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Showing episodes and shows of
Dr Ken Shadlen
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Latest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Video
How can countries prepare for the next global health crisis?
Contributor(s): Dr Clare Wenham, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Ulrich Sedelmeier, Dr Tine Hanrieder | They explore how power, politics and public opinion are affecting the next international pandemic response and preparedness, including the crucial question of access to vaccines and other medicines.
2024-06-11
1h 01
All items | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
How can countries prepare for the next global health crisis?
Contributor(s): Dr Clare Wenham, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Ulrich Sedelmeier, Dr Tine Hanrieder | They explore how power, politics and public opinion are affecting the next international pandemic response and preparedness, including the crucial question of access to vaccines and other medicines.
2024-06-11
1h 01
All items | LSE Public lectures and events | All media types
How can countries prepare for the next global health crisis?
Contributor(s): Dr Clare Wenham, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Ulrich Sedelmeier, Dr Tine Hanrieder | They explore how power, politics and public opinion are affecting the next international pandemic response and preparedness, including the crucial question of access to vaccines and other medicines.
2024-06-11
1h 01
All items | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio
How can countries prepare for the next global health crisis?
Contributor(s): Dr Clare Wenham, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Ulrich Sedelmeier, Dr Tine Hanrieder | They explore how power, politics and public opinion are affecting the next international pandemic response and preparedness, including the crucial question of access to vaccines and other medicines.
2024-06-11
1h 01
The Cosmopolitan
Global Covid-19 vaccine inequality | Karrar Karrar, Lara Dovifat & Ken Shadlen
Podcast: Global Development Institute podcast (LS 25 · TOP 10% what is this?)Episode: Global Covid-19 vaccine inequality | Karrar Karrar, Lara Dovifat & Ken ShadlenPub date: 2022-05-03Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationWhile the Covid-19 pandemic has caused enormous devastation and disruption in health, social and economic terms, the remarkably quick development of Covid-19 vaccines is an enormous achievement. Yet despite frequent statements that “it's not over anywhere, until it’s over everywhere”, the distribution of Covid-19 vaccines has been grossly inequitable – defying what the world needs epide...
2022-05-11
57 min
Global Development Institute podcast
Global Covid-19 vaccine inequality | Karrar Karrar, Lara Dovifat & Ken Shadlen
While the Covid-19 pandemic has caused enormous devastation and disruption in health, social and economic terms, the remarkably quick development of Covid-19 vaccines is an enormous achievement. Yet despite frequent statements that “it's not over anywhere, until it’s over everywhere”, the distribution of Covid-19 vaccines has been grossly inequitable – defying what the world needs epidemiologically and economically, as well as ethically.The panel of leading academic and activist experts reflect on one of the biggest immediate problems facing the world – looking back at how global Covid-19 vaccine inequality has emerged and exploring what needs to happen now and in...
2022-05-03
57 min
econopolitics
#8 Big pharma and patents — Ken Shadlen
Ken Shadlen (LSE) joins us to talk about the political economy of big pharma and patents in Latin America, global health, multilateral institutions, and his fondness for football! #econopolitics is an original series from LASA Economics and Politics Section, produced by GabrielSan Studio. Music by Bixiga70 and Hank Levy (Whiplash)
2021-03-03
34 min
LSE Podcasts
Citing Africa | Series 2, Ep 5: Neglected Tropical Diseases: the rise of a global health issue
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) affect more than a billion people in developing countries, but they remained largely unnoticed by the international community until the the Sustainable Development Goals were drafted in 2015. Discussing why and how ideas ‘go viral’, we speak to LSE Professor Dr Ken Shadlen and NTD specialist at the SCI Foundation Yael Velleman to explore the power dynamics involved in global agenda-setting. Speakers: Dr Ken Shadlen, Yael Velleman (Regina Guzman, Katie Bullman and Polly Lloyd-Healey)
2020-12-10
21 min
Citing Africa
Neglected Tropical Diseases: the rise of a global health issue
Contributor(s): Dr Ken Shadlen, Yael Velleman, Regina Guzman, Katie Bullman, Polly Lloyd-Healey | Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) affect more than a billion people in developing countries, but they remained largely unnoticed by the international community until the the Sustainable Development Goals were drafted in 2015. Discussing why and how ideas ‘go viral’, we speak to LSE Professor Dr Ken Shadlen and NTD specialist at the SCI Foundation Yael Velleman to explore the power dynamics involved in global agenda-setting. Speakers: Dr Ken Shadlen, Yael Velleman (Regina Guzman, Katie Bullman and Polly Lloyd-Healey)
2020-12-10
21 min
LSE Podcasts
Addressing the Pandemic: the pharmaceutical challenges [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Kalipso Chalkidou, Dr Panos Kanavos, Professor Margaret Kyle, Professor Ken Shadlen | The panel will examine a range of issues related to the development and use of vaccines and treatments for COVID-19, including the range of incentives for innovation and national approaches to purchasing, price negotiations, and intellectual property and trade policies. Kalipso Chalkidou (@kchalkidou) is the Director of Global Health Policy and a Senior Fellow at the Center for Global Development. Previously, she was the Director of Global Health and Development Group at the Institute of Global Health Innovation, Imperial College London, helping governments build technical and...
2020-05-26
1h 28
LSE Podcasts
LSE Festival 2019 | The Drugs Aren't Working! Confronting the Crisis of Superbugs [Audio]
Speaker(s): Michael Anderson, Dr Mathias Koenig-Archibugi, Ken Shadlen, Catherine Wilkosz | Growing resistance to antibiotics is one of the most significant current threats to global public health. Estimates suggest that in the European Union and the United States alone infections from multidrug resistant bacteria cause around 50,000 deaths a year, with substantial economic burdens associated with these infections. These figures will likely worsen, in the absence of new antibiotics to replace those with declining effectiveness. Existing systems of global health governance and drug development need to be reconfigured in order to respond to new threats. Coordinated international action is needed to...
2019-02-26
56 min
Latest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
LSE Festival 2018 | Universal Health Coverage in the Global South: what is needed to make it work? [Slides]
Speaker(s): Professor Kalipso Chalkidou, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Daniel Wang | Although Universal health coverage is a pillar of the modern welfare state, the successful design and implementation of arrangements to deliver on this promise faces enormous challenges. This panel, with perspectives from health policy, law, and political science, examines these challenges and reflects on national experiences in developing countries. Topics will include: the imperatives of determining which healthcare products and services are covered; national and regional strategies for securing stable supplies of quality healthcare services at affordable prices; the relationship between the spread of patents on pharmaceutical products, a...
2018-02-22
00 min
Latest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
LSE Festival 2018 | Universal Health Coverage in the Global South: what is needed to make it work? [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Kalipso Chalkidou, Professor Ken Shadlen, Dr Daniel Wang | Although Universal health coverage is a pillar of the modern welfare state, the successful design and implementation of arrangements to deliver on this promise faces enormous challenges. This panel, with perspectives from health policy, law, and political science, examines these challenges and reflects on national experiences in developing countries. Topics will include: the imperatives of determining which healthcare products and services are covered; national and regional strategies for securing stable supplies of quality healthcare services at affordable prices; the relationship between the spread of patents on pharmaceutical products, a...
2018-02-22
1h 15
2014 | LSE Public lectures and events | Video
Shaping Tastes: attitude campaigns and persuasion as tools of public policy
Contributor(s): Professor Claus Offe | Current debates on “nudges” reflect the decline of traditional tools of policy implementation. This talk explores policy tools – ranging from paternalist manipulation to moral suasion and participatory schemes – that aim at shaping social behaviour. Claus Offe is a professor of theories of the state at Hertie School of Governance, Berlin. Ken Shadlen is a professor in development studies in the Department of International Development at LSE. Credits: Tom Sturdy (Audio Post-Production), LSE AV Services (Audio Recording).
2014-06-05
1h 31
2014 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
Shaping Tastes: attitude campaigns and persuasion as tools of public policy
Contributor(s): Professor Claus Offe | Current debates on “nudges” reflect the decline of traditional tools of policy implementation. This talk explores policy tools – ranging from paternalist manipulation to moral suasion and participatory schemes – that aim at shaping social behaviour. Claus Offe is a professor of theories of the state at Hertie School of Governance, Berlin. Ken Shadlen is a professor in development studies in the Department of International Development at LSE. Credits: Tom Sturdy (Audio Post-Production), LSE AV Services (Audio Recording).
2014-06-05
1h 31
Summer 2014 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
Shaping Tastes: attitude campaigns and persuasion as tools of public policy
Contributor(s): Professor Claus Offe | Current debates on “nudges” reflect the decline of traditional tools of policy implementation. This talk explores policy tools – ranging from paternalist manipulation to moral suasion and participatory schemes – that aim at shaping social behaviour. Claus Offe is a professor of theories of the state at Hertie School of Governance, Berlin. Ken Shadlen is a professor in development studies in the Department of International Development at LSE. Credits: Tom Sturdy (Audio Post-Production), LSE AV Services (Audio Recording).
2014-06-05
1h 31
Summer 2014 | Public lectures and events | Video
Shaping Tastes: attitude campaigns and persuasion as tools of public policy
Contributor(s): Professor Claus Offe | Current debates on “nudges” reflect the decline of traditional tools of policy implementation. This talk explores policy tools – ranging from paternalist manipulation to moral suasion and participatory schemes – that aim at shaping social behaviour. Claus Offe is a professor of theories of the state at Hertie School of Governance, Berlin. Ken Shadlen is a professor in development studies in the Department of International Development at LSE. Credits: Tom Sturdy (Audio Post-Production), LSE AV Services (Audio Recording).
2014-06-05
1h 31