Podcast appearances and mentions of eric fish

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eric fish

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Best podcasts about eric fish

Latest podcast episodes about eric fish

MDR KULTUR trifft: Menschen von hier
MDR KULTUR trifft Ingo Hampf

MDR KULTUR trifft: Menschen von hier

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 50:19


Seit 1992 ist Ingo Hampf Gründungsmitglied und Hauptkomponist von Subway to Sally. Heute gilt sie als Deutschlands wichtigste Folk Metal Band. Soeben erschien das 15. Studioalbum „Post Mortem“.

Public Defenseless
312 | How to Create More Opportunities to Fight the Government's Case Pre-Trial w/Chesa Boudin and Eric Fish

Public Defenseless

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2024 67:11


Today, Hunter is joined once again by Eric Fish and Chesa Boudin. This time, Eric and Chesa join the show to discuss a recent law review article they published discussing ways to strengthen pre-trial adjudication. As discussed at length on the show, our criminal legal system has killed the jury trial. As a result, opportunities to bring injustices, misconduct, and corruption to light have faded away. Chesa and Eric's law review article attempts to point out places around the country that have figured out ways to revive adversarial aspects of our legal system before trial. In doing so, they offer a pathway that criminal defense lawyers may be able to increase their chances to oppose the governments case in public.   Guests: Chesa Boudin, Executive Director, UC Berkley Criminal Law and Justice Center Eric Fish, Professor of Law, UC Davis School of Law   Resources: Contact Chesa https://www.law.berkeley.edu/our-faculty/faculty-profiles/chesa-boudin/#tab_profile https://x.com/chesaboudin?lang=en Contact Eric https://x.com/Eric_S_Fish https://law.ucdavis.edu/people/eric-fish   Law Review Article https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5026754   Contact Hunter Parnell:                                 Publicdefenseless@gmail.com  Instagram @PublicDefenselessPodcast Twitter                                                                 @PDefenselessPod www.publicdefenseless.com  Subscribe to the Patron www.patreon.com/PublicDefenselessPodcast  Donate on PayPal https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=5KW7WMJWEXTAJ Donate on Stripe https://donate.stripe.com/7sI01tb2v3dwaM8cMN Trying to find a specific part of an episode? Use this link to search transcripts of every episode of the show! https://app.reduct.video/o/eca54fbf9f/p/d543070e6a/share/c34e85194394723d4131/home  

Public Defenseless
207: How Public Defenders Can and Have Beaten Mass Immigration Prosecutions w/Eric Fish

Public Defenseless

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 64:22


In a follow up to our episode on Operation Lone Star, Hunter is joined by UC Davis Law Professor Eric Fish to discuss his recent law review article, “Resisting Mass Immigration Prosecutions.” On our previous OLS episode, we discussed the many ways the state of Texas has stacked the deck in its favor, making it extremely difficult for PDs to get anything close to a “win.” Yet, OLS is not the first mass immigration prosecution scheme, and today's episode is about understanding the lessons we can learn from Eric, the other PDs, and the criminal defense attorneys in San Diego who got amazing wins against Operation Streamline.   Guests: Eric Fish, Former Federal Public Defender and Professor of Law, UC Davis School of Law   Resources: Law Review Article https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4659514 History of Operation Streamline https://www.law.berkeley.edu/files/Operation_Streamline_Policy_Brief.pdf Contact Eric https://law.ucdavis.edu/people/eric-fish   Contact Hunter Parnell:                                 Publicdefenseless@gmail.com  Instagram @PublicDefenselessPodcast Twitter                                                                 @PDefenselessPod www.publicdefenseless.com  Subscribe to the Patron www.patreon.com/PublicDefenselessPodcast  Donate on PayPal https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=5KW7WMJWEXTAJ Donate on Stripe https://donate.stripe.com/7sI01tb2v3dwaM8cMN  

OWL360
Episode 21: County Covid Level Orange and Hybrid School Model

OWL360

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 19:56


Dr Eric Fish joins Superintendent Brandon Harpe, Director of Curriculum Lisa Ferguson and Troy Hubbard to discuss the recent County Covid level orange and how it impacts Seymour Community Schools with the new Hybrid classroom model.

AHLA's Speaking of Health Law
COVID-19 GC Roundtable - Part 4

AHLA's Speaking of Health Law

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2020 48:43


In the fourth podcast in this series with general counsel on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic, Sarah Swank, Counsel, Nixon Peabody LLP, speaks with Mark Bonanno, General Counsel, Oregon Medical Association, and Eric Fish, Chief Legal Officer, Federation of State Medical Boards. The podcast discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected their associations and advocacy activities, including their biggest membership concerns, how their associations have reacted to changes in regulation, and lessons learned. From AHLA's In-House Counsel Practice Group.

Brownstein Podcast Series
Client Spotlight: Regulation In an Era of Health Care and Technological Change

Brownstein Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2019 28:43


Technologies like artificial intelligence are fundamentally altering the way health providers service patients. As the health care industry evolves, the federal government and state medical boards across the country will face increased pressure to address these changes. Mark Begich moderates a conversation with David Reid and our guests, Eric Fish and Sarvam TerKonda of the Federation of State Medical Boards, and René Quashie of the Consumer Technology Association, in which they discuss the regulatory landscape for AI in health care and whether regulations should address specific technologies or overarching principals.

The Denver Degenerates
The Denver Degenerates Podcast Ep172 – Theme Park Racist

The Denver Degenerates

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2019 67:57


Hello Degenerates! We have a couple of fill-ins this week. Eric Fish and Chase South help us hold it down. We talk about Nitrous experiences, whippets, and tell stories of our car puke past. No car is safe with Chase around, that's for sure. Dan regales us with stories that turn out to be movie plots. We take it to an extreme! Enjoy…   Twtter & Snapchat – Dendegenerates Instagram – The Denver Degenerates Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/thedenverdegenerates/ Email – denverdegenerates@gmail.com Website – denverdegenerates.com Merchandise - https://teespring.com/stores/denverdegenerates If you're looking to Buy or Sell a House hit up Gabe - GabeGRealty.com   -Jason

ROCK ANTENNE Heimatklänge – der Podcast!
Subway to Sally / Potsdam: ROCK ANTENNE Heimatklänge

ROCK ANTENNE Heimatklänge – der Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2019 27:10


Hier rocken die Bands von Daheim! In dieser Folge der ROCK ANTENNE Heimatklänge sprechen wir mit Sänger und Multi-Instrumentalist "Eric Fish" Eric-Uwe Hecht und Drummer und Percussionist Simon Michael Schmitt von der Potsdamer Band Subway to Sally. Viel Spaß!

Lead Time
Everyday Discipleship

Lead Time

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2019 46:52


Today, in Episode 16, Tim and Jake speak with Eric Fish about his wild story of discipling many, especially in marginalized people groups, and teaching others to do the same. This is Lead Time.

Sinica Podcast
Gao Yutong on the Chinese student experience in America

Sinica Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2018 54:22


This week on Sinica, Kaiser is live at the Princeton US-China Coalition Global Governance Forum, where he speaks with Gao Yutong (Tony Gao) about the wunderkind entrepreneur's experience as a Chinese student in the U.S. from age 16 to his present 23. Gao is the founder and CEO of Easy Transfer, which Chinese students use to pay their college tuition from Chinese bank accounts without all the hassle, paperwork, and expensive fees. He was named last year to the Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia list. Gao talks about his time amidst the cornfields (in his sophomore year of high school, he attended an all-boys Catholic boarding school in Lincoln, Nebraska), his stint as president of the Chinese Students and Scholars Association at the University of Southern California, and how students from China might prepare themselves better for the experience of study in the U.S. If you like this episode, be sure to check out — or re-listen — to another recent episode: The Chinese student experience in America, with Siqi Tu and Eric Fish. Recommendations: Gao: A recommendation for college students to pick the thing they like most. Also, to take the advice of Jack Ma: “When you are 20 to 30 years old, you should follow a good boss [and] join a good company to learn how to do things properly. When you are 30 to 40 years old, if you want to do something yourself, just do it. You still can afford to lose, to fail. When you're 40 to 50 years old, my suggestion is you should do things you are good at. When you are 50 to 60 years old, spend time training and developing young people, the next generation. When you are over 60 years old, you better stay with your grandchildren." Kaiser: The podcast of the UPenn Center for the Study of Contemporary China, specifically, the recent episode with Damien Ma on China’s political economy.

Sinica Podcast
The Chinese student experience in America, with Siqi Tu and Eric Fish

Sinica Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2018 63:50


This week, our featured topic is Chinese students overseas. There are about 800,000 of them, and according to China’s Ministry of Education, nearly 80 percent choose to return to China soon after finishing their education. This group is referred to as “sea turtles” (海龟; a pun on 海归 hǎiguī, meaning “to return from overseas”) for their ambitious swim to and from faraway shores. Historically, overseas Chinese students were almost exclusively from the wealthiest and best-educated families in Chinese society, but nowadays, the group is dramatically more diverse. The new students abroad, however, face many of the same identity issues that the previous generations faced. Chinese students who are studying at American universities are, as Eric Fish put it in an article on SupChina recently, caught in a cross fire. Many of these 300,000-plus students find themselves grappling with their Chinese — or, as most Americans simply see it, “Asian” — identity for the first time, and are taken aback by the biased views that many Americans have about China. They feel forced to choose: to either defend their country against ignorant attacks, or take very Americanized worldviews to prove that they are not “brainwashed.” But if they go too far and adopt too liberal of a viewpoint, they may get accused back home of being a “white-left” (白左 báizuǒ; a derogatory term for white Western liberals). To discuss the ideology and identity issues at play, as well as more routine aspects of the Chinese student experience in America, we welcome Eric Fish — the author of China’s Millennials, who is now working on a second book about university students from China in the U.S. — and Siqi Tu — a graduate student in sociology at the City University of New York looking at Chinese high school students in America. The podcast was recorded live in New York at the China Institute on March 14. Recommendations: Jeremy: For anyone who (like him) is having trouble with the American bureaucracy regulating septic tanks as they try to build a house in a holler (what people in Tennessee call a hollow, or a small valley between two hills), Jeremy recommends the Sun-Mar Compact Composting Toilet and the EcoJohn Waterless Incinerating Toilet. No septic permit necessary! Siqi: Americanah, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. It’s written by a Nigerian immigrant to America about her experience figuring out racial identity in the country, finding love, and then undergoing reverse culture shock upon returning to Nigeria.   Eric: Fortunate Sons: The 120 Chinese Boys Who Came to America, Went to School, and Revolutionized an Ancient Civilization, by Liel Leibovitz and Matthew Miller. It’s about the experience of what is considered the first group of Chinese students to come over to the U.S., way back in 1872. Kaiser: America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism, by Anatol Lieven, an incredibly prescient book written six years ago.

The F.A.N. Show
Episode 242: Thanksgiving Special

The F.A.N. Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2017 64:12


It's that time of year when we give thanks for everything in our lives that make each day special! Eric "Fish stix" Fischer joins me as we talk sports, the holidays, Thanksgiving and more on the show!

Asia In-Depth
North Korea’s Market-Savvy Millennials

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2017 29:17


While concerns over nuclear and ballistic missile tests tend to dominate the headlines about North Korea, a story that may be just as consequential has been quietly developing over the past two decades. Private enterprise and sophisticated markets are starting to give the country’s citizens access to a wide array of goods, including illegal foreign media products. Today, the country’s millennial generation is coming of age having grown up with a market mentality and far more foreign media exposure than their parents — something that’s having major social and political implications. In this episode, we trace how this generational shift is changing North Korea from the inside.

Friends of Europe podcasts
EU-China Forum: shaping a new world order

Friends of Europe podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2017 76:10


The 7th EU-China Forum looked at the future directions of EU-China relations in an age of increased uncertainties. In the second session, speakers and participants discussed current geopolitical changes and their impact on both Europe and China and on EU-China relations. Speakers included EU Commissioner for trade Cecilia Malmström, Cao Yuanzheng (BOCI Research), author of “China’s Millennials: the want generation” Eric Fish, Liu Miao (Luzhou Laojiao), Meng Hong (Renmin University of China), Masami Nakata (Energy Charter Secretariat) and Juan Prat y Coll (FIPRA).

Asia In-Depth
American Universities in China—Free Speech Bastions or Threat to Academic Freedom?

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2017 53:29


In recent years, American universities have been setting up branches and full degree-granting campuses in China at a time when Chinese leaders are cracking down on so-called “Western values.” This has raised questions back in the States — including in the U.S. Congress — as to whether academic freedom is being compromised. In this episode, we look at the case of NYU Shanghai and what challenges American educational institutions face in China's current political environment.

Asia In-Depth
Donald Trump and Asia

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2017 27:36


When Donald Trump was elected to become the 45th president of the United States in November, it sent shockwaves across the world, particularly in Asia. Throughout his campaign, he made pledges that, if acted upon, could fundamentally alter the U.S. position in the region... and even the broader international order. In this episode, we look at the geopolitical hotspots in Asia including China, North Korea, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, India, and the Philippines, and how President Trump might address them.

Asia In-Depth
North Korea Goes Ballistic

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2016 24:31


In spite of ever-stricter sanctions on North Korea, the impoverished and isolated country continues to produce more sophisticated weapons. Many experts fear North Korea is approaching its ultimate goal of a nuclear ballistic missile arsenal capable of hitting targets around the world. In this episode, analysts describe how the “Hermit Kingdom” is managing to develop these weapons, and what, if anything, can be done to counter them.

Asia In-Depth
China’s Economy—Headed for a Crash?

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2016 28:50


After embracing market reforms in 1979, the world's largest communist country blindsided the world with three decades of consistent double-digit GDP growth. It was dubbed the "China Miracle." But now, the country's growth is rapidly slowing and a raft of grave concerns about demographics, the middle-income trap, capital flight, and debt are emerging in its economy. So does this mean economic catastrophe, or can it be managed? In this episode we hear from a range of economists, investors, and journalists to unpack what’s going on in China’s economy, and what a stumble might mean for the world.

Asia In-Depth
Women Confront 'Honor Killing' in Pakistan

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2016 14:51


Each year, throughout the world, thousands are killed in so-called "honor killings" for bringing perceived shame onto their families for anything from infidelity to refusing an arranged marriage — or even being raped. The victims of these murders are predominately female, and because of legal loopholes and entrenched ideas about a woman’s role in the family, the practice is especially prevalent in Pakistan. In this episode of the Asia Society Podcast, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, who recently won an Oscar for her film about honor killing, discusses why the crime persists and how things might be starting to change.

Asia In-Depth
Taiwan’s New Direction

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2016 20:59


In January, Taiwan's voters handed the traditionally pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) a landslide victory, giving it control of the parliament and presidency for the first time ever. The outcome is just the latest of many signals that Taiwanese are growing more skeptical of mainland China, which appears to be failing in its long-running strategy to entice the self-governing island back peacefully. In this fifth episode of the Asia Society Podcast, we explore how Taiwan has continued to drift further away from the mainland psychologically, and what the implications could be of a new Taiwanese government that's less friendly with Beijing.

Asia In-Depth
Myanmar's Road to Democracy

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2015 24:52


For five decades, Myanmar (also known as Burma) languished under a hardline military junta, with most people living in poverty and any hint of dissent quickly stomped out. But in 2008, a new constitution set in motion a profound set of changes. Then this November, it culminated with something that's long seemed impossible: free and peaceful elections that allowed long-time political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party to take power. In this fourth episode of the Asia Society Podcast, we trace Myanmar's "bumpy zig-zag road" to reform and explore what lies ahead for the nascent democracy.

Asia In-Depth
Culture Under Terrorist Threat

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2015 15:37


In the aftermath of the Arab Spring, several Middle Eastern countries have descended into violence as terror groups like the Islamic State have gained power. As they’ve seized territory in Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere, these organizations have systematically destroyed millennia-old archeological sites and trafficked priceless artifacts, creating a self-perpetuating cycle that provides funding for arms and erodes the region's shared identity. This process — which some experts have deemed "cultural cleansing" — has augmented the tragedy of the human lives lost to the conflict. In this episode, we explore what’s happening and what the world can do to stop it.

Asia In-Depth
Iran's Political 'Midlife Crisis'

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2015 18:17


In July, after years of negotiations, Iran signed a historic deal with the United States and five other world powers to limit its nuclear capability in exchange for sanctions relief, triggering controversy throughout the world. But regardless of its international perception, the deal signals a major shift in Iran's domestic politics. In this episode, experts on the country discuss the political conflict playing out over Iran's future between aging hardline revolutionaries and a moderate younger generation more inclined to opening up to the world.

Asia In-Depth
Xi Jinping's China

Asia In-Depth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2015 28:20


When Xi Jinping became China's top leader in 2012, few had any inkling of the sweeping changes that were to come. Three years later, a clearer picture has emerged, but many questions remain. Is he a reformer bent on curbing corruption at the highest levels of government? Or is he merely concerned with consolidating power within China's opaque political system? In this inaugural episode, scholars, journalists, and political figures weigh in on the man that some have described as China's most powerful leader since Mao.