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Showing episodes and shows of
Energy Policy Institute At The University Of Chicago & UChicago Podcast Network
Shows
The Pie: An Economics Podcast
Should Performance Reviews Be Scrapped?
Many of us react to the term “performance review” with a shudder. It’s that awkward periodic conversation in which we have to hear feedback, share our assessments of each other, and, occasionally, clash with our colleagues. But do performance reviews have to be like that? We hear from Chicago Booth's Stacey Kole. Does she think that performance reviews are worth saving, and if so, how can they be revamped?--Today we’re bringing you a special episode from our podcast colleagues here at the University of Chicago. Now, if you’ve ever held a job – al...
2025-03-14
27 min
The Pie: An Economics Podcast
The Uncertainties of Climate Change
How can we incentivize the private and public sectors to develop and deploy solutions to climate change, while accounting for uncertainties? This episode of The Pie covers a panel discussion among professors David Keith of the Department of the Geophysical Sciences at UChicago and founding faculty director of the university’s Climate Systems Engineering initiative, Franklin Allen of Imperial College in London, and José Scheinkman of Columbia. Lars Peter Hansen, The David Rockefeller Distinguished Service Professor in Economics, Statistics in the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics and the Booth School of Business and winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in...
2024-07-15
44 min
Prep Talk Podcast: APs, SAT, ACT Prep 101
Breaking Barriers: Crafting a winning resume for UChicago | PrepTalk Podcast #uchicago #podcast
In this captivating episode, we sit down with Divayata Choudhary, recently admitted to the esteemed University of Chicago. Join us as she shares her insights on the importance of extracurricular activities in shaping her journey, her process of creating an impressive resume, and the excitement and anticipation of embarking on her college adventure at UChicago. Get ready to be inspired by her remarkable achievements and gain valuable tips on building a well-rounded profile. Tune in to "PrepTalk Podcast" for an engaging discussion on the significance of extracurriculars and the anticipation of starting college at the University of Chicago. Time...
2023-06-29
11 min
The Animal Behavior Podcast
S3E1 William Kimler on Darwin and Chapter 7 of the Origin
In the first episode of Season 3, we kick off our new miniseries, "Foundations of Animal Behavior" in a conversation between Matthew and Darwin scholar and intellectual historian Dr. William Kimler. We recommend that you read Chapter 7 either before or after this conversation. Here is the version (1st edition) that William and Matthew reference, starting on page 207 of the text (page 114 of the pdf): http://darwin-online.org.uk/converted/pdf/1859_Origin_F373.pdf William first describes the social and intellectual context in which the Origin was written, including a description of natural theology and Darwin's own...
2023-06-05
56 min
Chicago History Podcast
Episode 609 - Black Women's Worker Strikes of the 1930s with author Melissa A. Ford
Send us a textIn the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Communist Party in Chicago encouraged black women working in sweat shops to stand up for themselves and strike for better wages, better working conditions, and more. Today we’re talking about the Black Women’s Worker Strikes of the 1930s.Read more about author Melissa A. Ford here:https://melissafordphd.com/Special thanks to the Black Metropolis Research Consortium (https://bmrc.lib.uchicago.edu/), essential to the work of Melissa A. Ford.Show your support of t...
2023-02-25
25 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
China Faltering? Why the End of Zero Covid Won’t Fix Its Economic Problems
Podcast note: Please enjoy this episode from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.How will China’s economy respond after the lifting of ‘Zero Covid’ policy? UChicago economist Chang-Tai Hsieh joins The Pie to discuss the surprising party response to political protests, emerging dynamics affecting the Chinese economy today, and what the future may hold.
2022-12-13
22 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
Economic Warfare: Are Russian Sanctions Working?
Podcast note: Please enjoy this episode from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.Ten months into a devastating war, the Russian and Ukrainian economies are struggling yet resilient. Russian-born economist Konstantin Sonin joins The Pie to provide an update on the economic impacts of the ongoing conflict, including the massive long-term toll not yet captured in available data.
2022-11-30
25 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
Fighting Inflation: Is the Fed’s Work Just Beginning?
Podcast note: Please enjoy this episode from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.The Federal Reserve’s latest 75 basis point rate hike brought interest rates up again on everything from mortgages to car loans and credit cards. Will it be enough to halt inflation? How is the Fed thinking about the US economy, unemployment, and its global impact? University of Chicago economist Anil Kashyap joins to discuss the campaign to bring inflation down and mo...
2022-11-15
22 min
THE ONE'S CHANGING THE WORLD -PODCAST
AI THAT PREDICTS CRIME WITH 90% ACCURACY- PROF ISHANU CHATTOPADHYAY
#artificialintelligence #crime #ai #universityofchicago #predictivepolicing #predictiveanalytics #predictiveprogramming #police #minorityreport Prof Ishanu Chattopadhyay heads the ZeD lab@UChicago where they investigate the core algorithmic principles behind data analysis with minimal human intervention, and little or no access to domain expertise. ZED lab is interested in unraveling complex emergent structures in biological, physical & social systems, solving hard problems in clinical decision-making, understanding the epidemiology of complex diseases, and reliably predicting rare events in complex stochastic phenomena. Prof Ishanu has developed an AI Algorithm that can forecast crimes being committed days before they actually occur. The AI model was tested...
2022-11-07
52 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
Tax vs Ban: The Unexpected Results on Gun Sales
Podcast note: Please enjoy this episode from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.In this episode, we’re talking about guns. Chicago Booth economist Brad Shapiro has quantified—for the first time—American consumer demand for guns, and how that demand shifts in response to different regulations, including bans and taxes. He was surprised by some of the findings, which offer new and important insights for ongoing gun policy debates.
2022-11-01
17 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
COVID and Schools: Elementary Lessons
Podcast Note: Please enjoy this episode from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.Did closing schools during the COVID-19 pandemic serve students and society at-large? As part of a World Bank Advisory Panel, University of Chicago economist Rachel Glennerster is taking a closer look at the long-term economic cost of learning losses. Addressing these costs, estimated at greater than $10 trillion, will be crucial to future education policy and pandemic response.
2022-10-27
16 min
UChicago Economics Events and Conversations
WFH… Gone Global
Podcast Note: Please enjoy episode one from season two of The Pie, an economics podcast from the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Subscribe where you get your podcasts, or at thepie.uchicago.edu.In this episode, we talk about the remote work revolution. It is now more than two years old, and it’s a worldwide phenomenon, at least in wealthier countries. Economist Steve Davis has been studying the staying power of work from home around the globe, and finds that not only is it here to stay, but it’s prompting larger societal questions about everything from...
2022-10-19
21 min
The Accord Research Alliance Podcast
45. Using the Net Promoter Score for Listening: an interview with Emilie Jackson
Emilie Jackson joins the podcast to talk with Nathan Mallonee about the listening work HOPE International does in their microfinance institutions. Their listening practice is geared toward helping them design new microfinance products and services for their clients. Emilie also goes into depth about one particular tool they use for quicker feedback—the Net Promoter Score—and how they modified it for clients in the countries they work in. For more information about HOPE International, visit www.hopeinternational.org. To find out more about the Accord Research Alliance, and to register for the 2022 OneAccord Forum, visit www.accordnetwork.org. Emilie's book...
2022-09-29
26 min
Big Brains
The Imbalance In Our Society With Raghuram Rajan
Hello Big Brains listeners! Our podcast is coming up on an important milestone … our 100th episode! As part of the month-long celebration, we’re looking back at some of our favorite episodes—highlighting a different world-changing idea or discovery each week. This week, we look back at our episode with UChicago economist, Raghuram Rajan. He became infamous for predicting the 2008 financial collapse three years before it happened. Rajan says that there are three pillars in our society: the state, the markets and the community. In his new book, he traces the history of how the state and markets have grown, while...
2022-09-01
25 min
Haunted UK Podcast
The Legend That Is Bigfoot - Part 1
This is the end of season break multi part special of the Haunted UK Podcast, and it's in this episode which was chosen by listeners, that we'll be delving into the legend that is Bigfoot. Around 21,000 years ago during the last ice age, many scientists agree that a huge land bridge existed which stretched between North American Alaska and Russia. This is now the location of the Bering Sea. It is widely believed that this land bridge enabled human settlers to migrate from the Asian Continent and to begin to forge a new life in this huge...
2022-07-29
1h 03
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
Can the World Phase Out Fossil Fuels? A Look at Climate Policy in the Developing World
Developing countries represent a large source of potential future carbon emissions as they seek to rapidly industrialize their economies. Yet, if the world is to hold future warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, these countries must identify a cleaner model of growth that relies on low- or zero-carbon fuels instead of fossil energy. This tension between maintaining access to inexpensive energy and addressing climate change was on full display last fall when countries met at the COP26 international climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland. India, already the world’s third-biggest emitter, committed that half of its energy come from clean sources by 2030. At th...
2022-05-19
1h 10
Sofa King Podcast
Episode 647: Gladiators: On Death, Politics, and Celebrity
On this episode of the world famous Sofa King Podcast, we look at the ultimate form of sports entertainment—Roman Gladiators. Everyone pictures these brave, bloodthirsty men performing for the crowd and emperor, but there is a lot more to their tale. For one, a lot of them were slaves or prisoners of war. Another thing is, they became crazy popular, becoming the celebrities of their era. There is still graffiti in places about girls in love with gladiators! There were no gladiators without the crowds, and we talk about the scope of gladiatorial games as well as how politicians us...
2022-03-18
1h 44
Sofa King Podcast
Episode 647: Gladiators: On Death, Politics, and Celebrity
On this episode of the world famous Sofa King Podcast, we look at the ultimate form of sports entertainment—Roman Gladiators. Everyone pictures these brave, bloodthirsty men performing for the crowd and emperor, but there is a lot more to their tale. For one, a lot of them were slaves or prisoners of war. Another thing is, they became crazy popular, becoming the celebrities of their era. There is still graffiti in places about girls in love with gladiators! There were no gladiators without the crowds, and we talk about the scope of gladiatorial games as well as how politicians us...
2022-03-18
1h 44
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
An Insider’s Look at COP26: Successes, Setbacks, and the Future of International Climate Diplomacy
Last November, the international community concluded its 26th United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland. Reviews were mixed. Among its successes, COP26 concluded the Paris “rulebook,” adopted a consensus decision on next steps, and produced a series of multilateral commitments on limiting methane emissions and deforestation, strengthening climate finance, and more. A surprise joint declaration between the United States and China offered hope that the world’s two largest economies and carbon emitters can still work together. At the same time, despite substantial progress since adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015, the world remains off track to limiti...
2022-02-08
59 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
Where do Americans Stand on Climate and Energy Policy?
Climate change is a top priority for President Joe Biden as he prepares to meet the world at the next international climate summit, COP26, in November. But how big of a priority is it for the American public? How much would they pay out of their own wallets to confront climate change? And, where do they stand on key issues? On October 26, EPIC hosted a conversation with the 2021-2022 Visiting Fellows in Policy Practice Carlos Curbelo and Heather McTeer Toney. Curbelo and McTeer Toney dug into the results of an EPIC/AP-NORC poll conducted to track opinions on central topics...
2021-11-03
48 min
Not Another Politics Podcast
Introducing: Entitled
The University of Chicago Podcast Network is excited to announce the launch of a new show, it’s called "Entitled" and it’s about human rights. Co-hosted by lawyers and UChicago Law School Professors, Claudia Flores and Tom Ginsburg, Entitled explores the stories around why rights matter and what’s the matter with rights. We’re taking a much needed break at the end of the summer, so we're going to share the first episode of that show with you this week, and recommend you go subscribe! We’ll be back in two weeks with a new episode of Not Another Po...
2021-09-08
41 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Roadmap: Do Energy Efficiency Programs Work? Lessons for Policymakers
You’ll be hard pressed to find a climate agenda that doesn’t include policies to encourage energy efficiency. It makes sense. Reducing energy consumption while lowering households’ electricity bills and greenhouse gas emissions at the same time—a win for everyone, right? While the concept of doing more with less energy is appealing, research is piling up that these policies often don’t deliver as promised and can be expensive ways to reduce carbon emissions. This as the Senate’s infrastructure bill provides an historic investment into one of the central energy efficiency programs researchers have pointed to as underdeliver...
2021-08-13
21 min
Capitalisn't
Introducing: Entitled
The University of Chicago Podcast Network is excited to announce the launch of a new show, it’s called "Entitled" and it’s about human rights. Co-hosted by lawyers and UChicago Law School Professors, Claudia Flores and Tom Ginsburg, Entitled explores the stories around why rights matter and what’s the matter with rights. We’re going to share the first episode of that show with you this week, and recommend you go subscribe! We’ll be back next week with a new the second installment of our meritocracy series! Please enjoy Entitled, and we’ll see you next week!
2021-08-05
37 min
Big Brains
Introducing: Entitled
The University of Chicago Podcast Network is excited to announce the launch of a new show, it’s called "Entitled" and it’s about human rights. Co-hosted by lawyers and UChicago Law School Professors, Claudia Flores and Tom Ginsburg, Entitled explores the stories around why rights matter and what’s the matter with rights. We’re going to share the first episode of that show with you this week, and recommend you go subscribe! We’ll be back next week with a new Big Brains about an incredible scientific breakthrough that will have huge implications for climate change, can...
2021-07-29
41 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Roadmap: Boosting Clean Energy to Achieve a Carbon-Free Power Sector
In our third episode in this special series, The Atlantic's Rob Meyer talks with Steve Cicala and Michael Greenstone to take a hard look at the barriers that today’s fragmented grid imposes on the growth of renewables, and what steps the government can take to remove those barriers. But taking those steps will likely not be enough, and many in Washington are supporting a Clean Electricity Standard—though not everyone agrees on what qualifies as “clean.” https://epic.uchicago.edu/area-of-focus/decarbonizing-the-us-economy-with-a-national-grid/
2021-06-23
39 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Roadmap: Fuel Economy Standards—The Other Transportation Policy
Where does climate and energy policy go from here? In the new podcast miniseries The Roadmap, The Atlantic's Rob Meyer joins EPIC scholars to take a deep dive into timely climate and energy issues and the evidence behind needed policy changes, as described in the U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap. For our second episode, Rob talks with EPIC Executive Director Sam Ori and Harris Public Policy's Koichiro Ito about transportation emissions. While new proposals to boost electric vehicles have dominated much of the Biden administration’s transportation agenda, the predominate policy tool to reduce carbon emissions in this sector has hi...
2021-06-08
45 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Roadmap: The Case for a Carbon Price and How to Prevent Leakage
Episode 1 : The Case for a Carbon Price and How to Prevent Leakage For the first episode, Rob talks with EPIC Director Michael Greenstone and UChicago Law’s David Weisbach about one of the most important and political issues in climate policy: carbon prices. They also discuss one of the biggest questions surrounding carbon pricing, which is how to impose a carbon price without driving industry overseas and without exporting carbon emissions—a phenomenon called carbon leakage. https://epic.uchicago.edu/us-energy-and-climate-roadmap/
2021-05-26
32 min
Pineapple Pizza Podcast
Everything Comes Down to Poo and Colonialism
Emily serves up two spicy specials on this week's menu. First, bite into a slice of Crocotta with a dubious side of Leucrocotta, but don't let this one linger under your tongue for too long, or you may start seeing things. Then, sit back and listen to a story about the potential inspiration for Bram Stoker's Dracula, as you tear into a big, fresh piece of Vetala jerky.Podcast Promo by Podcast Without and AudienceTo stay on top of all the latest from Pineapple Pizza Podcast, be sure to check out our website at www...
2021-05-09
1h 12
The Hellenistic Age Podcast
Interview: On Antigonus II Gonatas w/ Robin Waterfield
After facing decades of civil wars and invasions following the death of Alexander, peace was restored in Macedonia by the capable Antigonid king Antigonus II 'Gonatas', who strengthened the kingdom's hegemony over the Greek Peninsula in a reign that lasted an impressive 40 years. Despite this, we know very little about the man and his exploits. Author and independent scholar Robin Waterfield ("Dividing the Spoils", "Taken at the Flood") joins the show to discuss his new book "The Making of a King: Antigonus Gonatas of Macedon and the Greeks", which seeks to chronicle the life of Antigonus and provide a guide...
2021-04-18
34 min
Red River Podcast
ep 71 Steve Dejarnatt- Writer/ Director
Amazing to have cult film director, Steve Dejarnatt on. The director of one of Sams favorite films of al time. The 1988 Miracle Mile. A brief run through his career. From film making all the way to author and his new book of short stories, "Grace For Grace". https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/G/bo50634192.html As usual please like and share if possible. And follow the podcast network Dark Satellite Media. Holla https://linktr.ee/_red_river_podcast
2021-01-25
57 min
Pandemic Economics
Introducing Verified: Dust Up
Verified: Dust Up is a new investigative documentary podcast produced by Witness Docs that poses the question: Could a product so many of us have in our medicine cabinets be putting us at risk? In the second season of Verified, Host Natasha Del Toro and the Verified team investigate whether a group of women developed ovarian cancer from dusting their bodies with Johnson & Johnson’s baby powder—an iconic brand associated with innocence and comfort since the 1800s. One woman's mysterious illness snowballs into thousands of court cases; a trusted brand fights to convince consumers and regulators that baby powder is s...
2020-11-12
05 min
Big Brains
What Remains Unanswered After The 2020 Election, with William Howell and Luigi Zingales
It’s hard to think of a presidential election that has raised as many questions as 2020. What do these results tell us about the views and desires of the American public, what the polls got right and wrong, and how all of this will affect our economy? To find some answers, we turned to two leading UChicago scholars—and fellow University of Chicago Podcast Network hosts to discuss what comes next, following the historic election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Big Brains host Paul M. Rand welcomes Luigi Zingales, professor of economics and host of the Capital...
2020-11-11
34 min
NAHAM Connections Podcast
4 – Solving the Denial Dilemma in Patient Access
ABOUT THE EPISODE Thank you for joining us for the fourth episode of the NAHAM Connections Podcast: Voices in Patient Access. In this episode, Michael Sciarabba, CHAM, director of Patient Access services at UChicago Medicine, takes a deep dive into his recently published Access Management Journal article about denial prevention. Here, Michael discusses strategies to proactively solve the denial dilemma; describes the roles of patients, providers and Patient Access professionals in managing denials; and shares advice to help prevent denials. || MUSIC Podcast theme, "Pride in Each Other” || LINKS *Episode* https://www.naham.org/page/Connections2020Q3DenialDilemma *Social Media* https://ww...
2020-09-17
26 min
Pandemic Economics
Introducing Pandemic Economics
As the COVID-19 pandemic has sent world economies into deep freeze, hosts Tess Vigeland, former host of public radio’s Marketplace, and Eduardo Porter, economics reporter for the New York Times, are interviewing top economists from the University of Chicago. Subscribe to this podcast produced by Stitcher and the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics for insights to help you navigate this moment. New episodes published weekly. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2020-04-20
03 min
LeftPOC
41. Pandemic & Its Discontents w/Elise Mitchell - Left POCket Project Podcast
In this episode, we speak with historian and researcher Elise Mitchell about pandemics in history, their impact on marginalized populations - particularly the enslaved - and the linkages to the social impact of the current COVID-19 crisis. --- Readings & Resources Elise Mitchell - "The Shortages May Be Worse Than the Disease - Humanity's Long History of Making Epidemics Worse" https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/humanitys-long-history-of-making-epidemics-worse/607780/ Dayle B. DeLancey - "Vaccinating Freedom: Smallpox Prevention and the Discourses of African American Citizenship in Antebellum Philadelphia" https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.5323/jafriamerhist.95.3-4.0296 Ida Altman - "The Revolt of Enriquillo and...
2020-04-03
1h 54
The Dirt Podcast
The Dirt Potcast: Ceramics in Archaeology
This week, we’re talking ceramics! Anna and Amber explain how bits of pottery aren’t called shards, but do hold lots of secrets (and sometimes blood!), the role of ceramics in archaeology, evidence for amateur and student potters, and how Amber clearly didn’t miss her calling as a ceramic artist.LinksBasic Concepts: Pottery in the Archaeological Record (Archaeology Review)[https://ahotcupofjoe.net/2007/01/basic-concepts-pottery-in-the-archaeological-record/]Ancient Chinese pottery confirmed as the oldest yet found (The Guardian)[https://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/jun/28/ancient-chinese-pottery-oldest-yet]Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) in the Study of Archaeological Cerami...
2019-09-02
58 min
The Dirt Podcast
The Dirt Potcast: Ceramics in Archaeology - Ep 58
This week, we’re talking ceramics! Anna and Amber explain how bits of pottery aren’t called shards, but do hold lots of secrets (and sometimes blood!), the role of ceramics in archaeology, evidence for amateur and student potters, and how Amber clearly didn’t miss her calling as a ceramic artist. LinksBasic Concepts: Pottery in the Archaeological Record (Archaeology Review) [https://ahotcupofjoe.net/2007/01/basic-concepts-pottery-in-the-archaeological-record/]Ancient Chinese pottery confirmed as the oldest yet found (The Guardian) [https://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/jun/28/ancient-chinese-pottery-oldest-yet]Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) in the Study of Archaeological Ceramics (Oxford Handbook of Archaeological Ceramic Analysis) [https...
2019-09-02
58 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Lebanese Comics w/ Omar Khouri and Fadi “the fdz” Baki
Fadi “the fdz” Baki and Omar Khouri are co-founders and editors of the Lebanese comics magazine Samandal. In this episode of Ventures the two take listeners back to the comic’s early days, to Lebanon in the year 2006; post-war with Israel, but before an established comics scene existed in the country. The two wanted to create a space where people could tell authentic stories in their own way. And in September of 2007, Samandal was born. Interview by Benny Vanderburgh and Yzza Sedrati. The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Ce...
2019-08-20
29 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
History & Imagined Space in the Graphic Novel w/ Barbara Mann
In this episode, Barbara Mann, a professor of Cultural Studies and Hebrew Literature at The Jewish Theological Seminary, discusses how graphic novels serve as a unique space for historical discourse. Citing commercially-popular examples like Maus and The Rabbi’s Cat, Mann concludes that the language of graphic novels, their unique way of presenting anecdotes, and their narrators enable the form to explore historical narratives. She argues that through a conversation of language, cartoon visuals, and the literal story-telling space on the page, comics can mimic the experience of the past. This lecture is part of the Farouk Mustafa Memorial Friday Le...
2019-07-12
36 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
The Political Lives of Saints with Angie Heo
In this episode of Ventures, Professor Angie Heo discusses her new book The Political Lives of Saints. Heo challenges the idea that in Egypt Christian saints and icons hold significance only for the country’s Christian population. She argues that public narratives of saints intertwine with narratives of the nation, and these stories bind Christians and Muslims together, especially during periods of national humiliation and turmoil. Interview by Lydia Yousief. Special thanks to Yousief Yousief for sharing his story. The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Center for Mi...
2019-06-19
25 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Bollywood on the Nile? A Lecture by Joel Gordon
Is there an Egyptian Orientalism? Joel Gordon approaches this question by tracing the representations of India and Indians in modern Egyptian cinema. In this lecture, Gordon puts these cinematic representations in the context of shifting relations between Egypt and India through the 20th century. Reaching from Suez to Shalimar, Gordon narrates the connection between Egyptian cinema, culture, and an important international relationship. This lecture is part of the Farouk Mustafa Memorial Friday Lecture Series. The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies.
2019-06-01
49 min
Emergency Preparedness in Canada (EPIC) Podcast
E28 - Beat the Heat - Understanding Heat Emergencies
On this episode of Emergency Preparedness in Canada (EPIC)Podcast, we speak with Environment Canada Meteorologist Melissa MacDonald about the weather! Specifically, the unique dangers that heat waves present to our most invisible and vulnerable populations. What are they? Why are they so dangerous? And are our current response strategies effective? All this and more on this episode of EPIC Podcast: Current, Relevant, Canadian. Journal Club Articles: https://www.cdc.gov/climateandhealth/docs/UseOfCoolingCenters.pdf https://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/H/bo20809880.html Tool of the Trade: https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/hc-sc/migration/hc-sc...
2019-05-09
41 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Walking with Arba’een Pilgrims feat. Alex Shams
With nearly 25 million attendees, the Arba’een Pilgrimage in Iraq is one of the largest public gatherings in the world. Banned under Saddam Hussein, Shi’a Muslims from around the world have renewed this annual ritual in recent years, defying sectarian violence and the threat of ISIS. Alex Shams, a Ph.D student in Anthropology at the University of Chicago, recently traveled to Iraq to study this extraordinary human phenomenon. Along the road to Kerbala, he witnessed the new forms of solidarity that Arba’een is forging between Shi’is from Iraq to India. Interview by Krishna S. Kulkarni. The views ex...
2019-04-22
29 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Constellations of Blackness: Revolution, Language, and the Afro-Arab Imaginary
In this episode, Sophia Azeb excavates genealogies of the Afro-Arab world. Highlighting the Pan-African Festival of 1969 in Algeria, Azeb shows how art functioned as a cultural exchange between African diaspora communities and Arabs in the Middle East. In the backdrop of the Algerian War for Independence, this festival collected the various anti-colonialist, Pan-African, and Third Worldist ideas underpinning what Azeb dubs the “Afro-Arab imaginary.” Interview by Marie Helmy. The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies.
2019-03-26
22 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Death and Dying in Iraq - A Lecture by Hayder Al-Mohammad
In this lecture, Hayder Al-Mohammad discusses how modern-day Iraqis prepare for death, either their own or within their communities. Placing post-invasion Iraq in the context of the Gulf War and subsequent U.S. sanctions, this episode explores a suffering healthcare system where many Iraqis and their families, especially amongst the poor, face deadly illnesses like cancer without aid. This lecture is part of the Farouk Mustafa Memorial Friday Lecture Series. Check out Al-Mohammad’s work here: http://uccs.academia.edu/HayderAlMohammad The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Ce...
2019-03-07
56 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Anthropology of the Occult with Alireza Doostdar
In this interview, Alireza Doostdar plunges into the world of Iranian occult sciences. His ethnographic research, or ‘deep hanging out,’ introduces us to a diverse cast of characters: New Age spiritists, fortune tellers, and ordinary people grappling with what lies beyond the natural. Drawing on the ideas and practices of these interlocutors, Doostdar reveals the symbiotic relationship between occult and rational thinking. Interview by Rachel Carbonara. Check out Doostdar’s book from Princeton University Press: The Iranian Metaphysicals Explorations in Science, Islam, and the Uncanny. https://press.princeton.edu/titles/11335.html The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own an...
2019-01-29
34 min
Big Brains
What Ripples in Space-Time Tell Us About the Universe with Daniel Holz
All around us in the universe, stars and black holes are smashing into each other with tremendous force. These events are so powerful that they literally ripple the fabric of space-time—and these ripples, called gravitational waves, travel hundreds of millions of light-years across the universe. Prof. Daniel Holz and fellow scientists at LIGO knew that these waves would take us closer to figuring out multiple mysteries about the universe, like its size and age. They were certain that they would be able to build an instrument so sensitive that they could pick up these signals—but not e...
2019-01-21
22 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
At the Origins of Islam with Fred Donner
With almost 2 billion followers, Islam has spread far beyond the land of its birth. Its origins, however, remain difficult for historians to explain. In this episode of Ventures, Fred Donner discusses the challenges of studying early Islam and the narratives of Islam’s emergence in the 7th century CE. Drawing on decades of research, Donner complicates the conventional historical account by raising questions about the boundaries of the early Muslim community, or as he calls it, the “Believers Movement,” and the Jews and Christians that may have constituted it. Interview by Alexander Barna. The views expressed in this podcast are the pa...
2018-12-27
31 min
Radio Harris
Why Bother to Vote?
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2018-12-18
00 min
Big Brains
David Axelrod on Why ‘Democracy is Messy’ and the Future of Politics
David Axelrod departed Washington, D.C. because he knew it’d be hard to top his role in helping Barack Obama make history. But when the president’s former senior adviser began the next chapter in his illustrious career, he looked to his alma mater to make an impact. Axelrod, AB’76, founded the non-partisan Institute of Politics at the University of Chicago in 2012. In the years since, Axelrod has helped build upon the University’s tradition of wide-ranging debate by welcoming guests ranging from Senator Bernie Sanders to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to UN Ambassad...
2018-11-26
25 min
UChicago Center for Middle Eastern Studies
“Impossible Exodus” with Orit Bashkin
Between 1949 and 1951, 123,000 Iraqi Jews emigrated to the newly-established state of Israel. In this interview, Orit Bashkin explores the nuanced world of this diaspora: Jews who spoke Arabic and struggled to survive transit camps; sometimes collaborating with Palestinian communists or working with the Israeli government. This history is a cautionary but hopeful tale of complex identities, multiculturalism, and coexistence. Interview by Aidan Kaplan. The views expressed in this podcast are the participants' own and do not necessarily represent the views of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies.
2018-11-14
27 min
Radio Harris
Radio Replay: What's in Store for Russia?
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2018-10-16
00 min
Big Brains
Future of Higher Education and College Access with Robert J. Zimmer
As president of the University of Chicago, Robert J. Zimmer has a unique view to the challenges and opportunities facing higher education, and one of the biggest obstacles he sees is access for all students. While private institutions continue to offer greater financial support, Zimmer believes government and public institutions now need to do their part. “Is the country going to invest in the future of young people, or is it not? And is it going to provide access to higher education for people from all sorts of financial backgrounds? I think this is so important to the...
2018-10-01
34 min
Radio Harris
Winning the War on Poverty?
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2018-09-18
00 min
Radio Harris
CSI Colombia (Econ Edition)
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2018-08-28
00 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
How Consumers Respond to the Changing Energy Landscape: From Energy Conservation to Microgrid
In this two-part episode, host Jeff McMahon explores a pair of University of Chicago studies on consumer energy behavior. First, McMahon sits down with EPIC’s Koichiro Ito, an assistant professor at Harris Public Policy, for insight on what motivates consumers to conserve energy. Does simple encouragement work? Or do prices need to rise for them to act? Then, McMahon is joined by Bob Rosner, founding co-director of EPIC and a distinguished UChicago physicist and former director of Argonne National Laboratory, and Kathleen Cagney, a sociology professor and director of the Population Research Center at the National Opinion Research Center (NO...
2018-08-13
40 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Environment as a Human Rights Issue
From lead pipes in Flint, Michigan, and toxic sites in East Chicago to severe hurricanes and flooding in Texas, Miami and Puerto Rico, environmental and climate disasters pack a hard punch on low-income communities and communities of color. Earlier this year, EPIC’s Mark Templeton, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School and director of the Abrams Environmental Law Clinic, discussed the intersection of environmental and social justice issues with Jacqui Patterson, the director of what is now the NAACP’s largest program – the environmental and climate justice program. The discussion was part of an event hosted by the UC...
2018-07-19
48 min
Radio Harris
Crashing the Party
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2018-07-05
00 min
Big Brains
Special University of Chicago Convocation Podcast with Student Speaker Andrea Popova
A special Convocation edition podcast from the UChicago Podcast Network, featuring an interview with student speaker Andrea Popova, followed by the complete speeches from Andrea and fellow graduates Mark Meyer and Priscilla Daboni.
2018-06-12
22 min
Big Brains
Special University of Chicago Convocation Podcast featuring Valerie Jarrett and Marianne Bertrand
A special Convocation edition podcast from the UChicago Podcast Network, featuring the full speeches given by Class Day speaker Valerie Jarrett, distinguished senior fellow in the University of Chicago Law School former senior adviser to President Obama; and Marianne Bertrand, the Chris P. Dialynas Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
2018-06-12
41 min
Talking Europe: The UCL European Institute podcast
Hannah Arendt and the Ancients (Miriam Leonard)
In the fifth edition of our 'Talking Europe' podcast series, Miriam Leonard, Professor of Greek Literature and its Reception at UCL Classics, talks revolution, freedom and the role of Greek philosophy and tragedy in Hannah Arendt's thought. The conversation, with the European Institute's Dr Uta Staiger, takes its point of departure from a Special Issue on Hannah Arendt and the Ancients in the Journal of Classical Philology (Jan 2018), which was edited by Prof. Leonard. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/cp/2018/113/1
2018-06-07
39 min
Big Brains
Future of Energy Innovation with Michael Polsky
When UChicago alumnus Michael Polsky first ventured into the field of renewable energy in 2003 with his company Invenergy, he thought they had missed the boat. “When we got into renewables in earnest, I thought we were too late,” said Polsky, MBA’87, believing people were well ahead of him in building clean energy projects. Today, he said we’re barely in “the third inning” of the renewables game. The founder and CEO of Invenergy, one of the largest renewables company in North America, Polsky, believes it’s not a question of if but when the United States becomes...
2018-05-21
23 min
Radio Harris
The Great Gatsby Curve
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2018-05-14
00 min
Big Brains
The Expanding Universe with Wendy Freedman
Wendy Freedman spent part of her career measuring the age of the universe. Now she’s working on a project that may very well give scientists a chance to glimpse into its birth. Freedman, the John & Marion Sullivan University Professor of Astronomy & Astrophysics, works in the field of observational cosmology, measuring the expansion rate of the universe. In 2001, she and a team of scientists found that the universe is around 13.7 billion years old—far more precise than the previous estimate in the 10- to 20-billion-year-old range. Freedman was the founding leader from 2003 until 2015 of an intern...
2018-05-14
23 min
Big Brains
Nature’s Design Secrets with Rama Ranganathan
From the smallest proteins of cells to entire ecosystems, nature might be the most sophisticated engineer on earth. Researchers like UChicago molecular biologist Rama Ranganathan are trying to uncover the basic design principles that govern biology and apply them to human engineering. He calls the field “evolutionary physics,” and the goal is to unlock the secrets of evolutionary history. On this episode of Big Brains, Ranganathan shares his pioneering research on evolutionary physics, and explains why he believes biology is at a similar point today as engineering was two centuries ago during the Industrial Revolution. Subs...
2018-05-07
25 min
In Theory: The JHI Blog Podcast
Podcast 3, Roundtable On History Of Quantification
Hosted by John Handel, with Dan Bouk, How Our Days Became Numbered: Risk and the Rise of the Statistical Individual (UChicago, 2015); William Deringer, Calculated Values: Finance, Politics, and the Quantitative Age (HUP, 2018); and Jamie Pietruska, Looking Forward: Prediction and Uncertainty in Modern America (UChicago, 2017);
2018-05-01
1h 23
Big Brains
Mind of a Virtuoso Composer with Augusta Read Thomas
To say Augusta Read Thomas is prolific is an understatement. A past Grammy Award winner and finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music, Thomas has been hailed as “a true virtuoso composer” by The New Yorker, and her work has been performed more than almost any other living composer. Thomas, the University Professor of Composition in the Department of Music and the College, champions classical music as co-curator of the Chicago Ear Taxi Festival and works with new musicians as founder and director of the UChicago Center for Contemporary Composition. On this episode of Big B...
2018-04-30
25 min
Radio Harris
Inequality in Climate Change
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RadioHarris/~4/1jdJJCTl3Tg" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>
2018-04-27
00 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
The Fight Against Climate Change Is Happening In The Courtroom
One year in, President Trump’s climate policy agenda has largely focused on rolling back any progress started by his predecessor—from suspending a rule to limit methane leaks from oil and gas operations on federal land to beginning the process of repealing the Obama Administration’s signature climate change regulation, the Clean Power Plan, and withdrawing from the Paris Agreement. Central to the President's success in rolling back these efforts is a figure called the social cost of carbon. Host Jeff McMahon talks with UChicago Law's Mark Templeton and Roberto Borgert about the legal challenges surrounding the social cost of car...
2018-02-26
35 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
A Conversation with Tommy Beaudreau, former Chief of Staff, U.S. Department of Interior
The Trump Administration has undertaken efforts to expand fossil fuel development on federal lands by lifting a moratorium on new coal leasing, scaling back certain protections on federal lands, and moving to open up new areas for offshore drilling. At the same time, the Administration is moving to alleviate regulatory burdens on industry operations, most recently by proposing to roll-back certain safety requirements and structural reforms put into place after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. What are the implications of the Trump Administration policies? On January 24, 2018, EPIC hosted a conversation with Tommy Beaudreau, former Chief of Staff at the Department...
2018-01-29
1h 28
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
A Conversation with Bill Brown, CEO of NET Power
A Conversation with Bill Brown, CEO of NET Power by Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago & UChicago Podcast Network
2018-01-16
30 min
Off The Charts Energy Podcast
Exclusive: A Conversation with Former Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz
EPIC Director Michael Greenstone talks with former Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz for an insiders look into his life, the climate threat, and the need for energy innovation in this special edition podcast.
2017-12-04
36 min
Open Stacks
#20 UCHI 0101: Robert J. Richards, Michael Ruse, Catherine Zuckert & Katy Weintraub
This week on Open Stacks, we celebrate the new school year at our neighbor, the University of Chicago. We'll hear from Professors Catherine Zuckert and Nathan Tarcov on "Machiavelli's Politics," and Robert Richards and Michael Ruse on their book, "Debating Darwin". Plus, a very special interview with UChicago teacher, the Co-op's own Katy Weintraub. Open Stacks is the official podcast of the Seminary Co-operative Bookstores. This episode was produced by Kit Brennen & Imani E. Jackson.
2017-09-25
1h 09
Radio Harris
Behind the Tax Divide
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2017-07-31
00 min
Radio Harris
Chicago Homicides - Separating Fact from Fiction
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2017-05-11
00 min
Radio Harris
The Black-White Earnings Gap Won't Go Away
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2017-02-10
00 min
Radio Harris
Big Decisions, Down to a Science
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2016-12-06
00 min
Radio Harris
Policy Labs, Firsthand
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2016-06-21
00 min
The Quad Podcast
The Uncommon Essay
Where is Waldo really? Why are you here and not somewhere else? What does Play-Doh have to do with Plato? Eva Haraldsdottir (B.A. 2019) chats with fellow UChicago students about the rite of passage that is writing the Uncommon Essay. https://collegeadmissions.uchicago.edu/apply/essay/past-essay-questions
2016-06-02
09 min
Radio Harris
Constitutional Flaw
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2016-04-28
00 min
Radio Harris
What's in Store for Russia
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2016-03-24
00 min
Radio Harris
Replacing Scalia
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2016-02-23
00 min
Radio Harris
What Really Causes Gridlock in Congress
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2016-01-25
00 min
Radio Harris
Managing the Flood
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2015-12-07
00 min
Radio Harris
Thomas Piketty vs. Inequality
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2015-11-24
00 min
Radio Harris
Nudging Parents and Children Together
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2015-11-06
00 min
Radio Harris
Introducing the Pearson Institute
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2015-10-08
00 min
Radio Harris
Breaking Glass Ceilings
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2015-09-04
00 min
Radio Harris
Want Better Government? Get Better Data.
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RadioHarris/~4/OK2fZhr1BiQ" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>
2015-06-23
00 min
Radio Harris
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Lawmakers
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2015-05-26
00 min
Radio Harris
War Games
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2015-05-06
00 min
Radio Harris
Hillary Knocks on the Glass Ceiling
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RadioHarris/~4/M4cvztHC6tM" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>
2015-04-17
00 min
Radio Harris
The $20 Billion Equalizer
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2015-03-17
00 min
Radio Harris
Setting the Doomsday Clock
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2015-02-17
00 min
Radio Harris
The Case for a Harder Kindergarten
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2015-01-27
00 min
Radio Harris
Can Bruce Rauner Bring Back Illinois?
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RadioHarris/~4/PF9louagRro" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>
2015-01-12
00 min
Radio Harris
The Ever-Expanding Executive
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2014-12-16
00 min
Radio Harris
A Latrine of Their Own
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2014-11-20
00 min
Radio Harris
Get Out Whose Vote?
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RadioHarris/~4/wrfBM7HU7MA" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>
2014-11-03
00 min
Radio Harris
Herd Mentality Goes Viral
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2014-10-23
00 min