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History doesn't just echo, it warns. As Washington ramps up tariffs and the world braces for economic whiplash, are we watching a 21st-century rerun of Hoover's Great Depression playbook? From China's counterstrikes to cracks in America's economy, we unpack whether this trade war is strategy or self-sabotage and how it may accelerate the formation of a "post-American" global trade order. Host Tu Yun joins Professor Josef Mahoney, Professor of Politics and International Relations, East China Normal University, Professor Hans-peter Burghof, Chair of the Banking and Finance Department, University of Hohenheim, and Professor Qu Qiang, Fellow, Belt and Road Research Center, Minzu University of China to check for answers to these and more at the Chat Lounge.
In this episode Harriet and Grahame discuss Pillars 1 and 2 with Professor Hans van den Hurk ... Why are they so darned complex? Will they stand the test of time? Are there alternative methods? Do many countries have the capacity? find out more about Hans here Prof Dr Hans van den Hurk (H.T.P.M.) | Maastricht UniversityHans van den Hurk is an international tax advisor with extensive experience (hhp.law)
① What's at stake in German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's China visit? We are joined by Professor Hans-peter Burghof with University of Hohenheim in Germany and Professor Cui Hongjian from Beijing Foreign Studies University. (00:49) ② UN chief calls for restraint after Iran's attacks on Israel. To what extent has the attack intensified concerns that the Middle East is being pushed into a full-blown conflict? (25:19)③ China issues new national-level guidelines aimed at addressing stock-market volatility. (36:07)④ We look at a France-UK dispute over fishing rights in the post-Brexit era. (45:48)
Wiedervorlage zum 2. Jahrestag des Kriegsbeginns in der Ukraine. Professor Neuhoff, Kandidat der AfD zur Europawahl, hielt diesen Vortrag zur Vorgeschichte des Kriegs im Rahmen der IfS-Sommerakademie 2022 (hier auf Youtube anschauen).
I dette afsnit taler jeg med ekspert i positiv psykologi, nemlig forsker og professor i emnet, Hans Henrik Knoop. Mange taler om positiv psykologi og jeg må indrømme, at jeg selv synes, at emnet er enormt spændende. For hvis vi virkelig kan påvirke vores trivsel og glæde – og dermed vores liv - med vores mindset, så har vi en stor magt i vores hænder. Hans Henrik sætter os i dette afsnit ind i emnet, og trækker på sin årelange faglige og forskningsbaserede viden, når han fortæller om, hvorvidt vi reelt kan tænke os glade. Vi taler om, hvad positiv psykologi helt præcist er, vi taler om hvad studier peger på, om misforståelser og om hvad vi selv kan gøre for at dyrke positiv psykologi i hverdagen. I afsnittet kommer vi bl.a. ind på:Hvad positiv psykologi rent faktisk er - og hvilke misforståelser emnet indeholder.Hvorfor og hvordan vi kan påvirke vores liv, trivsel og sundhed med positiv psykologi.Hvorfor positiv psykologi og optimisme ikke er det samme, og hvorfor vi faktisk godt kan være for over-optimistiske.Hvad vi rent lavpraktisk kan gøre for at dyrke positiv psykologi i hverdagen.Hvorvidt positiv psykologi kan bruges til noget, når vi er i dyb sorg.Vil du gerne støtte podcasten her? Det kan du gøre ved at dele på sociale medier, at du lytter/følger med og tag'e @MindCareCollective.Du kan også støtte podcasten ved at donere et valgfrit beløb via Mind Care Collectives MobilePay: 155503.Musik: Max Ulver Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Following China's decision to bid farewell to stringent covid restrictions, the end of 2022 has been a rather painful period for the Chinese economy, as many people stayed at home due to infections or the fear of becoming infected. Many economists agree that the fundamentals sustaining China's long-term growth remain strong. However, less optimistic views argue that China will have a bumpy road to recovery due to the unpredictable virus, external uncertainties, and the existing challenges facing the economy even without the pandemic. In this edition of the program, we take a look at the prospects of China's recovery. Host Ding Heng is joined by Dr. Wang Dan, Chief Economist of Hang Seng Bank China; Michael Powers, Zurich Insurance Group Professor of Risk and Finance at Tsinghua University; Professor Hans-peter Burghof, Chair of the Banking and Finance Department at the University of Hohenheim in Germany.
Deze keer stellen we opnieuw twee boeken aan u voor: 1. Ruusbroek in gesprek met drie vrienden - Pater Klaas Blijlevens, ofm cap. - Uitgeverij Halewijn Kapucijn Klaas Blijlevens brengt ons in contact met een grootmeester van de mystiek, Jan Van Ruusbroec. Om de lezer in te leiden in enkele van Ruusbroecs mooiste mystieke teksten, zet Klaas Blijlevens drie dialogen in scène. Achtereenvolgens zien we een kluizenaar, een volgelinge van Clara van Assisi en een kartuizermonnik in gesprek gaan met Jan van Ruusbroec. Deze personages zijn wel degelijk historisch en ze voeren ons naar de kern van Ruusbroecs spiritualiteit. Hun dialogen met Ruusbroec werden echter gefingeerd. Klaas Blijlevens schreef ze op basis van zijn uitgebreide kennis van Ruusbroec en brengt zo diens ideeën tot leven op een voor iedereen boeiende en toegankelijke manier. Klaas Blijlevens werd geboren in 1938 in Nederland, trad in 1956 in bij de kapucijnen en werd in 1963 priester gewijd. In 1976 kwam hij naar Vlaanderen en was meer dan 20 jaar pastor in het psychiatrisch ziekenhuis in Ieper. De aandacht voor onze eigen mystici kreeg meer diepgang toen hij zich vanaf 1990 dankzij het Ruusbroecgenootschap in Antwerpen kon verdiepen in onze Middelnederlandse mystiek. 2. Koning David in de Bijbel en daarna - Professor Hans Ausloos - Uitgeverij Averbode Zonder twijfel is David een van de belangrijkste figuren uit de Bijbel. Hij is er de koning die Jeruzalem tot hoofdstad van Israël maakte en de eerste voorbereidingen trof voor de bouw van de tempel door zijn zoon Salomo. Hij geldt er als de grondlegger van de Davidische dynastie en de voorloper van de te verwachten Messias. Bijna zestig keer komt zijn naam voor in het Nieuwe Testament en Jezus wordt er ‘zoon van David' genoemd. De Didachè-studiedagen Bijbel, die jaarlijks in Leuven worden georganiseerd door de Vlaamse Bijbelstichting in samenwerking met de Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen van de KU Leuven, waren in 2021 gewijd aan David. Er werd nader ingegaan op de historische achtergrond, de narratieve opbouw en de theologische betekenis van de verhalen over David in de boeken Samuël, Koningen en Kronieken. De verdere doorwerking van de Davidfiguur in andere teksten binnen en buiten de Bijbel en in de kunst kwam een bod, evenals de wijze waarop de verhalen over David een inspiratiebron kunnen zijn in godsdienstonderwijs, catechese en pastoraal. In dit boek worden de teksten van de lezingen gebundeld. De bijdragen werden geschreven door Hans Ausloos, Bryan Beeckman, Hans Debel, Kolet Janssen, Bénédicte Lemmelijn, Hector Patmore, Klaas Smelik, Koert van Bekkum en Eveline van Staalduine-Sulman. Hans Ausloos is Doctor in de Godgeleerdheid (KU Leuven, 1997). Hij is professor Bijbelwetenschappen aan de UCLouvain en Maître de recherches van het Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique (F.R.S.-FNRS). Hij publiceerde heel wat boeken en artikels in wetenschappelijke tijdschriften en reeksen, naast talrijke bijdragen voor een breder publiek.
He was a self-taught musician from Syria who astonished the music world with his innovative technique on the double bass. With his new style, Francois Rabbath could play with ease what should have been impossible. UNL Professor of Double Bass and Jazz Studies Hans Sturm is the guest on this week's All About Books where he'll talk about his biography of Rabbath “75 Years on 4 Strings”
In Episode 2 of Series 4 of the DIAL Podcast, we are in discussion with Professor Hans van Kippersluis from the Erasmus University in Rotterdam. Hans, a professor of applied economics, is the Principal Investigator on the DIAL project, Gene Environment Interplay in the Generation of Health and Education Inequalities, which has used innovative methods and data to explore the interplay between nature and nurture in generating health and education inequalities. Transcript Christine Garrington 0:00 Welcome to DIAL, a podcast where we tune in to evidence on inequality over the life course. In series four, we're looking at what's been learned from some of the DIAL projects about how and when inequality manifests in our lives, and what its longer term consequences might be. For this second episode of the series, we're delighted to be joined by Hans van Kippersluis, Professor of Applied Economics at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam. And Principal Investigator of the DIAL project, Gene Environment Interplay in the Generation of Health and Education Inequalities - put more simply nature versus nurture. So Hans, welcome to the podcast. And I wonder if you can start by talking us through what researchers working on this project have actually been looking into. Hans van Kippersluis 0:42 What we've been doing in this project is essentially incorporating the recent availability of genetic data into social science and most prominently economic analysis. And so most of our work has focused on the interplay between genes and the environment. So in the introduction, you mentioned nature versus nurture, but actually more accurately, what we're doing is nature and nurture jointly into how they shape essentially education and health outcomes. And I think this is also the main innovation of our project, because biologists have studied nature before; social scientists have of course, extensively studied nurture, but not many have studied the interplay, the interaction between the two. And I think this was sort of the main innovation for why we got the funding some five years ago. And so what we have done is mostly studying this interplay. But along the way, we have also made some methodological contributions to a field which is very new. Then we've also used genetic data to test all their theories, and also, I think, enrich the framework of equality of opportunity. Christine Garrington 1:35 Yeah, fantastic project. And as you've just said, you've made unprecedented use of genomic as well as survey data in the research, tell us a bit more about the information that you've been able to access? And how you've been able to use it? Hans van Kippersluis 1:47 Yeah, sure. So the interesting thing is that more and more social science datasets, so data sets that have been traditionally used by social scientists, and these are mostly extensive surveys, are now collecting DNA information from their respondents. And this is often from blood or saliva. And what they did is basically, so more than 99% of DNA is the same across human beings. And so what we are using is only this remaining less than 1% of the variation. And these are called snips. And snips are points of your DNA that differ across human beings. And there's roughly 1 million of them. And so what we do, basically also other people have done is sort of aggregating these tiny effect sizes into an index. And this is called the polygenic index. And this is telling us something about your genetic predisposition towards a certain outcome. And this is quite interesting, because this data, this new variable, essentially can be added to existing datasets. And so we have a wealth of information that has been collected in the past on surveys on existing data. And then we simply add one indicator, one new variable. This is telling us something about people's genetic predisposition. And just to be clear, this is not like a deterministic variable. It also exhibits quite a bit of measurement error and noise. But at the group level, and that's what we have been doing is it sort of does tell us something about your genetic predisposition, and it can help us understand how certain life outcomes like education, like health, are shaped by the interplay between your genetic predisposition and your environment. Christine Garrington 3:07 Indeed, let's talk a little bit now then about some of the research findings. And you know, what's come out of this now, one piece of research we've spoken about this actually, in an earlier podcast episode, actually drew links between mothers smoking in pregnancy and their baby's birth weight. I wonder if you can just sort of summarise that for you what actually came out of that what we learned Hans van Kippersluis 3:28 this was work with with my PG students, Rita Dias Pereira and colleague Cornelius Rietveld. And for birthweight we knew that maternal smoking is one of the key environmental risk factors. And we also knew from genetic studies that genes matter in determining your birth weight. And so what we did here was essentially looking at the interaction between the two. So can higher polygenic indices protect against maternal smoking? And the answer, unfortunately, perhaps was no, in the sense that we found very, very little interaction between genes and the environmental exposure of maternal smoking. So it seems that both matter, but there doesn't seem to be any meaningful interaction between the two. So that was, to some extent surprising, but on the other hand, also perhaps logical in the sense that maternal smoking is apparently such a devastating environmental exposure that even higher genetic predisposition cannot protect you from this. Christine Garrington 4:16 Yeah, really interesting. And anybody who's interested in that can listen to Rita actually discussing that in series three, Episode Seven, of our DIAL podcast called Mums Who Smoke and their Baby's Birthweight. So do check that out if you're interested to know a little bit more about what Rita and all of the all of your colleagues did. Now, there have been some interesting findings Hans from the project around the role of genes in a child's education and specifically around parental investments. I wonder if you can explain a bit more about what you were looking to understand there. Hans van Kippersluis 4:50 Yes, yeah, so this is one of my favourites studies. It's joint work. Also with another PG student Muslimova and my colleagues Stephanie von Hinke, Cornelius Rietveld and Fleur Maddens. And the starting point there was actually a theory of human capital formation from economics. And it dates back all the way to the work of Nobel laureate Gary Becker. And one of the crucial assumptions in that model is that parental investments are complementary to your genetic endowments. And this assumption is actually very hard to test because often we do not have a good measure of endowments. And if we do, it may already be contaminated by parental investment. So many people, for example, use birth weights. But of course, well as we just learned, maternal smoking may have a large effect on your birth weight, so it's not fully free of your parents' behaviour. And the other thing is that your parental investments often respond to endowments. So if you have a child with specific needs, of course, parents respond to this. So the problem of testing this assumption is that endowments and investments are actually always very closely entangled. And that makes it very hard to test whether they are complementary or not. So what we did here was using one's genetic endowment, and that is actually has a very nice property and that it's fixed at conception, so it cannot be affected by your parental investments. And what we did was using the child's birth order to proxy for parental investments. So what we know from earlier studies is that firstborns tend to get more parental attentions on average than later points. So this is one after all, because they have undivided attention until the arrival of later borns. And this extra parental investment is actually independent of your endowments. It simply derives from the fact that you have more time if you have one child as opposed to multiple children. So what we did in this study is looking within families comparing siblings that were first born to later borns, and then further analysing whether this firstborn advantage was stronger for firstborn siblings who randomly inherited the higher polygenic index for educatio. I think this was a nice, very unique setting to test this theoretical assumption that parental investments are complements to genetic endowment. Christine Garrington 6:45 What did you find here? Then what do we learn about the role of genetics in affording in affording certain children advantages later on in life? Hans van Kippersluis 6:53 So what we found was that indeed, the firstborn effect seems to be stronger for siblings who randomly inherited higher polygenic indices. And I think this is evidence in favour of this theoretical assumption of complementarity between endowments and investments. And it also means that your genetic predisposition cannot just give you a direct advantage. But it also means that this advantage may be kind of amplified by your parental or your teacher investments. And this complementarity, I think also suggests once again, that for disadvantaged children, so the other side of the coin, we need to start very, very early and follow up these early investments also with data investments to make them as productive as possible. Christine Garrington 7:29 So Hans, some fascinating research and findings. I wonder if there's been a standout or surprising finding for you from the project. Hans van Kippersluis 7:36 I think methodologically, what we've learned is that there's still a world to explore in terms of using genetic data in social science, because what we have seen is that polygenic indices can be a great tool to improve our understanding of the things we just talked about. But I think the way we use these polygenic indices, are shall I put this sort of a bit naive, in some sense, because what we do is we first construct a score or an index by regressing an outcome on all of these 1 million individual genetic variants. And as you can imagine, if you do these 1 million regressions, then it will be a lot of noise in these coefficients, and these estimates also come with some uncertainty. And what is surprising to me, what I've learned is that many researchers simply sort of seek to use this polygenic index as if it's some kind of a transferable and deterministic index. And there's hardly any account in the literature on the uncertainty in this index. And I think what we have done in one paper is actually showing how this uncertainty is sort of leading to different conclusions, because what we did is basically looking at the polygenic index for cardiovascular disease. And in cardiovascular disease, more and more people are using these polygenic indices, this genetic data for personalised decisions regarding, for example, the use of statins. And what we did was sort of constructing six different polygenic indices using different discovery sample using different methods of constructing this polygenic index. And what was fascinating and actually maybe astonishing to see is that only 6% of the individuals are in the top quintile of the polygenic indices, if you look across these six different ways of constructing the same polygenic index. And I think this is fascinating, because it shows that even though polygenic indices are now increasingly being used, apparently it matters a great deal about how you construct these things. And this is one thing we have shown, I think this is quite remarkable, and also an important methodological contribution. Christine Garrington 9:19 A really important contribution to how this research might develop in the future. Right, absolutely. And then just finally, Hans, I wonder what this all of this work tells us about the interplay between genes in our environment, or, as we've talked about nature and nurture, not nature versus nurture, in better understanding and in tackling inequality. Hans van Kippersluis 9:41 So it's very hard, I think, to give sort of direct policy leads or implications, but there's a few leads. One thing is that I think we need to start early. We knew already that inequalities arise early in life. And I think this focus on genetics gives us yet another clue that it's very important to start early. And also because of the work I mentioned about complementarities, it's very clear that later investments are more effective if the person has had already more investments early in their life. So that's clearly one more general policy implication, I think. And I think our work is also showing how sort of genes and environment shaping jointly inequalities. And I think this has important implications for the discussions about equality of opportunity. I mean, if you look at politicians across the entire political spectrum, everybody seems to be agreeing that equality of opportunity is a great thing, and that your health and your income should not depend on your parental background. But let me ask two questions about this. One is, what about your genes? There's hardly any discussion about whether inequalities that are deriving from genetic advantages or disadvantages are fair or not. And what we've also shown in this project is that parental background seems to reinforce genetic advantages. So even if you believe that parental background should not be leading to inequalities and your genes may, then how do you treat the interaction between the two? So I think we should have a clear discussion here a societal discussion about what is fair here. And I think that's why our research is very important, because 30 years studies have already shown that people's preferences for redistribution, for example, depends strongly on whether they perceive inequalities as fair or unfair. So I don't think we are political activists here. But I do think that showing how genes and the environment jointly shape outcomes such as health, education, income, but really help people to make up their own mind as to what they regard as fair or unfair inequalities. Christine Garrington 11:23 Hans thank you very much some some big advances here. But still some big questions to answer, I guess is the is the summary but fascinating work and thank you for taking time to share it with us. So finally, thanks to Hans van Kippersluis for discussing the findings and implications of DIAL dial project Gene Environment Interplay in the Generation of Health and Education Inequalities. You can find out more about this and other dial research on the website at www.dynamicsofinequality.org. We hope you enjoyed this episode, which is produced and presented by me Chris Garrington of Research Podcasts. And don't forget to subscribe wherever you find your podcasts to access earlier and forthcoming episodes.
Googler man Vest-Sahara, dukker det opp flere begreper som beskriver territoriet. Noen steder står det at det er en "koloni", andre steder står det “ikke-selvstyrt territorium”. Andre ganger omtales det som ‘omstridt'.Dagens gjest, jurist og professor Hans Morten Haugen, er her for å hjelpe til med å rydde i begrepene. Musikk: Aziza Brahim (Lagi, 2014, Glitterbeat records).
Over 30 major European banks and credit card processors are looking to create a payments giant to challenge US dominance. 40 payment experts in Brussels are tasked with drawing up a blueprint for a pan-European payment service by September. The project, named European Payment Initiative, has so far received more than 30 million euros from its backers. Professor Hans-peter Burghof, Chair of the Banking and Finance Department at Germany’s University of Hohenheim, offers his analysis.
Professor Hans van Wees Hans has been Grote Professor of Ancient History since 2011, having previously held posts as Lecturer, Reader and Professor since joining UCL History in 1995. His research centres on the archaic period of Greek history (c. 750-450 BC), but also includes the classical period, and is focused above all on developments in society, economy, and warfare. PhD supervision Among students who have recently completed a PhD under Hans' supervision are Errietta Bissa (Government Intervention in Trade in Archaic and Classical Greece, published in 2009), and most recently Alex Millington (on representations of Ares), Roel Konijnendijk (Classical Greek Tactics: a cultural history, published in 2018), and Cezary Kucewicz (on the treatment of the war dead, to be published by Bloomsbury). Current students are Vincent Fourcade (classical Greek navy), Alix Harmer (Cimon and Athenian foreign policy), Beatrice Pestarino (structures of government in archaic and classical Cyprus), Sotirios Peithis (military communications in classical Greece), and Joe Whitchurch (revenge and the state in ancient Greece). In addition to the range of topics included above, Hans would particularly welcome PhD proposals in the area of archaic or classical Greek social and economic history. Major publications Ships and Silver, Taxes and Tribute: A fiscal history of archaic Athens (London: IB Tauris, 2013) Greek Warfare: Myths and realities (London: Duckworth/Bloomsbury, 2004) (with Nick Fisher as co-editor) Aristocracy in Antiquity: Redefining Greek and Roman elites (Swansea: Classical Press of Wales, 2015) (with Kurt Raaflaub as co-editor) A Companion to Archaic Greece (Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009) For a full list of publications, see Hans's Iris profile. Teaching Cultures of War in Ancient Greece (special subject) The Economy of Ancient Greece (thematic course) The Economy of Archaic Greece (MA module) The Economy of Classical Athens (MA module) Approaches to the Ancient World (Classics module for first-year students) Approaching History (first-year undergraduate core course) Sources and Methods in Ancient History (MA Ancient History core course) The Greek World, 800-386 BC (survey course) "Aristocracy" in Ancient Greece (advanced undergraduate seminar) Homer and History: Epic Evidence for Early Greek Society (research seminar)
Hur formas lärarutbildningen av reformer? Vad är lärarnas roll och hur lika eller olika bör de vara? I avsnittet gästar Hans Hasselbladh som är professor på Örebro Universitet i företagsekonomi med inriktning mot organisationsteori. Han har forskat om reformer i offentlig sektor, professioner, styrning och makt och är radaktör och författare till boken ”Professionalisering av lärarutbildningen: Reformer i Sverige och Finland”. Programledare: Ingela Netz och Per Kornhall. Om du vill kommentera, ställa frågor eller föreslå ämnen och intervjupersoner är du välkommen att mejla per(a)kornhall.se eller ingela.netz(a)gmail.com. Läs mer om podden Kornhall & Netz och programledarna på Arena Idés webbsajt, https://arenaide.se/kornhall-netz/ Arena Idé är en progressiv, partipolitiskt obunden tankesmedja med fokus på arbetsmarknad, ekonomisk politik, välfärd och demokrati. Vi är en ideell förening och finansieras av fackföreningsrörelsen. En del av Arenagruppen.
Despite having a population of over 260 million people, Indonesia has a mere 1,000 psychiatrists and an equal number of clinical psychologists. Funding for mental health care is around 1% of the country's health budget. Under these conditions, providing adequate mental health care is an enormous challenge. Furthermore, just like in many countries around the world, mental illness remains widely subject to negative judgements and stigmatisation in Indonesia. Gross human rights abuses against people living with mental illness are still prevalent across the archipelago, such as the practice of 'pasung', or shackling. Professor Hans Pols chats with Dr Natali Pearson about the stigma surrounding mental illness, community advocacy efforts and government policy to overcome stigma and eradicate controversial practices used to isolate people with mental illness from the community, and the future of mental health services in Indonesia. This episode coincides with the release of a special edition of 'Inside Indonesia' edited by Professor Hans Pols, dedicated to mental health care in Indonesia, which you can find at: https://www.insideindonesia.org/. About Professor Hans Pols: Hans has been investigating the history of medicine in the Dutch East Indies and Indonesia for several years as part of his research within the University of Sydney's School of History and Philosophy of Science. He has a special interest in the history of psychiatry that dates back to his childhood. In 2018, Hans published a book, 'Nurturing Indonesia: Medicine and Decolonisation in the Dutch East Indies', with Cambridge University Press, in which he analysed what motivated Indonesian physicians and medical students in the Dutch East Indies to participate in the political affairs of the colony. He subsequently published a two-volume edited book with essays, entitled 'Jiwa Sehat, Negara Kuat' ('Healthy Minds, Strong Nation'; a variation on a popular 1950s public health slogan in Indonesia), with KOMPAS. The book is the results of years of discussion between psychiatrists, psychologists, community mental health nurses, social workers, and patient advocates around innovative and successful mental health initiatives in Indonesia. You can follow Hans on Twitter @HansPols3.
J. G. M. 'Hans' Thewissen, Ph. D. Anatomy Professor at Ohio University, studies fossil cetaceans in order to answer questions about the evolution of whales -- in particular, about how whales originated from land animals.MARK from Evolution Soup talks to Hans about his early discoveries, fossils of proto-whales that lived partly on land, and the features we can point to in whale anatomy that display the transition from land to water over 50 million years.Illustrated throughout with artwork from Paleoartists NOBU TAMURA and LUCAS LIMA.LINK to original fully-illustrated video interview: https://youtu.be/QA9RS6ghwEw#whales #cetaceans #evolutionLINKS FOR HANS THEWISSEN:BOOK: The Walking Whales: From Land to Water in Eight Million Years https://is.gd/fe6V7ZFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/hansthewissenNEOMED/YouTube: https://bit.ly/2QIskrU2019 radio interview when Hans was in Sitka, Alaska, which attempts to link his work in modern and fossil whales:http://www.sitkanature.org/wordpress/2019/03/17/sitka-nature-show-180-hans-thewissen/ARTWORK LINKS:Lucas Limahttps://www.artstation.com/luuucasNobu Tamurahttps://www.deviantart.com/ntamurahttp://spinops.blogspot.com/Special Thanks To:Nick Garland & Studio 252MYA (online paleo art resource)https://252mya.com/Interviews powered by https://streamyard.com/#evolutionsoup #evolution #paleo #paleontology #paleoartist #Homosapiens #hominid #artwork #Darwin #cave #bone #fossils #cetaceans #australopithecus #hominin #extinct #animals #science #anthropology #paleoanthropology #genus #species #africa #skull #skulls #naturalselection #whales #paleontologySupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=2279893&ty=h&u=2279893)
Dr Mark Hanna and Professor Hans Lindahl, Chair of Legal Philosophy at Tilburg University in a wide ranging conversation about law, philosophy, boundaries and social movements. Dr Mark Hanna in discussion with Professor Hans Lindahl, Chair of Legal Philosophy at Tilburg University and Chair of Global Law at Queen Mary University of London. Professor Lindahl discusses a range of issues, including the importance of boundaries to legal orders and their relevance to Brexit and Northern Ireland, as well as the importance of social movements from the aboriginal Tent Embassy in Australia in the 1970s to the more recent phenomenon of Greta Thunberg and the school strike for climate.Professor Lindahl has published Fault Lines of Globalization: Legal Order and the Politics of A-Legality with Oxford University Press in 2013, and Authority and the Globalisation of Inclusion and Exclusion with Cambridge University Press in 2018. His research is focused on globalization processes, such as the concept of legal order in a global setting; the relation of boundaries to freedom, justice, and security; a politics of boundary-setting alternative to both cosmopolitanism and communitarianism; transformations of legal authority and political representation; immigration and global justice; collective identity and difference in the process of European integration.
Dr Mark Hanna and Professor Hans Lindahl, Chair of Legal Philosophy at Tilburg University in a wide ranging conversation about law, philosophy, boundaries and social movements.
Prof. Dr. Hans Zollner ist Präsident des Kinderschutzzentrums der Universität Gregoriana in Rom. In Würzburg leitete er jetzt den Workshop "Prävention von Missbrauch in der Kirche".
Gäst i avsnittet är Professor Hans de Geer som berättar om punktskatternas historia och hur statens intäkter sedan länge varit intimt sammanlänkande med befolkningens konsumtion av tobak, socker och alkohol. Är det moraliskt riktigt att rökare får finansiera försvarsinvesteringar?
Professor Hans Diehl discusses lifestyle choices that result in optimal health.
Hans De Wit tells us how universities can attract the best and the brightest international scholars, in a discussion on brain drain and gain. This podcast forms part of a series, produced and disseminated by ESNA Media, on the subject of higher education and science policy. Produced, edited and narrated by Tino Broemme Audio editing by Peter Redmayne Music by Zende Music INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT: Welcome to the fourth ESNA podcast on higher education and science policy. Today, we are taking another look at internationalization. This time, we are asking how German universities attract top scientists. We will be talking to Professor Hans de Wit from Boston College in the United States, where he is Director of the Centre for International Higher Education ... VIEW FULL TRANSCRIPT HERE http://tinyurl.com/j7mmaja
T&A talk with Mark W. Gray, the man behind 'Professor Puppet' on sex as a mature man, the choice of wether or not to have kids, and how to make the holidays special wether you're single, alone, married, or divorced. PLUS, Professor Hans Von Puppet tells us how to spice up the romance for the holidays. Show Notes Why should men masturbate before a date? (08:31) If you see something, say something! Speaking up about what’s bothering you in your partner is essential to your relationship. (21:43) A lot of things can change our perspective on life, but the nice thing about having a child is that it’s another person that you are connected to for life. (27:00) He’s found that having two children is almost easier because it takes the pressure of the single child. (29:03) Can we make ourselves change our outlook on having children? (33:00) We are pulled in two different directions because we’re taught to have a career at the same time as we’re being societally pressured to have children. (34:40) Are we selling ourselves short by not aggressively pursuing parenthood? (35:35) Can caring for a child become a crutch, giving us an excuse to stop caring for our own selves? (37:11) There’s an illusion that we’re in complete control of where our life is going and sometimes the derailment can be as important as the path. (37:35) FULL Show Notes & Links HERE: http://www.tatalksex.com/an-older-man-convinces-ta-to-have-kids-w-professor-hans-von-puppet-ep-72/
Hans van de Ven (Professor of Modern Chinese History, Cambridge University) The Chinese Maritime Customs’ Invention of a Chinese National Language David Der-wei Wang (Edward Henderson Professor in Chinese Literature at Harvard University, Director of CCK Foundation Inter-University Center for Sinological Studies, and Academician, Academia Senica) will give a series of three public lectures on The Chinesesness of Chinese Literature and participate in this concluding symposium. Confirmed Speakers: Professor Qian Jun (University of Newcastle) Professor Michel Hockx (SOAS) Professor Hans van de Ven (University of Cambridge) Dr Julia Lovell (Birkbeck College, University of London) Dr Susan Daruvala (University of Cambridge)
This week we changed things up just a bit moving the set to a table on the other side of the venue (no more chairs of differing heights!) and brought on our first special guest (Professor Hans von Puppet). Our featured startup is Bunchball and we're joined by Kasey McCurdy and Andrew Kirpalani from the Des Moines-based engineering team. The Welch Avenue Show is hosted by Geoff Wood of Welch Avenue and Chris New of Quadrant5.tv. We record live each Wednesday morning around 10:30 am Central following 1 Million Cups Des Moines at Green Grounds Cafe in West Des Moines.If you enjoy the show give us a rating and review in iTunes. Download here
This week we changed things up just a bit moving the set to a table on the other side of the venue (no more chairs of differing heights!) and brought on our first special guest (Professor Hans von Puppet). Our featured startup is Bunchball and we're joined by Kasey McCurdy and Andrew Kirpalani from the Des Moines-based engineering team. The Welch Avenue Show is hosted by Geoff Wood of Welch Avenue and Chris New of Quadrant5.tv. We record live each Wednesday morning around 10:30 am Central following 1 Million Cups Des Moines at Green Grounds Cafe in West Des Moines.If you enjoy the show give us a rating and review in iTunes. Download here
The term Software Engineering (SE) was coined at a NATO conference in 1968 in a somewhat provocative sense. Shouldn't it be possible to build software in the way one builds bridges and houses, using sound and proven design and construction techniques as in other engineering fields? By now, after 40 years of development, we can safely say that a lot of progress has been made. Life without well-engineered computer systems is inconceivable. In this lecture, Professor Hans van Vliet (Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam) will sketch the developments in the field, and focus on recent developments that are having a huge impact: - the rise of agile methods - the shift from producing software to using software - the success of open source software - the globalization of software development These developments have widened the scope of the field. It is increasingly being recognized that there's more to SE than engineering. In particular, SE has an important human and social dimension as well.Professor van Vliet was invited to Swinburne under the Board of Research Visiting Professor Grant Scheme, and this lecture was presented as part of the PVC(R) Visiting Professor Lecture Series.