Podcasts about professor fran

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Best podcasts about professor fran

Latest podcast episodes about professor fran

JOSPT Insights
Ep 216: Latest clinical recommendations for rotator cuff tendinopathy, with Dr François Desmeules

JOSPT Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 22:28


Clinicians appreciate the value of a trustworthy clinical practice guideline for helping guide decisions in practice. Professor François Desmeules (University of Montréal) led an international team of shoulder experts who synthesised the latest evidence on diagnosing and non-surgically managing rotator cuff tendinopathy. Today he shares the headlines of the CPG and explains how the guideline group made sense of all the evidence to come up with recommendations for assessment, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis, including return to sport. ------------------------------ RESOURCES Rotator cuff tendinopathy diagnosis, non-surgical medical care and rehabilitation CPG: https://www.jospt.org/doi/10.2519/jospt.2025.13182

The Global Novel: a literature podcast
In Search of Lost Time (1913)

The Global Novel: a literature podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 20:48 Transcription Available


In Search of Lost Time (1913) by Marcel Proust remains one of the most profound and monumental novels of the 20th century, presenting us an intricate labyrinth of memory, time, and desire. With us are Professor Darci Gardner from Appalachian State University, whose expertise is in 19th and 20th-century French literature and she will shed light on the enigmatic Proustian syntax as a vehicle for story-telling and more. We also have Professor François Proulx from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and his expertise in French literature will enlighten us on aspects of desire and sexuality in this novel.Suggested Readings:Marcel Proust, Swann's Way (vol.1 of In Search of Lost Time)Proust and the Arts (2018) ed.Christie McDonald & François ProulxD. Gardner, "Rereading as a Mechanism of Defamiliarization in Proust,"  Poetics Today (2016) 37 (1): 55–105.https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-3452619F. Proulx, “Beyond the Epistemology of the Closet.” Nineteenth-Century French Studies 48:3-4 (2020), 185-192.https://muse.jhu.edu/article/754608F. Proulx, “Proust's Drawings and the Secret of the ‘Solitary House.'” Modern Language Notes 133:4 (2018), 865-890.https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/707619 F. Proulx and H. Freed-Thall, eds. “Proust to Other Ends,” special issue of L'Esprit Créateur, 62:3 (Fall 2022), 164 pages.https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/48666 This podcast is sponsored by Riverside, a professional conference platform for podcasting.Music by Giorgio Di Campo from FreeSound Music:http://freesoundmusic.eu  / freemusicforyoutube    / freesoundmusic original video: (https://youtu.be/_vZT5AHSuPk?si=KMvmbbfOpqAaWeWK)Comment and interact with our hostsBuzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the Show.Official website Tiktok Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin

The Every Lawyer
Lost in Promulgation: the trouble with Section 55

The Every Lawyer

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 52:34


For over 157 years, the Canadian federation has derived its legitimacy from a written constitution made up of 31 documents, the majority of which have no legal force in the French language, among them the foundational Constitution Act of 1867, formerly referred to as the British North America Act. While the Constitution Act of 1982 was written and adopted in both official languages, the remaining 71% of the documents, though translated, have yet to be promulgated. 42 years and counting. How did we get here? And what are the consequences of a 71% unilingual constitution? Professor François Larocque, holder of the first Canadian Francophonie Research Chair in Language Rights since 2018, is one of Canada's top experts on language rights and is currently involved in litigation aimed at solving this issue once and for all.The French version of this episode is available here: Canadian Bar Association - Juriste branché (cba.org).Constitution bilingue / Bilingual Constitution (youtube.com)

ISC Presents
Freedom and responsibility in science in the 21st century: episode 5, emerging technologies

ISC Presents

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2023 10:01


In this fifth episode, Professor Françoise Baylis (philosopher and bioethicist at Dalhousie University) and Ocean Mercier (Associate Professor at the School of Māori Studies at Victoria University of Wellington) explore new technologies, the associated risks and benefits they bring in science, considering ethical implications and insights from an indigenous perspective.What do developments in fields like gene editing, machine learning or climate engineering mean for scientific responsibility? Tune in as our guests discuss discusses the need for limits and regulation in the use and development of technologies, highlighting the importance of indigenous perspectives and values in considering the impacts of new technologies and the need to protect indigenous knowledge and rights.

Big Thinking Podcast
Is bilingualism in peril in Canada?

Big Thinking Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 32:31


Welcome to the Big Thinking podcast, where we talk to leading researchers about their work on some of the most important and interesting questions of our time.Gabriel Miller, President and CEO of the Federation, is our host.With so many developments occurring at various levels of governments on bilingualism and official languages, we wanted to get an expert opinion on the situation in an attempt to answer today's burning question: is bilingualism in peril in Canada? We are joined by Professor François Larocque, lawyer and Full Professor of Common Law at the University of Ottawa. Professor Larocque holds UOttawa's Research Chair in Language Rights and Issues, which is the very first research chair in Canada dedicated to the study of minority language rights and the development of the standards that govern them, focusing on constitutional protection of French.

Talking Strategy
Episode 10: Christine de Pizan: Strategic Precepts for the Prince with Professor (em.) Françoise Le Saux

Talking Strategy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2022 28:28


We're joined by Emeritus Professor Françoise Le Saux to discuss the unique work of Christine de Pizan. An Italian by origin, de Pizan was charged with writing manuals on good governance and the conduct of war for the medieval French crown prince who became Charles VI. Her main concern in a time of civil and foreign wars was to reduce civilian suffering, and to make the decision to go to war truly a last resort. Exceedingly well-read, building on the writings of Aristotle, Vegetius and the French cleric Honoré Bovet, de Pizan created benchmarks for good governance in peace and conflict. Unusually for her time, she saw insurgencies as functions of poor governance and provided advice on how to govern wisely and justly. She promoted conflict mediation by bringing together princes and experts to listen to disputing parties and identify possible resolutions short of war. If war was nevertheless required, she reiterated rules to prevent the conflict from degenerating into unnecessary destruction. The only known female strategic theorist from the time, and highly regarded by the Dukes of Burgundy Philip the Bold and John the Fearless, she was something like the French Courts, the Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre, and the Institute for Public Policy Research all rolled into one. Professor Françoise Le Saux, our expert consultant on de Pizan, was formerly Professor of French at the University of Reading. She has worked extensively on issues of translation and cultural adaptation in the Middle Ages.

FlowNews24
Professor Fran Sheldon (@FranSheld65) from @Griffith_Uni on #MenindeeLakes, Barwon-Darling River health and floodplain harvesting impacts

FlowNews24

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 7:48


Dr Fran Sheldon, Professor and Dean (Learning and Teaching) in the Griffith Sciences group at Griffith University and Research Member in the Australian Rivers Institute, talks about the restored health of the Lower Barwon-Darling system and how water policy and measurement will be important in the future years of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan

Voice of Islam
Breakfast Show Podcast 08-09-2021 -Madagascar-climate change famine/US vulnerable to Terrorism

Voice of Islam

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 104:56


Topics: 1 Madagascar on the brink of the world's first ‘climate change famine', UN warns 1. Professor François Engelbrecht 2 US has never been more vulnerable to Terrorism 1. David Munro 3 US President Gerald Ford pardons former President Richard Nixon of all federal crimes 1. Professor Patrick Andelic Presenters Sheikh Sharjeel Ahmad Qayyum Rashid Producer Tahira Amini, Malahat Atta and Hania Yaqub Sahar Tahir Researchers Mehrish Dogar, Maryam Khan, Khaula Hashmi, Anam Ahmedi, Sahar Tahir

Strefa Zarządzania Uniwersytetu SWPS
ChinaTalk with François Godement (Senior Advisor for Asia, Institut Montaigne)

Strefa Zarządzania Uniwersytetu SWPS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2021 56:18


On December 30, 2020, China and the EU signed a long-anticipated Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI), which had been negotiated since 2014. According to many commentators, the deal was announced in haste. On the one hand, Germany was eager to sign the Agreement before the end of its presidency in the Council of the EU, and on the other hand China was anticipating unfavorable shifts in US policies, which the incoming Biden administration could bring. Although it is still a long way before all conditions of the EU-China cooperation under CAI are finalized and ratified, a wave of criticism has been growing in Europe, pointing out that the deal does not do much in terms of securing a “level playing field” in the economic relations between the two partners. In our conversation with Professor François Godement of the Institut Montaigne, Paris, we discussed, in broad terms, the idea of fairness and reciprocity in the EU-China economic dealings, and we wondered whether the CAI is a move in the right direction. Professor Godement, one of Europe’s leading experts on China and CAI in particular, commented also on the role of the EU in China’s economic policies and practices, and on the engagement versus rivalry dilemma that Europe’s politicians are facing, in the context of China’s economic rise and the growing US-China economic tensions. The meeting was hosted by Associate Professor Marcin Jacoby, Department of Asian Studies at SWPS University at SWPS University, and Zbigniew Niesiobędzki, Ph.D., President of the Polish-Chinese Business Council - a partner of the ChinaTalk series. During the interview we answered questions such as: What were the biggest changes in China and its relations with the EU from 2012 until today? Will the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) bring more damage or profit for the EU? What is the Chinese perspective of the CAI? What could be the possible tool for creating a more even market between the EU and China? What is the impact of CAI on Trans-Atlantic relations? What is the level of understanding China among the decision makers in the EU? What is the current state of France’s bilateral relationship with China? What are the perspectives of China for the next few years? “ChinaTalk” is a series of interviews with leading global experts on China and East Asia, produced jointly by the Polish Chinese Business Council (PCBC) and SWPS University. Interviews are hosted by PCBC President, Mr. Zbigniew Niesiobędzki, and Professor Marcin Jacoby, Head of the Department of Asian Studies at SWPS University. ChinaTalk brings you the latest knowledge on the economy, social issues, management, and politics of China and East Asia. Our guests interpret the current developments and trends in the Chinese economy, and predict global, regional and bilateral outcomes of political decisions. Chinese relations with the European Union, and Poland in particular, constitute an important context of these discussions. The expert insights provide valuable input for business practitioners, analysts, as well as researchers and students interested in macroeconomics and global trade. For more ChinaTalk materials visit: https://www.swps.pl/strefa-zarzadzania/chinatalk

Revista de Imprensa
Revista de Imprensa - Depois de assassínio de professor França vai reagir a islamismo

Revista de Imprensa

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2020 4:17


Entre os  destaques nos  jornais  desta  terça-feira, estão a França perante o islamismo radicalem  sectores  da  sua  socieade, o regresso  da  esquerda boliviana ao poder em La Paz, a  eleição presidencial dos Estados Unidos  e as  incertezas  do  escrutínio  de  2  de Novembro, o  Mali entre os militares  e os religiosos após o golpe que derrubou  Ibrahim  Boubacar Keïta.  

Finding Genius Podcast
Calibrating Cancer: François Fuks' Cancer Research Reveals Epigenetics and Disease Connections

Finding Genius Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2020 36:55


Professor François Fuks researches epigenetics in human diseases. Along with our immune response process, scientists know that genetic alterations have a say in cancer progression. Professor Fuks researches how this interacts with epigenetic alterations and his work has led to a much sharper distinction between different types of cancers.  Listeners will learn How the two-hit hypothesis works with epigenetics modification and genetic factors, Why understanding epigenetics and disease can lead to life-saving therapies, and What new "epidrugs" may soon be available and what they are capable of targeting.  François Fuks is a professor of epigenetics at the Université libre de Bruxelles in Belgium. He's the director of the Laboratory of Cancer Epigenetics and the Cancer Research Center and founded a company that seeks to address the epigenetic field called Epics Therapeutics. He explains the gist of his research in terms of the careful and ground-breaking work his team has down with epigenomics and epigenetics in cancer. If cancer were a book series, he says, one volume is known but he and others are discovering another volume: this volume shows epigenetic chances and effects that have implications for diagnosis and therapeutics. He describes these implications in careful detail, describing a tight interplay that can lead to alterations in cancer progression. Genetic and epigenetic events are very tightly connected. These dynamic modifications can switch back and forth, adding marks but also removing. He explains this crosstalk in detail, how the different "lations" from demethylation to phosphorylation work in epigenetics and genetic forces, and how imprinting plays a role. He then addresses an exciting discovery. Scientists had asked if epigenetics could present a more complete picture than the subgroups we already divide cancer into. The answer is yes, epigenetics has enabled a better picture, adding subgroups and better classification for cancer treatment. Listen in to learn more about this as well as what "epidrugs" might offer future patients. For more about his work, see his lab's web page: http://fukslab.ulb.be/ Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK

Talking Transformation
TTPod COVID Diary Entry Number 7: “On your marks, (re)set, GO!?” Considering the structural and institutional opportunities for socio-economic and spatial change Post-COVID

Talking Transformation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2020 60:39


In these troubling times, the Talking Transformation Podcast team remains committed to bringing you conversations from South Africa and beyond. We continue to speak with professionals working around the globe and ask them to share their perspectives and insights into the cities they are operating from. Heading up the University of Cape Town's Urban Real Estate Unit (URERU), Professor François Viruly is closing in on securing a co-host slot as he re-joins the conversation to discuss the economic impacts and challenges implied by SA’s extended lockdown and the continued uncertainty: what can government and industry collectively do to work together and bring greater certainty to the future? We revisit some of the themes from Diary Entry 3 and cover new territory relating to COIVD-19’s impact on the property and business sectors . We welcome the input of Ashraf Adam and the wealth of knowledge he has developed whilst serving the public sector. Presently he is the CEO at Mandela Bay Development Agency (MBDA). His extensive CV covers global, national, provincial and municipal institutions and he holds strong views and convictions which are frequently shared via the conventional and social media platforms. His recent article in The Herald titled “Our Chance to Press the Reset Button” made for very fascinating reading and we invited him to share those views and what led him to his conclusions in this episode. The role of Local Economic Development units in municipalities; the strength and weaknesses of our institutions here in South Africa; and the impact of an economic downturn on municipal efficiency and revenue collection: all are considered in this extended episode. As always, we hope you enjoy the episode and welcome feedback via twitter @talkingtransfo1 Recorded 15th April 2020 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/talking-transformation-po/message

Talking Transformation
TTPod COVID Diary Entry Number 3: “End of Days or New Horizons?” – During and after COVID 19 – what can we expect from SA’s property market

Talking Transformation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2020 44:08


In these troubling times, the Talking Transformation Podcast team remains committed to bringing you conversations from South Africa and beyond. We continue to speak with professionals working around the globe and ask them to share their perspective and insights into the cities they are operating from. Heading up the University of Cape Town's Urban Real Estate Unit (URERU), Professor François Viruly has already guested on our TTPod FutureCast panel episode in February this year. We are delighted he’s back again today to consider – even at this early stage - the possible impacts of COVID 19 on the national economy and property sector more directly. We try and find possibilities in a time of great uncertainty and think about the factors and opportunities that could shape future trends more directly post-COVID 19. We ask what could land use “look like” in post COIVD 19 South Africa when considering residential, industrial, retail and office space? As always the perspectives are thought provoking and challenging and will be a useful reference for all of us looking at the formal and informal economy both now and in the future. Flatten the Curve! "Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika" --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/talking-transformation-po/message

Simfonie AGS Witpoortjie Preekbediening
Die Bybel - 'n Manjifieke Boek

Simfonie AGS Witpoortjie Preekbediening

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020


Professor François Möller bedien by ons die Woord en illustreer hoedat die Messias, Jesus Christus, alreeds vir baie jare as Belofte aangedui is in die Woord van die Here.

The Conversation
Women winning the Nobel Prize for Medicine

The Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 27:13


Just 12 women have won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine since it was founded in 1901. Kim Chakanetsa brings together two of these female Nobel Laureates - both extraordinary scientists from Norway and France. Professor May-Britt Moser won the prize in 2014 for the discovery of a type of cell in the brains of rats, which helps them locate their position in space.  She won the prize jointly with her former husband Edvard, with whom she had collaborated since they were students. Now divorced, they still run a world-renowned neuroscience lab - the Kavli Institute - together in the far north of Norway, where they are pursuing research that could further our understanding and treatment of Alzheimer's in humans. Professor Françoise Barré-Sinoussi was a researcher at the Institut Pasteur in Paris in the early 1980s when a new and terrifying disease emerged - AIDS. She and her colleague very quickly identified the HIV retrovirus as the cause, and set about finding a treatment. In 2008 she was recognised by the Nobel committee for this achievement, and she says this has opened doors for her work that otherwise would have remained closed - enabling her to better advocate on behalf of the vulnerable people most affected by HIV-AIDS. Image: (L) Francoise Barré-Sinoussi. Credit: Institut Pasteur (R) May-Britt Moser. Credit: TiTT Melhuus

Full PreFrontal
Ep. 16: Frans de Waal - Demystifying the Bi-Polar Ape

Full PreFrontal

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2017 38:50 Transcription Available


On a daily basis we direct our attention, guide our instincts, and move from making micro to macro decisions feeling that we are fully in control of our inner machinery called the brain. While exploring the nature and development of Executive Function skills and its impact on learning and self-awareness, one can't help but notice that many of us are unaware of ‘why we do what we do'. On the podcast, a world-renowned primatologist and celebrated author, Professor Fran de Waal, brings a perspective that we are not so different from the animals and the Interconnectedness between the good, the bad, and the ugly tendencies that form the true human nature are quite closely related to our animal counterparts. About Frans de Waal, Ph.D.Frans de Waal is a Dutch/American biologist, born in the Netherlands in 1948, having lived in the USA since 1981. His passion is primate behavior, and the comparison between primate and human behavior.  He pursues the first as a scientist and the second as a writer of popular books. For him, there is nothing more logical than to look at human society through the lens of animal behavior.Frans has a Ph. D. in zoology and ethology (the study of animal behavior) from the University of Utrecht, and now teaches Psychology at Emory University, in Atlanta. He is also a Distinguished Professor at the University of Utrecht.His first book, “Chimpanzee Politics,” compared the schmoozing and scheming of chimpanzees involved in power struggles with that of human politicians. The book even reached the reading list of the congress in Washington. Ever since, Frans has drawn parallels between primate and human behavior, from aggression to morality and culture.Since childhood, he has been an animal lover, and in fact — even though his career has focused on primate behavior — he is very much interested in all sorts of animals, including fish and birds, but also elephants and dolphins.BooksChimpanzee Politics: Power and Sex among ApesAre We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?Support the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)

Full PreFrontal
Episode 14: Demystifying the Bi-Polar Ape

Full PreFrontal

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2017 38:48


On a daily basis we direct our attention, guide our instincts, and move from making micro to macro decisions feeling that we are fully in control of our inner machinery called the brain. While exploring the nature and development of Executive Function skills and its impact on learning and self-awareness, one can’t help but notice that many of us are unaware of ‘why we do what we do’. Today on the podcast, a world-renowned primatologist and celebrated author, Professor Fran de Waal, brings a perspective that we are not so different from the animals and the Interconnectedness between the good, the bad, and the ugly tendencies that form the true human nature are quite closely related to our animal counterparts.

Kingston Shakespeare Podcasts
Anne-Valérie Dulac: Frances Yates's Alhazen

Kingston Shakespeare Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2016 29:06


Anne-Valérie Dulac examines Frances Yates’ reading of Alhazen’s (Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham; c. 965 – c. 1040) optics as a possible source for the theory of sight in Love’s Labour’s Lost. Dulac prodes deeper into this bold suggestion and provides a reading of the play’s optics (also linking them to the Sonnets) as mirroring Alhazen – a combination of intromission and extramission, the eye receiving and emitting beams of light. Anne-Valérie Dulac is a senior lecturer in early modern literature at Université Paris 13 - Sorbonne Paris Cité. She is currently working on the forthcoming publication of her doctoral dissertation on Philip Sidney and visual culture, completed under the supervision of Professor François Laroque. Her research interests include Sir Philip Sidney’s works and correspondence, visual culture, limning and optics. The paper she will be presenting for this conference is adapted from a forthcoming chapter (“Shakespeare and Alhazen”) in a book edited by Sophie Chiari and Mickaël Popelard entitled Shakespeare and Science. The conference Frances Yates: The Art of Memory was held on April 30, 2016 at the Rose Theatre, Kingston. The session was chaired by Patricia Gillies. Recorded by Anna Rajala and Timo Uotinen. More at: https://kingstonshakespeareseminar.wordpress.com/

Understanding Animal Research
Nobel laureate Professor Françoise Barré-Sinoussi on HIV

Understanding Animal Research

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2016 4:26


Professor Françoise Barré-Sinoussi was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2008 for the discovery of the HIV - the human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS. In this interview she describes the importance of using animals in her research to understand the disease. In French with English sub-titles

Translational Medicine
Between research and humanitarian

Translational Medicine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2014 6:24


Between research and humanitarian Professor François Nosten's work concentrates on infectious diseases at the Thai-Burma border. The main focus of his research is on malaria, especially malaria in pregnant women and emerging drug resistance of malaria parasites.

Malaria
Between research and humanitarian

Malaria

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2014 6:24


Between research and humanitarian Professor François Nosten's work concentrates on infectious diseases at the Thai-Burma border. The main focus of his research is on malaria, especially malaria in pregnant women and emerging drug resistance of malaria parasites.

Yale Himalaya Initiative
Françoise Robin on Tibetan Poetry and Film

Yale Himalaya Initiative

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2014 62:41


In this keynote address from the 2014 Himalayan Studies Conference at Yale University, Professor Françoise Robin delivers a lecture on the increasing presence in Tibetan poetry and films of the disappearing herders' black tent during the settlement of the mid 2000s.

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2012 63:07


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). This recording is presented on iTunes U as a video file. For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2012 63:07


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). This recording is presented on iTunes U as a video file. For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2012 63:07


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). This recording is presented on iTunes U as a video file. For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk

LCIL International Law Seminar Series
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

LCIL International Law Seminar Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2012 63:07


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). This recording is presented on iTunes U as a video file. For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2012 63:07


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). This recording is presented on iTunes U as a video file. For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk

LCIL International Law Seminar Series
'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' chaired by Professor James Crawford, with Judge Xue Hanqin, Professor Françoise Hampson, Sir Michael Wood and Professor Marc Weller

LCIL International Law Seminar Series

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2011 62:39


The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of agression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture entitled 'International Law: The Year in Review - A Panel Discussion' was delivered at the Faculty of Law on Friday 2nd December 2011 and involved a panel discussion chaired by Professor James Crawford (University of Cambridge) and featuring Judge Xue Hanqin (International Court of Justice), Professor Françoise Hampson (University of Essex), Sir Michael Wood (20 Essex Street Chambers) and Professor Marc Weller (Director, Lauterpacht Centre). For more information about the series, please see the LCIL website at www.lcil.cam.ac.uk