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The Institute of Development Studies (IDS) is a leading global institution for development research, teaching and learning, and impact and communications, based at the University of Sussex. Our vision is of equal and sustainable societies, locally and globally, where everyone can live secure, fulfi…

Institute of Development Studies


    • Nov 29, 2017 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 57m AVG DURATION
    • 14 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from IDS Live

    Automation, inequalities and the future of work

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2017 81:14


    Automation and digitisation are set to impact on many areas of work and livelihoods in developing countries and there is an urgent need for robust empirical work to address this issue. Participants at the 2017 Digital Development Summit, convened by IDS, called for research institutions to create cross-cutting partnerships across disciplines, geographies and sectors both to develop research and to play a brokering role in relation to solutions. This seminar will be a space to discuss key issues and debates and explore the role IDS researchers might play in developing this research agenda.

    Book Launch: The Struggle for Development

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2017 70:47


    Most development thought is based upon the assumption that the uplifting of the world’s poor is to be carried out by elite actors (states, corporations, NGO’s) , rather than the poor themselves. This way of thinking, paradoxically, helps justify new ways of oppressing and exploiting the poor. In this talk Professor Benjamin Selwyn from the School of Global Studies at the University of Sussex, launches his book The Struggle for Development. He introduces the concept of labour-led development to illuminate, theoretically and empirically, ways in which the poor can be masters of their own development.

    Brighton and beyond - the future of decent work in a digital world

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 70:38


    Advances in digital technology and artificial intelligence are transforming the future of work. Self-driving trucks are due to be tested on UK roads in 2018 and are already being piloted in the US where around 3 million people are employed as truck drivers, while in the Philippines 89 per cent of call centre jobs are now at risk from automation. Women are also likely to be disproportionately impacted by automation, and less likely to be shaping decisions in the tech sector where they are under-represented. Technological advances represent significant opportunities both for the UK and the rest of world. With significant implications for the UK Government and the Global Goal to achieve decent work for all by 2030, this fringe meeting at the Labour Party Conference seeks to explore: The opportunities and challenges that advances in digital technologies present for the work place and workers in the future, both at home and abroad? How policies across UK government – industrial strategy, education and skills, international development and trade - can help promote prosperity across the UK as well as supporting economic development globally? Chair: Chi Onwurah MP Speakers: Becky Faith, Digital and Technology Cluster, Institute of Development Studies; Jenni Lloyd, Purpose Lab. and Wired Sussex; Karen Cham, Academic Lead of the Brighton Digital Catapult Centre and Professor of Digital Transformation Design, University of Brighton.

    What is China's Belt and Road Initiative, and Why is East Africa in Focus?

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 44:02


    Three years since the launch of China's flagship outbound investment strategy, One Belt One Road (OBOR), many are left uncertain - what is OBOR and what exactly is China trying to achieve? Based on study of trade-related potential for win-win development between China and Africa countries, Dr. Lauren Johnston will explain economic push factors underlying China's outbound investment agenda, and the attractiveness of selective 'Road' countries in Africa. Arguing that the timeliness of OBOR investments for particular African economies could help underlie sustained economic development, she adds a call for Australia, the only OECD member of the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), to grasp related new challenges and opportunity.

    Participatory Monitoring and Accountability

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2017 85:22


    In this seminar, the speakers will share their thinking on Participatory Accountability; how it connects to the surfacing and valuing other types of knowledge; and its potential as a more inclusive and transformative approach to monitoring the Sustainable Development Goals. Speakers Chair: Jackie Shaw, IDS Fellow-Participation cluster whose expertise focuses on integrating visual methods into action research processes Jo Howard, IDS Fellow-Participation cluster working on social inclusion, citizenship building and processes of participation Joanna Wheeler, storycrafter, researcher, facilitator working for social justice Erika Lopez Franco, IDS Research Officer-Participation cluster working on building networks of social change through participation and action research

    CRPD Seminar: The BRICS Effect

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2017 20:53


    Wednesday 21st June 2017, 10:00 to 11:15, IDS Room 221 The Centre for Rising Powers in Development welcomed Paulo Esteves, the Director of the BRICS Policy Center, and Geovana Zoccal, IDS Visiting Fellow and researcher at the BRICS Policy Center, for a discussion on 'The BRICS Effect: The Impact of South-South Cooperation in the Social Field of International Development Cooperation ' The seminar was chaired by Lidia Cabral, Research Fellow. You can find more information on the Centre for Rising Powers in Development on the IDS website (www.ids.ac.uk)

    Did Climate Change Spark the Syrian Civil War?

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2017 54:59


    Professor Jan Selby will deliver a Sussex Development Lecture to discuss claims that climate change was behind Syria's descent into war. For proponents of the view that anthropogenic climate change will become a ‘threat multiplier’ for instability in the decades ahead, the Syrian civil war - now entering its seventh year - has become a recurring reference point, providing apparently compelling evidence that such conflict effects are already with us. According to this view, human-induced climatic change lay behind an extreme pre-civil war drought in Syria; this drought in turn caused large-scale migration; and this migration exacerbated the socio-economic stresses that underpinned Syria’s descent into war. This lecture will interrogate these claims and offer a counter-interpretation - one with important implications both for understanding the conflict and security implications of climate change, and for the politics of development more broadly. About the Speaker Jan Selby is Professor of International Relations, and Director of the Sussex Centre for Conflict and Security Research (SCSR). His research focuses on peace processes; environmental security; the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; and International Relations theory.

    Challenging Inequalities: Pathways to a Just World

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2016 42:43


    Reducing inequalities is one of the biggest development challenges of our era, and a key focus of the current IDS strategy. The 2016 World Social Science Report on this theme, which IDS has co-led with the International Social Science Council, was launched in September 2016, bringing together over 100 authors from around the world. This seminar share's the report's key findings and messages about the level of inequalities, their multiple and intersecting nature, their consequences and implications and what might be done about them - towards building pathways to a more equal world.

    Precarious Lives : Food, Work and Care After the Global Food Crisis - Report Launch

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2016 79:02


    Precarious Lives : Food, Work and Care After the Global Food Crisis - Report Launch by Institute of Development Studies

    IDS Annual Lecture 2016 with Professor James Ferguson, 5 July 2016

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2016 55:21


    Professor James Ferguson from Stanford University delivers the inaugural IDS Annual Lecture titled 'Not Working: Rethinking Production and Distribution in the Jobless City'. It is a public lecture and all are welcome to attend. For more details visit: http://www.ids.ac.uk/events/ids-annual-lecture-with-james-ferguson

    Future of food: Burgers...or bugs event - Full panel discussion

    Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2016 63:49


    Future of food: Burgers...or bugs event - Full panel discussion by Institute of Development Studies

    IDS Seminar: Gender and Sexuality - What’s law got to do with it?

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2016 78:04


    This seminar marks the launch of the Gender, Sexuality and Social Justice Edited Collection. Comprising 33 articles, photo essays, interviews and thought pieces with academics, activists and legal practitioners from over twenty countries in the world, the speakers will reflect on the complexity of the deceptively simple question posed by the Collection’s title: Gender, Sexuality and Social Justice: What’s Law Got to Do With It? The increasing centrality of law and legal reform to the political strategies through which sexuality and gender justice are sought requires interrogation and careful scrutiny. As the contributions in this Collection show, the law is often an imperfect tool for achieving meaningful justice. Yet it is in these important and complex conversations that the scope for future action becomes tangible. In exploring different processes by which activists and other actors have worked for change, in interrogating what we mean when we talk about ‘solidarity’, and in questioning the usefulness and place of law, a picture of a complex but vibrant field of action for sexuality and gender justice begins to emerge. From activists working with women in Assam’s tea gardens in India or youth lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender leaders in Vietnam, to lawyers fighting the Anti-Homosexuality Bill in Uganda or the criminalisation of cross-dressing in Malaysia, to academics carefully re-reading Islamic Sharia or scrutinizing the link between feminism and criminal Law in Latin America, or to researchers assessing HIV prevention programmes in South Africa, the Collection offers first-hand knowledge and experience of the complexities of gender, sexuality and social justice.

    Defining Challenges Accelerating Sustainability Seminar 15.07.2015

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2015 50:54


    IDS researcher speaks on BBC World about global water scarcity

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2015 3:16


    Jeremy Allouche on BBC World 8/4/2015 - Recording of IDS Research Fellow on BBC World programme talking about global water scarcity

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