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Design Curious | Interior Design Podcast, Interior Design Career, Interior Design School, Coaching
Have you ever wondered if you need a design degree or a perfect career plan to become an interior designer? Think again!In this episode, I sit down withStef Johnson, founder ofStef Johnson Design, who shares her inspiring journey from growing up around design to running a successful interior design studio.Stef's path wasn't straight—she explored event planning, worked in real estate, and even managed construction projects before finally launching her own business. Her story proves there is no one "right" way to build a fulfilling career in this creative field.Whether you are just starting or thinking about shifting into interior design, this episode will encourage you to take the first step—even if you don't have it all figured out yet! Tune in and start paving your path in design.Featured Guest:Stef Johnson ownsStef Johnson Design (SJD), a full-service interior design studio based in North Carolina providing a classic approach to easy luxury in residential and commercial projects.For over a decade, the SJD team has offered a unique combination of design and construction knowledge. They pride themselves on prioritizing clients' tastes and taking a cost-effective approach to every job. Stef believes a home should reflect her client's unique personality highlighting objects they love.Why you've got to check out today's episode: Learn how to start a design career from any background and navigate the early stages of your interior design career Get practical tips and strategies to improve your design business practices Be inspired to follow your passionCheck out the show notes >>>From Economics to Interiors: The Journey to Becoming an Interior DesignerNEXT STEPS: Join theMy Design Mentor to kickstart a successful career in interior design!Grab your freebies: Your Roadmap to a Career in Interior Design 3 Things I Wish I had known when I Started my CareerConnect With Me: Email:podcast@rwarddesign.com Instagram:@rwarddesign Website atrwarddesign.comThanks for listening! I hope this helps you discover if interior design is the career for you. See you next week...Timestamps:(0:00) Introduction(01:47) Stef's Background in Interior Design(02:31) Early Career Path & Exploration(06:34) Building Her Expertise & Going Solo(10:29) Handling Client Projects Across Different Regions(14:42) Stef's Design Philosophy & Style(18:24) Lessons in Running a Design Business(19:53) Advice for Aspiring Interior Designers
In this episode we speak Ariel Liberman, a legal scholar whose work touches on education through an interdisciplinary perspective, as well as inter-religious engagement and legal theory. Dr. Liberman has an SJD from Emory Law School, and currently serves as the Paul and Marion Kuntz Scholar in Law and Religion, the Director of Undergraduate Outreach and Engagement, and the Managing Editor of Canopy Forum. In January 2025, Liberman will join the Department of Political Science at Auburn University as Assistant Professor in Law and Legal Studies. In this episode, John Bernau and Whitney Barth, join Dr. Liberman to discuss his current book project on civic education, what we can learn from the Jewish tradition, effecting change in the political system, and his reflections on the effects of legal education for undergraduate students.
In this episode, we're excited to welcome Alexa Windsor, a legal scholar and educator whose work focuses on the intersections of law and religion, contract law, and arbitration, especially in relation to gender and sexuality. Alexa Windsor is currently completing her SJD at Emory University School of Law. She has dedicated her research to exploring how contract law principles can be adapted for alternative dispute resolution in faith-based communities and for LGBTQ individuals. Her work brings fresh perspectives on religious freedom and inclusivity within legal frameworks. In this episode, we'll discuss Alexa's motivation to research these areas, her insights on the role of contract law in resolving conflicts within diverse communities, and her vision for inclusive legal practices.
Subscribe to Grand Tamasha on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, or your favorite podcast app. I spoke with Kushagr Bakshi is a Michigan International and Comparative Law Scholar and an SJD candidate at the University of Michigan Law School, where he also received his LLM. He received his first law degree from NUJS in West Bengal. We discussed a chapter of his dissertation called “The Country Without a Post Office: Jammu and Kashmir and the Imaginations of Freedom Within a Federation. We talked about assymetrical federalism versus hetererarchy, constitutional values and imagination for federalism in India, and much more. Recorded October 24th, 2024. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Connect with Ideas of India Follow us on X Follow Shruti on X Follow Kushagr on X Click here for the latest Ideas of India episodes sent straight to your inbox. Timestamps (00:00:00) - Intro (00:01:06) - Grand Tamasha (00:04:12) - Asymmetric Versus Heterarchical Federalism (00:19:37) - Isn't this Asymmetric Federalism? (00:31:39) - Democracy in Local Governments (00:43:27) - Rethinking the Rajya Sabha (00:53:30) - Outro
SJD is back from his sabbatical in Dunedin with some new music under his belt, that he'll be unveiling at The Others Way Festival in Auckland on November 30. He called up for a chat about some gigs he's been to recently and what his set will entail when they unleash on K Rd later this Spring. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode we hear from Professor Dale Stephens on the long-awaited release of The Woomera Manual on the International Law of Military Space Operations, how it came about, what it is intended to do, and where international law might be headed in relation to military space operations - as well as the challenges in drafting an international law Manual dealing with the law in a highly changing and novel domain. Released in May this year, the Woomera Manual focuses on the law as it is, and creates a set of Rules and accompanying Commentary dealing with international law in a military space context.Professor Dale Stephens CSM FAAL is a Professor at the University of Adelaide and a Captain in the Royal Australian Navy Reserve. He has occupied senior legal positions in the Australian Defence Force and undertook numerous operational deployments. He is Director of the Adelaide University Research Unit on Military Law and Ethics. He researches and teaches in the areas of International Law, Space Law, Military Operations Law and Law of Armed Conflict. He is Chair of the SA Red Cross IHL Committee. He was awarded his LL.M and SJD from Harvard Law School and is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law. Additional Resources:The Woomera ManualThe Artemis Accords OEWG on Responsible Behaviours in Space
United Cigars always has a lot of new activity at their booth, and the 2024 Premium Cigar Association (PCA) Trade Show was no exception. This year, United Cigars reintroduced an old brand, expanded its eponymous United brand, and celebrated the 30th anniversary of the La Gianna Havana brand. However, there was a slight difference as Selected Tobacco, owned by Nelson Alfonso and distributed by United Cigars, did not have a separate booth due to visa problems for Alfonso. Instead, the current Selected Tobacco products were showcased at the United booth. PCA 2024 Report: https://wp.me/p6h1n1-sJd
United Cigars always has a lot of new activity at their booth, and the 2024 Premium Cigar Association (PCA) Trade Show was no exception. This year, United Cigars reintroduced an old brand, expanded its eponymous United brand, and celebrated the 30th anniversary of the La Gianna Havana brand. However, there was a slight difference as Selected Tobacco, owned by Nelson Alfonso and distributed by United Cigars, did not have a separate booth due to visa problems for Alfonso. Instead, the current Selected Tobacco products were showcased at the United booth. PCA 2024 Report: https://wp.me/p6h1n1-sJd
For former Madam Justice Rosalie Silberman Abella, justice advocacy isn't limited to the confines of a courtroom. It is about channeling one's skills, knowledge and passion toward creating system-wide change that benefits all people - and sometimes that work happens in one's off hours. Having championed human rights, constitutional and international law, labor rights and more in her illustrious legal career, Madam Justice Abella knows a thing or two about justice advocacy and “sweeping away the cobwebs” of injustice. As a Supreme Court Justice, she oversaw landmark decisions including an opinion that paved the way for the legalization of same-sex marriage in Canada in 2004. In this special episode of Dear Beth, host Beth Bilson sits down with Madam Justice Abella. We also hear perspectives from Indigenous lawyer Eleanore Sunchild Q.C. and Nicole Sarauer, a lawyer and NDP MLA for Regina Douglas Park. Beth's fellow Co-Editors of Creating a Seat at the Table, Leah Howie and Brea Lowenberger interview Beth about why lawyers ought to push for positive change in the justice system. GUESTS/PANELISTS Madam Justice Rosalie Silberman Abella, Samuel LLM '55, SJD '59 and Judith Pisar Visiting Professor of Law 2023-2024 Abella was born in a Displaced Persons Camp in Stuttgart, Germany in 1946. She came to Canada as a refugee in 1950. Justice Abella was the first Jewish woman appointed to Canada's top court; the first pregnant woman appointed to the judiciary in Canada; and the first refugee appointed to the bench in Canada. She graduated from University College in 1967, earned her law degree at U of T in 1970 and received an honorary degree from U of T in 1990. Abella was presented with the Rose Wolfe Distinguished Alumni Award in 2019 in recognition of her outstanding contributions to U of T, Canada and the world. In 2020, she was honoured with Germany's Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit, one of the country's top national decorations for non-civilians, in recognition of the lessons she has drawn from the Holocaust about the need to protect minority rights and democracy. Since is the Samuel and Judith Pisar Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. In 2023, she received an honourary degree from the University of Saskatchewan. Eleanore Sunchild, K.C. is an Indigenous lawyer from the Thunderchild First Nation and received her call to the Saskatchewan Bar in 1999. Eleanore Sunchild, has represented clients across Canada and has appeared in all levels of court across Canada. She is most proud of her representation of Debbie Baptiste at the Supreme Court of Canada as an intervenor in the case of R. v. Chonan, where the elimination of peremptory challenges was upheld. Eleanore graduated from the University of Alberta, Faculty of Law, obtained a B.A. in Political Science and studied French immersion at the Faculté St. Jean, U of A. She is sought after for her knowledge of the Indian Residential school system, 60s scoop and the resistance and continuous impact on Indigenous Peoples. Eleanore advocates and speaks about the exclusion of Indigenous Peoples in the Canadian criminal legal system and has successfully pursued wrongful death actions and civil actions for those who have been unjustly harmed. Nicole Sarauer, is a mom, pal, lawyer, lover of live music and, since 2016, MLA for Regina Douglas Park. After legal studies in Saskatoon, Nicole returned to her hometown of Regina and worked in private practice and at a provincial charity giving free legal representation to those unable to afford it. She continues to offer free legal aid through Pro Bono Law Saskatchewan and has also volunteered her time to the Regina Sexual Assault Centre, Amnesty International, the YWCA and the Regina Catholic School Board (as Trustee). She is the proud beneficiary of the CBC/Metro's Future 40, the SYPE Young Professional of the Year Award and, best of all, two children and a husband named Jared. They live in Regina.
Alberta is seeing seismic changes to it's healthcare system and the implications can be a bit overwhelming. To try and make sense of the changes that Danielle Smith and the UCP are implementing and threatening to implement, we sat down with an expert in the field of health law, Dr. Lorian Hardcastle! Lorian Hardcastle is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Calgary, with a joint appointment to the Department of Community Health Sciences in the Cumming School of Medicine. Lorian obtained her JD with Health Law and Policy Specialization Certificate from Dalhousie University, and her LLM and SJD from the University of Toronto, and in this episode she helps us navigate what the changes to the role of CMOH, forced treatment and the implosion of AHS and the profitization of healthcare delivery mean for Albertans. Plus we now have merch that's available at www.abpoli.ca, including a fall lineup! As always, if you appreciate the kind of content that we're trying to produce here at The Breakdown, please consider signing up as a monthly supporter at our Patreon site at www.patreon.com/thebreakdownab. If you're listening to the audio version of our podcast, please consider leaving us a review and a rating, and don't forget to like and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Threads!
Dr. Harriet Musoke discusses issues surrounding recent and upcoming legislation in Uganda regarding organ donation and surrogacy. Dr. Musoke is Senior Principal Lecturer at the Law Development Centre and Senior Lecturer at the Islamic University in Uganda. She lectures in family law, human rights, women's rights and health law in particular reproductive and sexual health and rights. Dr. Musoke was Emory Law's first SJD student, graduating in 2008.
SJD on tour - Sean James Donnelly, better known as SJD, brings his Sweetheart tour to the Crown on Friday night. This show was broadcast on OAR 105.4FM Dunedin - oar.org.nz
Witness to Yesterday (The Champlain Society Podcast on Canadian History)
In this podcast episode, Nicole O'Byrne talks to Ravi Malhotra about his books Able to Lead: Disablement, Radicalism, and the Political Life of E.T. Kingsley published by University of British Columbia Press in 2021 and Class Warrior The Selected Works of E. T. Kingsley published by Athabasca University Press in 2020, both of which he co-authored and edited with Benjamin Isitt. In October 1890, Eugene T. Kingsley's life changed irrevocably while working as a brakeman on the Northern Pacific Railway when he was injured in a fall between two rail cars. While recuperating in hospital after the amputation of both legs, he began reading the works of Karl Marx. Joining a popular socialist movement, his activism eventually brought him to Vancouver, B.C. where he founded the Socialist Party of Canada. Able to Lead traces Eugene T. Kingsley's extraordinary life, and his political journey from soapbox speaker in San Francisco to prominence in the Socialist Party of Canada, highlighting his profound legacy for the twenty-first-century political left. Class Warrior is a collection of Kingsley's writing and speeches that underscores his tremendous impact on Canadian political discourse. Ravi Malhotra is a professor at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He has several postsecondary degrees, including an LLM from Harvard and an SJD from the University of Toronto. An interdisciplinary scholar, his main research interests are labour and employment law, human rights, globalization, and disability rights. He has worked as a researcher for the disability rights organization, Reach, where he contributed to reports about the barriers faced by law students with disabilities. Ravi is a member of the Human Rights Committee of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities, and he is an adjunct professor of Critical Disability Studies at York University. This podcast was produced by Jessica Schmidt. If you like our work, please consider supporting it: bit.ly/support_WTY. Your support contributes to the Champlain Society's mission of opening new windows to directly explore and experience Canada's past.
Michele Bratcher Goodwin, JD (Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy, University of California, Irvine), Molly Meegan, JD (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists), and Lisa Harris, MD, PhD (University of Michigan) discuss how new abortion bans in the US are creating serious legal and ethical dilemmas for clinicians. Hosted by JAMA Legal and Global Health Correspondent Lawrence O. Gostin, JD (Georgetown University). Related Content: Legal Risks and Ethical Dilemmas for Clinicians in the Aftermath of Dobbs The Future of Ob-Gyn Training in the US Post-Dobbs Medical Indications for Abortion Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Lawrence O. Gostin, JD, is the Legal and Global Health Correspondent for JAMA and Faculty Director of the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University. No other disclosures were reported. Michele Bratcher Goodwin, JD, LLM, SJD is Director of the Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy at University of California, Irvine. No other disclosures were reported. Lisa Harris, MD, PhD, is the F. Wallace and Janet Jeffries Collegiate Professor of Reproductive Health, and Professor and Associate Chair in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at University of Michigan. She is also a Professor in the Department of Women's Studies. No other disclosures reported. Molly Meegan is the Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). No other disclosures reported.
New album from SJD - Sean Donnelly aka SJD talks about his ninth album Sweetheart. This show was broadcast on OAR 105.4FM Dunedin - oar.org.nz
Pennie is joined in the studio by SJD, the music project of Sean Donnelly. Sean Donnelly (he/him) is a musician and songwriter from Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland), and currently based in Ōtepoti (Dunedin), under the Mozart Fellowship at Otago University. A quiet overachiever, SJD is one of Aotearoa's most lauded songwriters, winning two Aotearoa Music Awards, the Taite Music Prize (in 2013 for Elastic Wasteland), and was shortlisted for for the APRA Silver Scroll in 2007 for his song Beautiful Haze. This Friday 28th October, SJD proudly releases his ninth album Sweetheart, featuring an impressive cast of contributors, including Tami Neilson, Don McGlashan, James Milne, Anika Moa, Julia Deans, Deryk, EJ Barnes, Sandy Mill, Peau Halapua and Chris O'Connor. Pennie and Sean discuss his career and play highlights from his extensive repertoire, commencing with his first album 3, culminating in the incredible new album Sweetheart. Find SJD on Bandcamp & Spotify
Ooft big show this morning! We've got Rob talking about bananas, biscuits, and love on The Mind Trench, a chat with SJD about "You Are The Movement", JessB on her brand new single "Can't Fake It", and Christie from Yumi Zouma on the line chatting about their gig at the Tuning Fork this Saturday! Whakarongo mai nei!
The right to self-determination is, in some respects, the supreme right of rights, without which it is impossible to recognize a host of other human rights. The 2014–2015 crisis of Ukraine that continues with Russia's invasion in 2022 calls into question whether the case of the secession of Crimea can be justified by the rules of international law on self-determination.Joining us today on Humanities Matter are Dr. Majid Nikouei, SJD candidate at the University of Toronto, and Dr. Masoud Zamani, Assistant Professor of International Law and Law and Political Sciences Faculty at Shiraz University. Their paper, “The Secession of Crimea: Where Does International Law Stand?” published by Brill, delves into the controversial nuances of this issue.Guests: Dr. Majid Nikouei and Dr. Masoud ZamaniHost: Leigh Giangreco
Host David Johnson interviews Sharona Hoffman, JD, LLM, SJD, Edgar A. Hahn Professor of Law, Professor of Bioethics, and Co-Director of Law-Medicine Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Law about her recent JMR article Physicians and Cognitive Decline: A Challenge for State Medical Boards.
No, the other La Paz — the Southern/Baja California Alex Hunter 2022 Tour, with Megan as a VERY supporting avgeek act (aka Alex is the supporting act, Megan is the star, but you all knew that already). Emirates refreshes its fleet on a crazy tight clockwork upgrade schedule. Air France reveals its PORTE FRANCAISE* business seats (*French door). Lufthansa loses a star, and its general shine in a summer of strikes and chaos (those Philippines Airlines aircrafts won't be enough, guys). Don't try to smuggle McMuffins in Australia, even if you had to wait hours to no end in Bali. No more fuel after United taxies EWR for 9.5 hours (is that worse or better than Vueling?). Yes, yes, Paul knows, it was a 350 on the pic he posted on Instagram, not a Dreamliner (he's going to hear about this until the end of time, won't he?).
Nachdem das nächste große Sachsentreffen pandemiebedingt schon zwei mal verschoben wurde gibt es dieses Jahr einen dezentralen Kultursommer in Siebenbürgen. Natürlich sind wie von der SJD auch dabei und haben etwas besonderes für euch geplant: Ein Jugendroadtrip begleitend zum Kultursommer. In dieser Folge erfahrt ihr von unserem Gast Natalie alles, was ihr darüber wissen müsst. https://www.kultursommer.ro/ Anmeldung unter: natalie.bertleff@sjd-siebenbuerger.de
Welcome back to America's leading higher education law podcast, EdUp Legal - part of the EdUp Experience Podcast Network! Learn more about Michael Scharf, Co-Dean since 2013, Joseph C. Hostetler and BakerHostetler Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, and Managing Director of the Public International Law and Policy Group, a Nobel Peace Prize-nominated NGO. Dean Scharf utilizes his international law expertise to help grow and manage Case Western's foreign legal studies program, which includes robust LLM and SJD enrollment annually. Dean Scharf explains the ways that the international students in these programs enrich the experience of the JD students and actively engage with the law faculty, and the benefits that the Case Western degrees provide for the international graduates, who stay closely connected to the law school after graduation. He shares suggestions for other law schools seeking to maximize their success in starting and maintaining similar programs, and the significant benefits of doing so. Dean Scharf is also a convincing advocate for the leadership model of co-deans! Thank you so much for tuning in. Join us on the next episode for your EdUp time! Connect with your host - Patty Roberts ● If you want to get involved, leave us a comment or rate us! ● Join the EdUp community at The EdUp Experience! ● Follow EdUp on Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Twitter | YouTube Thanks for listening!
Jomana Qaddour has a very interesting story to tell. She immigrated from Syria to the US as a child with her parents, she lived most of her life in Kansas, and was "planned" to become an MD. However her passion and interest drove her to a completely different route - joined a JD (law degree) in Kansas. Her legal career took her to Washington DC where she used her networking skills to get into the world of policy and research, which eventually led to doing LL.M and SJD (on which she is still working) at Georgetown University, while at the same time she works at at the Atlantic Council and directing their Syrian file.In this episode Jomana talks about her journey, but also about her lessons from her work in policy and research. She talks about how she learned about the importance of perspectives, and that theoretical solutions to complicated problems (such as the conflicts in Syria, Iraq, and Bosnia) must take into account the local perspective and not just impose an outsider's point of view. Alongside all that Jomana is also a co-founder of the "Syria Relief and Development" - a humanitarian organization that has provided over $115 million worth of aid in Syria and the region which enabled to and provide support to millions of people.In this episode Danni drank her usual Amaratto, and Jomana drank coffee from a special mug with a picture of all four female US Supreme Court Justices.Jomana's SJD research is on ethno-sectarianism and its impact on constitutional frameworks in Iraq, Bosnia, and Syria.You can follow Jomana on:Twitter: @jomanaqaddourLinkedIn: Jomana QaddourGeorgetown profile pageContact us:Host: Danni Reches (@DanniReches)Producer and Editor: Ido Rosenzweig (@IdoRosenzweig)Contact us:On Twitter: @What2DoWithTHATOn Facebook: @What2DoWithTHATOn Instagram: @What2DoWithTHATSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur website: www.what2dowiththat.comEnjoy the episode! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome back to America's leading higher education law podcast, EdUp Legal - part of the EdUp Experience Podcast Network! Learn more about Michael Scharf, Co-Dean since 2013, Joseph C. Hostetler and BakerHostetler Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, and Managing Director of the Public International Law and Policy Group, a Nobel Peace Prize-nominated NGO. Dean Scharf utilizes his international law expertise to help grow and manage Case Western's foreign legal studies program, which includes robust LLM and SJD enrollment annually. Dean Scharf explains the ways that the international students in these programs enrich the experience of the JD students and actively engage with the law faculty, and the benefits that the Case Western degrees provide for the international graduates, who stay closely connected to the law school after graduation. He shares suggestions for other law schools seeking to maximize their success in starting and maintaining similar programs, and the significant benefits of doing so. Dean Scharf is also a convincing advocate for the leadership model of co-deans! Thank you so much for tuning in. Join us on the next episode for your EdUp time! Connect with your host - Patty Roberts ● If you want to get involved, leave us a comment or rate us! ● Join the EdUp community at The EdUp Experience! ● Follow EdUp on Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Twitter | YouTube Thanks for listening!
Hubwonk host Joe Selvaggi talks with Harvard Medical School professor, Dr. Jonathan Darrow, about the observations of his recent paper, Evidence for Community Cloth Face Masking to Limit the Spread of SARS-CoV-2: A Critical Review, in which he examines the range, quality, and scientific observations of mask wearing efficacy studies. Guest: Jonathan J. Darrow, SJD, […]
Michael Karayanni considers how the Israeli construction of religion and politics shapes the live Palestinian-Arabs in the state. The religion-and-state debate in Israel is Jewish centred and systematically disregards the Palestinian-Arab minority. This is rather puzzling. For the religion-and-state debate in many other countries does take up conflicts pertaining to minority religions, and the Palestinian-Arab minority did generate quite a diverse series of questions that could have easily qualified as part of the existing debate. In this article, I decode this anomaly by pointing out the existence of a legal matrix in the Israeli religion-and-state debate. This matrix identifies the recognition accorded to Jewish religious institutions and norms as "public and coercive" but that accorded to the Palestinian-Arabs as "private and liberal". In the second part of this article, I point out some of the legal implications of this matrix as well as critically evaluate if what seems to be "private and liberal" is in fact as such. Michael Karayanni was born in Kafr-Yasif, a Palestinian village located in the Western Galilee in Israel. After obtaining his undergraduate law degree at Bar-Ilan University (LLB 1990) and being admitted to the Israeli bar, he went on to pursue graduate studies in law in the United States (George Washington University, LLM 1994, University of Pennsylvania, SJD 2003) and in Israel (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, LLD 2000). His academic base is at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he is today the Bruce W. Wayne Professor of International Law. Throughout his career at Hebrew University he has held a number of administrative positions, among them Dean of the Faculty of Law, Academic Director of Minerva Center for Human Rights, Director of Sacher Institute for Legislative Research and Comparative Law and Founding Director of Center of the Study of Multiculturalism and Diversity. He has also held visiting positions at Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Georgetown Law Center, Melbourne Law School, Stanford Law School, Yale Law School and Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Recently he was elected to the Institut de Droit International. His work focuses on issues of private international law and interreligious law, civil procedure and multiculturalism.
Another day another podcast, SJD talks about his experiences in Detroit and he also explains how Detroit isn't as bad as people think. Thank you everyone who is listening!!! My YouTube is: youtube.com/sjdunham feel free to subscribe!
Rozměry nemající charakter hřídele/díry - výjimečné tolerance: J + tolerance(číslo) - SJD - šetří výstružníky, upínací trny (na výstružníky x měřící kontrolní trn), kontrolní kroužky (až 1 mikrometr) ULOŽENÍ S PŘESAHEM - lisovaná uložení H7/s6 - velký přesah - mohutný tlak popř. teplotní rozdíl, po zaliaování přestružování H7/r6 H7/p6 - tlakem demontovatelné, téměř nedeformované, ocelové, litinové, bronzové součásti PŘECHODNÁ ULOŽENÍ H7/n6 - pevné uložení, P H7/k6 - P, shodné uložení H7/js6 - P, V - posuvné uložení (např. věnec s přírubou náboje, volnoběžka (jednosměrné ložisko, volnoběžná spojka) volnoběžka pro vyšší otáčky (valivé elementy sevřeny - přenos Mk) - řemenice altetnátoru Rohatková volnoběžka - nízké otáčky (ráčna, jízdní kolo)) ULOŽENÍ S VŮLÍ - Smykové uložení H7/h6, H8/h7, H8/h8, Točné uložení H7/g6 - přesné uložení - mazání (např. hřídel), H7/f7 - u, H8/e8 - vačková hřídel u spalovacího motoru H9/d9 - těsnící víka, kývání (spíše než otáčení) H11/h11 - uložení s malou vůlí H11/d11 - uložení se značnou vůlí - montáž větších/ hrubších součástí v prašném prostředí
1 tip to save up to 70% on your next visit to the dentist in San Francisco If you live in San Francisco you can save up to 70% on their next visit to the dentist Visit Los Cabos and save 70% Get in a plane from SFO to SJD and in just 3 hours you can be in Cabo San Lucas or San Jose del Cabo Visit a world class dental clinic like Advanced Cabo Dentistry Get high quality dental care with Dr. Thomas Get the same high quality materials, equipment Get the same high quality dentists/training How do they charge 70% less..less cost for dental school, rent, buildings, dentists/hygienists get paid less, less cost for insurance These savings are passed along to you *disclaimer* this is not dental advice - this is meant for information purposes only and is not intended to be dental advice or instructions for dental diagnosis or treatment. Please consult with your dentist or a qualified dental professional before starting or changing dental treatment. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dentaldepartures/message
Over the next week we will be diverting from our Municipal series and focusing on the other elections taking place on October 18. Today we are chatting with the Campaign Manager for the Fluoride Yes Campaign in Calgary. The Campaign Manager for the Fluoride Yes! Campaign is Juliet Guichon, MA, SJD, ICD.D. The goal of the Fluoride Yes! Campaign is to promote the health and wellbeing of every Calgarian, and especially Calgary's children, seniors and other health-vulnerable residents, by encouraging voters to vote Yes in the fluoridation plebiscite question in the municipal election. Follow the Fluoride Yes Campaign! Website: https://www.fluorideyes.ca/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/fluoridationyyc Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fluoridationyyc/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/105337321651946 If you like what you hear and want to keep the show going consider sponsoring the show at : https://www.patreon.com/CrossBoderInterviewPodcast Follow the Cross Border Interview Podcast: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crossborderpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CrossBorderPod Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/CrossBorderInterviewPodcast Website: https://www.crossborderinterviews.ca/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCI2i25ZVKTO84oUsLyO4jig Miranda, Brown & Associates Inc. © 2021
Don McGlashan's had a helluva year, working with Jermaine Clement, SJD and one of the Phoenix Foundation. Plus, he's hitting the road this summer. Jase & Mike caught up with the Kiwi legend on the other side of the world to ask him about the new song "Now's The Place".
Don McGlashan's had a helluva year, working with Jermaine Clement, SJD and one of the Phoenix Foundation. Plus, he's hitting the road this summer. Jase & Mike caught up with the Kiwi legend on the other side of the world to ask him about the new song "Now's The Place".
Rules for the regulation of medical devices, such as hip prostheses and implantable defibrillators, are complex and differ from those for drugs. Aaron Kesselheim, MD, JD, MPH, and Jonathan Darrow, SJD, LLM, JD, MBA, both faculty members in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham & Women's Hospital, review device classes and approval pathways used by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and prospects for improvements and reform in the agency's processes. Related Content: FDA Regulation and Approval of Medical Devices
Dinis Guarda citiesabc openbusinesscouncil Thought Leadership Interviews
Jiaying is a Post-Doctoral Fellow affiliated with the Information Law Institute. Jiaying Christine Jiang is also the co-leader of CBDC Project, cooperating with the China Center at Yale Law School; and contributor of the RegTrax Initiative at CodeX, Stanford Law School.Jiaying Christine Jiang Questions1. Profile and Background;2. Intern, US Congress3. Academic work and research;4. Regulation of Blockchain - Your views on Blockchain policies and regulation in China and US5. Regtechcooperating with the China Center at Yale Law School; 6. What are Central Bank Central Banks - CBDCs in general;China CBDC;7. Can you tell about your work as Contributor of the RegTrax Initiative at CodeX, Stanford Law School 8. Your views on Fintech and AI and innovation in law and finance;Jiaying Christine Jian BiographyJiaying Christine Jian is originally from China but is now living in NYC. Her research focuses on the interaction between law and technology, especially policies and regulations on emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence, blockchain, smart contracts, digital currencies, FinTech, and LegalTech. Her doctoral thesis is about policies and regulations in the blockchain industry, comparing approaches in China and the US. In addition to blockchain research, she is also interested in Central Bank Digital Currency, smart contracts, computational law, comparative law, data rights issues, platform competition, and privacy issues.At NYU Law, Jiaying currently analyzes if sandbox and technology can be a new regulatory approach for blockchain implementation. In addition, she is the co-leader of the Central Bank Digital Currency project, cooperating with the China Center at Yale Law School. She is also a contributor of the RegTrax Initiative at the CodeX, Stanford Law School.Jiaying received her SJD from Emory University School of Law, LLM from the University of Southern California Gould School of Law, where she received the Graduate and International Programs Award at the Annual Shattuck Awards, and LLB from Shenzhen University (with distinction). She is admitted to the bars in China and the State of New York.About Dinis Guarda profile and Channelshttps://www.openbusinesscouncil.orghttps://www.intelligenthq.comhttps://www.hedgethink.com/https://www.citiesabc.com/More interviews and inspirational videos on Dinis Guarda YouTube Channel
Die Sozialistische Jugend – Die Falken Stuttgart hat sich in den letzten Monaten intensiv mit dem Leben und Wirken des Sozialisten und Gewerkschafters Fritz Lamm auseinandergesetzt. Einige der Ergebnisse dieses Prozesses werden in Form einer Podcastreihe im Arbeitsweltradio veröffentlicht. Wir starten in diese Reihe mit einer kurzen Biografie des Genossen.
Host Ashley Bains sits down with Dr. Jennifer Schulz, a practicing mediator and torts professor at the University of Manitoba. They discuss Dr. Schulz's law school experience, obtaining an MPhil and SJD, and how to start a career in mediation. Plus, Dr. Schulz provides some tips for law school success!
Today we talk with quiltmaker, SJD moderator and my good chum Morgan Hinkle!
Schnee und Eis, Coronazeit, Da ist die SJD nicht weit. Ein frecher Witz, viel Schabernack, Onlinespiele Ideen Werden von uns jetz angepackt, Sind auf Discord zu sehen. Die Planung von Präsenz Events ist momentan unmöglich, Doch trauert nicht ums VBS, Linedance lernen macht fröhlich. Ideen fürs Kulturwerk und Online-Sitzungen Verstärkung für den Vorstand und Jahresplanungen Bei uns erfahrt ihr es zuerst! Horcht auf und gebt gut Acht! Seid informiert, verpasst nichts mehr, durch diesen Podcast heute Nacht. Schaltet ein, ziehts euch rein!
How to best regulate the online sphere will be amongst the most important topics of the upcoming decade. Up until recently, laws have been in place that serve to mostly shield digital intermediaries from liability for third-party illegal content on their platform. Since 2016 however, in response to mounting concerns over the criminal misuse of the internet and a surge in noxious content online, the regulatory landscape has begun to change. Governments around the world have started to impose laws and regulatory frameworks that oblige online platforms to expediently and proactively address illegal or harmful content on their sites. Increasingly, however, platforms have also developed their own modes of self-regulation, endeavouring to incorporate new structures of responsibility and accountability into their business models. Join Flora Deverell and Jacob Berntson as they discuss the ways in which online regulation is being pursued by companies, governments, and multi-lateral organisations, such as with the upcoming EU wide law on the dissemination of terrorist content. They are joined by two of the foremost voices in this space: Evelyn Douek, a lecturer in law and SJD candidate at Harvard Law School, and affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, studying international and transnational regulation of online speech; and Daphne Keller, Director of Platform Regulation at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center – formerly Assistant General Counsel at Google and Director of Intermediary Liability at Stanford’s Center for Internet and Society – who has worked on groundbreaking Intermediary Liability litigation and legislation around the world. They also explore the implications of Facebook’s new Oversight Board and what this really means for governance and accountability processes, whether we should use international human rights law as a framework for ruling the internet, and why terrorist content is such an important topic in regulatory discourse.Full list of resources on our website: https://www.techagainstterrorism.fm/regulating-the-online-sphere/
David Kris, Paul Rosenzweig and I dive deep on the big tech issue of the COVID-19 contagion: Whether (but mostly how) to use mobile phone location services to fight the virus. We cover the Israeli approach, as well as a host of solutions adopted in Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and elsewhere. I'm a big fan of Singapore, which produced in a week an app that Nick Weaver thought would take a year. In our interview, evelyn douek, currently at the Berkman Klein Center and an SJD candidate at Harvard, takes us deep into content moderation. Displaying a talent for complexifying an issue we all want to simplify, she explains why we can't get live with social platform censorship and why we can't live without it. She walks us through the growth of content moderation, from spam, through child pornography and on to terrorism and “coordinated inauthentic behavior”—the identification of which, evelyn assures me, does not require an existentialist dance instructor. Instead, it's the latest and least easily defined category of speech to be suppressed by Big Tech. Returning to the News Roundup, Nate Jones and evelyn mull the head-spinning change the virus has made in the public reputation of Big Tech, but Nate wonders if Silicon Valley's PR glow will last. Meanwhile, China is celebrating its self-proclaimed victory over COVID-19 by borrowing Russian tactics to spread coronavirus disinformation. I argue that any country adopting Russia's patented “Who knows what's true?” tactics probably has something to hide. We take advantage of evelyn's Aussie ties to get a translation (and an apology) for Australia's latest venture into the business of blocking graphic violent content. David and Paul review the White House's National Strategy for 5G Security. They talk for two minutes, but they say more than the strategy. The House of Representative has irresponsibly bolted for home without even a temporary reauthorization of expiring FISA authorities. Paul and David explain why that isn't quite the disaster it sounds like. Quite. David says the Justice Department has brought the first fraud case stemming from the coronavirus crisis, and I suggest that case itself has a whiff of false advertising about it. Amazon is complaining that the Pentagon is trying to fix some of the contract award problems in the big Defense Department cloud procurement. Paul is more sympathetic than I am. And Paul questions the wisdom of failing to delay CCPA enforcement while the coronavirus rages across California. Download the 308th Episode (mp3). Take our listener poll at steptoe.com/podcastpoll. You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
Is Tyler the Creator the Brian Wilson of this generation? The Song Crush Team consider his new album Igor, and rave about new music from Kelsey Lu, SJD, and more.
Is Tyler the Creator the Brian Wilson of this generation? The Song Crush Team consider his new album Igor, and rave about new music from Kelsey Lu, SJD, and more.
SJD (on 'Miniatures 1') Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
SJD (on 'Miniatures 1') Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
SJD, aka Sean James Donnelly, is about to release a collection of miniature synth-pop songs. He joins Kirsten Johnstone to preview some of these alongside some of the synth greats.
DEALS:Nimpo Lake, BC (Chilcotin)Mar 15 - Apr 303 nights at Retreat Wilderness Inn$299 + $28 tax (337)Los Cabos, MexicoJan 14Air, 7 nights in a 3.5-star beachfront all-inclusive resort$569 + $476 tax (845)16 Night Panama Canal Cruise October 13 Air, 16 night cruise & transfers $1999 + $698 tax (2697) Miami, Colombia, Panama, thru the Panama Canal, Mexico (3 ports: HUX, PVR, SJD), LA Guest: Claire Newell President and Founder of Travel Best Bets
Chapter 1
An in-depth conversation with Auckland-based DJ, singer, percussionist and songwriter Sandy Mill. We talk SJD and local bands she's worked with including being part of Neil Finn's recent "super choir" and Facebook Live sessions. We talk too of her time in England of recording with the likes of Placebo and performing all manner of roles as a singer from main attraction to making sound effects and singing jingles. We talk about vinyl and DJing, about taste and the role of a supporting singer as well as her recent foray into being the solo star with her debut EP, "A Piece of Me". Get full access to Sounds Good! at simonsweetman.substack.com/subscribe
An in-depth conversation with Auckland-based DJ, singer, percussionist and songwriter Sandy Mill. We talk SJD and local bands she's worked with including being part of Neil Finn's recent "super choir" and Facebook Live sessions. We talk too of her time in England of recording with the likes of Placebo and performing all manner of roles as a singer from main attraction to making sound effects and singing jingles. We talk about vinyl and DJing, about taste and the role of a supporting singer as well as her recent foray into being the solo star with her debut EP, "A Piece of Me".
An in-depth conversation with producer, composer, singer/songwriter Sean James Donnelly (aka SJD)
Paul McLaney is the musical director of this year's World Of Wearable Arts shows. He talks about some of the composers involved including SJD, Claire Cowan and Eden Mulholland, and the joys and challenges of taking the job on.
Sandy Mill is the voice heard on the albums of SJD, Neil Finn, and Placebo. After nearly three decades of the music business, she's finally released her own EP. She shares her mixtape of favourite songs that have influenced her.
The promotion of more just and peaceful societies is a fundamental goal of the United Nations (UN). In response to the spike in violent conflict worldwide and unparalleled levels of forced displacement, the UN broke new ground in 2016 with two “peacebuilding resolutions,” which set forth a new UN approach to “sustaining peace” that addresses “all stages of conflict” and “all its dimensions.” During this session, we explored what law, policy, and ethics can teach us about “sustaining peace” and how the UN can be assisted in forging a more coherent vision of this new paradigm. This session of the fourth annual RPP Colloquium Series features Benjamin B. Ferencz, JD ’43 HLS, recipient of the Harvard Law School Medal of Freedom 2014, and former United States prosecutor at the International Military Tribunal at Nüremberg; respondent Gabriella Blum, LLM ’01, SJD ’03, Rita E. Hauser Professor of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, faculty director of the Program on International Law and Armed Conflict (PILAC), and member of the Program on Negotiation executive board at Harvard Law School; respondent J. Bryan Hehir, Parker Gilbert Montgomery Professor of the Practice of Religion and Public Life at Harvard Kennedy School, secretary for social services of the Archdiocese of Boston; and moderator Federica D’Alessandra, LLM, 2013-16 Fellow and 2010-12 Associate at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard Kennedy School, 2016-17 Visiting Scholar/Researcher at HLS, 2017-18 Fellow at HDS, and 2016-18 RPP adviser. Learn more about Harvard Divinity School and its mission to illuminate, engage, and serve at http://hds.harvard.edu/.
Rebuffed at every opportunity, whether it's her makeup, her hair, her dress or her nails, as the conductor is calling for everyone to board the train, it appears all Dr. Frankenstein is going to be granted is a gentle rubbing of elbows. He boards the train and turns to throw a kiss to Elizabeth, who flinches out of the way as though he has thrown something disgusting at her. She recovers and decides to mime a couple of blown kisses his way before being enveloped in a cloud of thick, cloying smoke as the train begins to pull away from the station. Our returning guest on The Wilder Ride is Susan Delmonico, a personal trainer who owns her own business, SJD Health and Fitness.
After realizing there is no escape from his past, the young Dr. Frankenstein decides to travel to his family's estate in Transylvania to claim his inheritance. We are introduced to a new characters at the train station, Elizabeth, Dr. Frankenstein's fiance. It becomes clear, Elizabeth if much more worried about not ruffling her appearance than she is in showing Dr. Frankenstein any affection. The scene ends with her asking him if he likes traditional wedding nights? All we hear from his is, "I like...", which left us wondering what he is about to say. Our guest, once again, is Susan Delmonico, who owns her own business, SJD Health and Fitness, where she is a personal trainer and likes to share her thoughts on fitness and recipes on her free site.
It's obvious, after the demonstration asked for by the annoying medical student, Brainy Smurf is not yet willing to stop pushing Dr. Frankenstein about his family's history, specifically of his grandfather's work with reanimating dead tissue. Dr. Frankenstein tries to laugh off the question of the vermicelli worm but is pushed repeatedly to the point of frustrated anger. Our guest on The Wilder Ride is personal trainer, Susan Delmonico of SJD Health and Fitness who grew up loving Young Frankenstein and still, to this day, thinks of it as one of her all-time favorite comedies.
An in-depth chat with film-composer, arranger and musician Victoria Kelly. We talk about her musical upbringing, the twin loves of classical music and Prince, her education - including studying film scoring in America; to work on local horror films and to composing, arranging and performing work with a range of bands and artists including writing and arranging the strings on Neil Finn's Dizzy Heights album, as well as touring the world with him; work too with SJD, with Strawpeople, Humphreys & Keen. We talk, too, about the death of Prince, about his influence and of the notion, several months down the track, of grieving his loss.
An in-depth chat with film-composer, arranger and musician Victoria Kelly. We talk about her musical upbringing, the twin loves of classical music and Prince, her education - including studying film scoring in America; to work on local horror films and to composing, arranging and performing work with a range of bands and artists including writing and arranging the strings on Neil Finn's Dizzy Heights album, as well as touring the world with him; work too with SJD, with Strawpeople, Humphreys & Keen. We talk, too, about the death of Prince, about his influence and of the notion, several months down the track, of grieving his loss. Get full access to Sounds Good! at simonsweetman.substack.com/subscribe
The Gathering SJD-August 2016 www.RobertSchullerMinistries.org Pastor Robert Schuller shares a message of hope found in the promises of God. Based on Deuteronomy 9, Robert encourages us to look to God when we climb our "mountains."
Access Justice laws give people equal opportunity to enjoy primary goods, ensuring that access to these goods is not allocated by markets and is not tilted in favor of wealth and privilege. But Access Justice often fails to meet its egalitarian aspirations, because access and its benefits are deployed disproportionately by elites, yet paid for directly by public budgets and indirectly by weaker groups. In this lecture, Professor Ben-Shahar explains why Access Justice law can unintentionally hurt weak groups in a variety of areas — access to courts, information, insurance, internet, and many more. Omri Ben-Shahar earned his PhD in Economics and SJD from Harvard in 1995 and his BA and LLB from the Hebrew University in 1990. Before coming to Chicago, he was the Kirkland & Ellis Professor of Law and Economics at the University of Michigan. Prior to that, he taught at Tel-Aviv University, was a member of Israel's Antitrust Court and clerked at the Supreme Court of Israel. He teaches contracts, sales, insurance Law, consumer law, e-commerce, food and drug law, law and economics, and game theory and the law. He writes in the fields of contract law and consumer protection. He is the co-author of More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure (Princeton 2014). Ben-Shahar is the Kearny Director of the Coase-Sandor Institute for Law and Economics, and the Editor of the Journal of Legal Studies. He is also the Co-Reporter with Oren Bar-Gill for the Restatement Third of Consumer Contracts. This lecture was recorded on March 3, 2015, as part of the Chicago's Best Ideas lecture series.
Access Justice laws give people equal opportunity to enjoy primary goods, ensuring that access to these goods is not allocated by markets and is not tilted in favor of wealth and privilege. But Access Justice often fails to meet its egalitarian aspirations, because access and its benefits are deployed disproportionately by elites, yet paid for directly by public budgets and indirectly by weaker groups. In this lecture, Professor Ben-Shahar explains why Access Justice law can unintentionally hurt weak groups in a variety of areas — access to courts, information, insurance, internet, and many more. Omri Ben-Shahar earned his PhD in Economics and SJD from Harvard in 1995 and his BA and LLB from the Hebrew University in 1990. Before coming to Chicago, he was the Kirkland & Ellis Professor of Law and Economics at the University of Michigan. Prior to that, he taught at Tel-Aviv University, was a member of Israel's Antitrust Court and clerked at the Supreme Court of Israel. He teaches contracts, sales, insurance Law, consumer law, e-commerce, food and drug law, law and economics, and game theory and the law. He writes in the fields of contract law and consumer protection. He is the co-author of More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure (Princeton 2014). Ben-Shahar is the Kearny Director of the Coase-Sandor Institute for Law and Economics, and the Editor of the Journal of Legal Studies. He is also the Co-Reporter with Oren Bar-Gill for the Restatement Third of Consumer Contracts. This lecture was recorded on March 3, 2015, as part of the Chicago's Best Ideas lecture series.
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SJD, Doctor of Juridical Science, Boston, MA, Suffolk University, Suffolk University Law School, Graduate Law Degrees, Legal Education, post-LLM