Anthropology
Ein Podcast von Oxford University
Kategorien:
264 Folgen
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Assisted reproductive technologies and medical travel
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
Childbearing as global security strategies
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
Educational migration: youth, time and transformation
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
The Science of Modelling Through
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
Is female health cyclical? Evolutionary perspectives on menstruation
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
Global householding: care migration and the question of gender inequality
Vom: 8.7.2019 -
How war is shaping the Ukrainian HIV epidemic: A phylogeographic analysis
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Why are men muscular? Reproductive, hormonal, and ecological hypotheses to explain variation in human male muscularity within populations of Bangladeshi and British men
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Life history, parental investment and health of Agta foragers
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Telomeres as integrative markers of exposure to stress and adversity: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Militant masks: youth and insecurity in the Niger Delta
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Trials of the everyday: spaces of global health in South Africa
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Precolonial Microbiome: how microbiologists access anthropology museums to contribute to the debate on restitution
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
'Don't Bury the Famine Dead': how humanitarian intervention killed the most vulnerable in Ajiep, South Sudan, in 1998
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Social life of a license: caste and everyday struggles for work legitimacies in India
Vom: 31.1.2019 -
Studying the origins of human material culture in young chilldren
Vom: 14.9.2018 -
The grey area: fascism between the general and the particular
Vom: 14.9.2018 -
Why Are There Always Candomblés? Situated Knowledges of Miscegenation and Syncretism in Brazil
Vom: 14.9.2018 -
Rights and justice: reproductive politics and legal activism in India
Vom: 31.7.2018 -
A petition to kill: efficacious appeals against big cats in India
Vom: 31.7.2018
The Oxford Anthropology Podcast brings together talks by internationally renowned scholars and cutting edge researchers. Their lectures explore a wide range of human experience and feature case studies from around the world. We are grateful to the speakers and staff and students from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography who have made this podcast possible.