses our African genomic origins and how exploring global genetic diversity can help us understand and address human disease. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (29.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 6/30/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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47 |
Episode 148: Targeted delivery: The promise of nanotherapies in treating cancer | Chemistry Associate Professor Eva Harth and Chemical Engineer Dr Angus Johnston discuss how cancer treatments may be vastly improved through drug delivery at the nanoscale. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (26.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 6/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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48 |
Episode 146: Kashmir revisited: Untold stories and hard realities | Politico-strategy analyst Dr Christopher Snedden examines the decades-long Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan in light of new understanding of the conflict's origins. With host Elisabeth Lopez. Download mp3 (28.8 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 6/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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49 |
Episode 145: Neighbours with a difference: The India-China relationship in context | Political scientist Dr Pradeep Taneja discusses how India and China view each other’s geo-political ambitions. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (22.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 6/2/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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50 |
Episode 144: Waiter, there's cesium in my soup: The health implications of radioactivity | Associate Professor Tilman Ruff explains how radiation from nuclear energy sources can affect the human body and our health. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (28.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/25/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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51 |
Episode 141: Cash crop crusaders: Genomic approaches to fighting fungus in canola | Plant geneticist Professor Barbara Howlett explains how genetics research is helping to fight fungal pests that confront canola farmers. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (24.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 5/5/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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52 |
Episode 140: A bullet for your thoughts: Recollections of persecution in Indonesia in the mid-1960s | Historian Dr Kate McGregor revisits Indonesia's 30 September Movement, which resulted in the killings and persecution of 100,000s of Indonesians in the mid-1960s. Only in recent times have newly guaranteed freedoms of expression allowed survivors to openly recall their experiences of this defining moment in the country's not-too-distant past. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (28.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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53 |
Episode 139: Muslim publics divided: Encounters with anti-pluralism in a democratic Indonesia | Indonesian law expert Professor Tim Lindsey discusses the apparent decline in religious pluralism in contemporary Indonesia against a backdrop of anything-goes press freedoms and laissez-faire officaldom. Also, liberal Muslim activist Dr M. Syafi’i Anwar recounts his experience at the hands of hardline Islamist groups,and the battle for the minds of ordinary Indonesians. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (26.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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54 |
Episode 138: Grey matter, virtually: Computational neurobiology's insights into the brain | Professor Terry Sejnowski discusses recent developments at the nexus of brain science and computer modeling, enabling new understandings of psychiatric conditions like schizophrenia. With Science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (28.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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55 |
Episode 137: Smart water: Irrigation systems in an age of high tech | Systems engineer Professor Iven Mareels explains how applying contemporary control-systems approaches to irrigation is reinvigorating this ancient water-transport method, bringing huge savings in the agricultural use of H2O. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (27.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 4/4/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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56 |
Episode 136: India's ambitions: Pathways and pitfalls to greatness | Veteran Indian journalist and commentator Pramit Pal Chaudhuri discusses what India needs to do -- and to overcome -- if it's to rise to the status of a great global power. Presented by Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (28.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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57 |
Episode 135: PTSD II: Researching and treating post-traumatic stress disorder | In the second of a two-part programme, psychologists Professor Mark Creamer and Associate Professor Meaghan O'Donnell discuss research and treatment considerations for post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, as manifested in military veterans and people who have suffered severe physical injuries. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (27.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/24/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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58 |
Episode 134: PTSD I: Describing and diagnosing post-traumatic stress disorder | In the first of a two-part programme, psychologists Professor Mark Creamer and Assoc Professor Meghan O'Donnell explain post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, its diagnosis, and how it's been viewed historically. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (20.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/16/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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59 |
Episode 133: Coding cultural riches: Investigating indigenous languages in Australia | Linguist Dr Rachel Nordlinger discusses how Australian Aboriginal languages are researched and how particular indigenous tongues grow at the expense of others as communities migrate. Presented by Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (23.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/10/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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60 |
Episode 132: Adult stem cells and their potential in treating heritable diseases | Cell biologist Dr Mirella Dottori and neuroscientist Dr Alice Pébay discuss how their work with induced pluripotent stem (IPS) cells, aka adult stem cells, may hold the key to a cure for Friedreich's ataxia and other genetically transmitted diseases. They also explain how adult stem cells differ from embryonic stem cells. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (30.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 3/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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61 |
Episode 131: What seems to be the antimatter?: Where experimental particle physics meets cloud computing | Physicist Associate Professor Martin Sevior and software engineer Tom Highfield explain how commercial cloud computing can be enlisted in the service of answering questions about the origins of the universe. With science host Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (24.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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62 |
Episode 130: Accused abroad: Foreign nationals and identity in criminal trials | Historian Associate Professor Richard Pennell discusses the confluence and confusion of nationality, identity, and jurisdiction in criminal cases crossing cultural and national borders. Presented by Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (26.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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63 |
Episode 129: Female-friendly cities: Planning for inclusivity in our urban spaces | Associate Professor of urban design Carolyn Whitzman and sociologist Dr Kalpana Viswanath discuss how urban environments can be designed and modified to make them safer for women. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (25.8 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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64 |
Episode 128: Light before the Dark: Life, Death and Art in Early Modern Nuremberg | Historians Prof Charles Zika and Prof Joel Harrington discuss the highs and lows of the culturally rich German city of Nuremberg in the 16th century. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (30.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 2/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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65 |
Episode 127: An ocean away: An African nation's roots in Southeast Asia | Linguistics Assoc Professor Sander Adelaar discusses the curious linguistic and genetic origins of the people of Madagascar. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (24.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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66 |
Episode 126: Lingua mundi and the perils of monolingualism | Professor Joe Lo Bianco examines the implications of English as "the world's language", and why it behooves native speakers of English to learn other languages. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (22.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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67 |
Episode 125: Approaches to snakebite in Papua New Guinea, and development in Sikkim | Herpetologist David Williams discusses his doctoral research into improving the plight of snakebite sufferers in Papua New Guinea, where snakes constitute a major public health problem. Also, PhD student Thomas Chandy probes community perceptions of the impact of economic development in the remote Himalayan region of Sikkim. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (40.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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68 |
Episode 124: Of dogs and hens: Researching animal welfare in shelters and egg production facilities | PhD student Sally Haynes examines the relationship between dogs and their handlers in animal shelters, and the implications for canine welfare. Fellow doctoral student Joanna Engel is looking into how cage size and nest box availability affect the behaviour and stress response of laying hens. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (32.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 1/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 123: Masterclass in improvisation: Flute legend Dave Valentin in Australia | New York-based latin and jazz artist Dave Valentin discusses how he came to his intstrument, the flute, its place in latin music, and what it takes to be a musical improvisor. With host Eric van Bemmel. Note: For legal reasons, this episode will not be available as an on-demand stream. It continues to be available as a podcast and as a download. We regret the inconvenience caused. Download mp3 (32 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/30/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 122: The ones and zeroes of life: Computational biology and the trajectory of scale | IBM computational biologist Dr Ajay Royyuru and computer scientist Professor Justin Zobel discuss the intersection of life sciences with high-end computing, and how computational scale may dramatically enhance biological and genetic research. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (31.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/23/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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71 |
Episode 121: Intellectual property: A guide for the rest of us | Law Professor Andrew Christie gives a primer on the complex world of laws pertaining to creations of the mind -- why they are there and how theyíre sometimes misunderstood. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (33.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/16/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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72 |
Episode 120: Mental health strategies in post-crisis Sri Lanka | Psychiatrist Prof Harry Minas, A/Prof Daya Somasundaram, and Dr Palitha Mahipala discuss the mental health landscape in Sri Lanka after decades of armed civil conflict and recent tsunami devastation. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (24.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/9/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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73 |
Episode 119: Part of the pattern: How networks explain social behavior | Psychologist Professor Pip Pattison explains how network theory can be used to explain and predict social behavior, and how it can be applied in areas such as defence and the management of epidemics. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (23.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 12/2/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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74 |
Episode 118: Controlling our impulses: Communication pathways and signal transmission in the nervous system | Neuroscientists Prof Bruce Carter and Dr Simon Murray explain how nerve cells conduct information efficiently and the processes that underlie the orderly creation and destruction of nerve and supporting cells. With Science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (28.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/21/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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75 |
Episode 117: Flavors of democracy: United States' ambitions in the Middle East | Political analyst Prof James Piscatori explains why the efforts by the United States to promote democracy in the Middle East may not result in the type of democracy Washington wants. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (31.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/18/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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76 |
Episode 116: Destined to fail: US policy in the Middle East and where it has gone wrong | Professor Marina Ottaway argues that past and current United States policy toward the Middle East is failing America, and needs to be recreated from a new perspective. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (21.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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77 |
Episode 115: The secret life of shampoo: Bubbles and droplets through the eyes of engineers | Chemical engineers Associate Professor Raymond Dagastine and Dr Rico Tabor shed light on the phenomena of bubbles and droplets, and explain why their underlying physics and chemistry are important to a wide range of industrial processes. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (26 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 11/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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78 |
Episode 114: Growing bodily tissues: An engineering perspective | Biomolecular engineer Associate Professor Andrea O'Connor discusses the engineering behind growing tissues and organs. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (23.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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79 |
Episode 113: Catching insects in Africa: A window on 18th century English society | Historian, literary critic and author Professor Deirdre Coleman connects naturalist Henry Smeathman's years in West Africa to the social norms and intellectual life 18th century England. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (22.7 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/21/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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80 |
Episode 112: Counting us in: Assessing indigenous child health | Epidemiologist Assoc Prof Jane Freemantle unpacks the delicate, complex task of empirically assessing child health in indigenous communities. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (20.4 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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81 |
Episode 111: A career in modelling: Assessing risk in natural resource management | Agricultural scientist Dr Andrew Hamilton explains how risk and uncertainty can be better modelled in both managing waster water and estimating species richness. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (22.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/6/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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82 |
Episode 110: Empowering Communities to Preserve Character of Place | Landscape Architect Assoc Prof Ray Green discusses his ground-breaking approach in which a community is able to define the character of its neighbourhood. This methodology seeks to restore the balance of power between communities and external bodies such as planners and developers. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (25.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 10/2/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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83 |
Episode 109: The Witch Depicted: Images and iconography in early modern times | Historian Prof Charles Zika explains the social and religious manipulations behind 15th and 16th century European images of witches and witchcraft, and how this contrasts with our contemporary visual representation of witches. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (25 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/23/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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84 |
Episode 108: Intellectualizing infidelity: A feminist remix | Political scientist Dr Lauren Rosewarne combines the academic and personal in a critical, feminist examination of being the ìother womanî in a affair with a married man. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (19.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/16/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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85 |
Episode 107: Getting it on the grid: Integrating renewable energy into our power supplies | Energy and climate change analyst Dr Roger Dargaville weaves together diverse technical, economic and environmental factors to produce a model for better, smarter use of our energy supplies. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (22.3 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/9/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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86 |
Episode 106: Nothing To Eat: Famine and Its Consequences | Economic Historian Prof Cormac O Grada joins host Jennifer Cook to discuss famine, its causes and repercussions, and the human condition in times of mass food scarcity. Download mp3 (27.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 9/2/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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87 |
Episode 105: Multiple Sclerosis: an Updated Look | Neurologist Prof Trevor Kilpatrick unpacks the complexity of Multiple Sclerosis and outlines the latest research findings on its causes and treatment. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (31.6 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/26/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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88 |
Episode 104: Evidence-based early childhood education: the Abecedarian approach | Early childhood educator Dr Joe Sparling discusses the Abecederian method, an evidence-based approach to improving learning environments for the very young. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (16 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/19/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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89 |
Episode 103: The Irish Diaspora and Its Legacy | Historian Professor Elizabeth Malcolm tells the story of Irish migration, particularly in the 19th and 20th centuries, and what it means for Ireland and the world today. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (16.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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90 |
Episode 102: Greening the Internet | Prof Rod Tucker spells out the environmental impact of an increasingly networked world, and how energy savings can be found with smarter technology. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (18.9 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 8/5/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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91 |
Episode 101: Making a Difference: Kiran Martin and Asha in the slums of Delhi | Paediatrician Dr Kiran Martin recounts the story behind the founding of ASHA, which now helps over 350,000 Delhi slum dwellers to improve their lives. Global health specialist Dr Peter Deutchmann weighs in on how research institutions in rich countries can work to empower and embolden work done by organisations in developing nations. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (25.1 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/29/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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92 |
Episode 100: Indonesia: Pathways to a Future | Historian Max Lane spies Indonesia's possible futures through the lens of its recent history and current political and economic climate. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (17.5 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/22/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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93 |
Episode 99: Click on the Kidneys: Virtual organs in your medical future | Prof Peter Harris discusses the process of virtual modelling of human organs, and how it will lead to enhanced understanding of disease and its treatment. With science host Dr Shane Huntington. Download mp3 (22.2 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/15/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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94 |
Episode 98: Wordlings, weasels and word bytes: Our language on a precipice? | Media researcher Dr Carolyne Lee scrutinizes changes to the English language accompanying the rise of social and digital media. With host Jennifer Cook. Download mp3 (17 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/8/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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95 |
Episode 97: Asperger's Syndrome and PDD-NOS Explained | Developmental psychologist Prof Margot Prior describes what it means to be an individual with Asperger's Syndrome, and how Asperger's and the similar Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified fit into the broader Austism Spectrum Disorder. With host Eric van Bemmel. Download mp3 (25.8 MB) Listen now Read Transcript read more | 7/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 95 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
A Great Find with intelligent conversation (for a change!)
Nice to hear some intelligent podcasting from Down Under on topics of interest to people anywhere. I've learned a thing or three from listening.
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