Episodes
E.J. Dionne, longtime op-ed columnist for The Washington Post; frequent commentator for NOR, ABC, and NBC; and award-winning author of four books including Why Americans Hate Politics. gives this year's Wilson Lecture on the timely topic of politics.
Published 09/20/12
On February 17, 1960, Julius K. Nyerere, President of the Tanganyika African National Union, gave the closing speech at Wellesley College's Symposium on Africa entitled "Africa's Place in the World." He is introduced by Margaret Clapp, President of Wellesley College.
Published 06/01/12
On February 17, 1960, Julius K. Nyerere, President of the Tanganyika African National Union, gave the closing speech at Wellesley College's Symposium on Africa entitled "Africa's Place in the World." He is introduced by Margaret Clapp, President of Wellesley College.
Published 06/01/12
On February 17, 1960, Julius K. Nyerere, President of the Tanganyika African National Union, gave the closing speech at Wellesley College's Symposium on Africa entitled "Africa's Place in the World." He is introduced by Margaret Clapp, President of Wellesley College.
Published 06/01/12
Steven Hamburg is a well-known forest ecologist, but he made a public name for himself by helping persuade Walmart to go green -- selling CFLs, retrofitting stores for energy efficiency, and developing a sustainability plan. Since 2008, Hamburg has been a Senior Scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund -- one of the nation's foremost environmental policy organizations -- where much of his work focuses on climate change. The Douglas Lecture honors Marjory Stoneman Douglas (1890-1998), a...
Published 12/07/11
Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. has won numerous awards for its beer and also for its sustainability practices. Cheri Chastain, Sustainability Coordinator at Sierra Nevada, explained how the brewing company tracks and reports key performance indicators in energy, water, agriculture, transportation, recycling/recovery, greenhouse gases, and more for both our environment and the company’s bottom line.  The Sierra Nevada case study illustrates how science and economics are intertwined in the field of...
Published 11/21/11
Joyce Klein Rosenthal, assistant professor of urban planning at Harvard University, gave a talk drawing on her expertise in environmental planning, sustainable development, and the public health effects of urbanization. Rosenthal moved from the history and design of cities to a discussion of the environmental impacts of urbanization and analyses of climate-related effects on health in today's urban areas. The talk took place as part of the Celebrating QR Connections lecture series at...
Published 10/27/11
Dr. Peter Norvig, Director of Research, Google. In decades past, models of human language were wrought from the sweat and pencils of linguists.  In the modern day, it is more common to think of language modeling as an exercise in probabilistic inference from data: we observe how words and combinations of words are used, and from that build computer models of what the phrases mean. This approach is hopeless with a small amount of data, but somewhere in the range of millions or billions of...
Published 05/03/11
Paul Frommer, creator of the Na'vi language for James Cameron's 2009 film "Avatar," talks about his involvement in the project. He discusses how he got the job, developed the language and worked with Cameron and the actors. He also speaks about the interplay of language and culture in the creation of Na’vi and Na’vi post-“Avatar,” including the astonishing development of a Na’vi community, where passionate enthusiasts are using the language to communicate and helping with its further...
Published 11/01/10
Peter Galison, Professor of History of Science and Physics at Harvard University, explores the technical, sociological, moral and philosophical questions at stake as we strive to determine who or what is to blame for the catastrophic failures of large technical systems.
Published 10/25/10
Jacqueline Jones, Professor of Southern History at the University of Texas at Austin and former Wellesley College History professor, discusses Savannah throughout and after the Civil War.
Published 10/22/10
Saberi discussed her memoir, “Between Two Worlds. A reporter, she was arrested at her Tehran apartment while researching a book on Iran. She was promised freedom only if she confessed to being a spy.
Published 05/05/10
The Director of Programs at Childbirth Connection makes the case for stakeholders from across the health care system to join in making health system improvements that foster more reliable delivery of evidence-based maternity care.
Published 03/16/10
Dr. Lerner discusses three issues (Radical mastectomy, screening mammography, and stem cell transplantation) from his book, The Breast Cancer Wars. He focuses on concepts of proof and evidence.
Published 03/03/10
The executive director of the National Women's Health Network and the dean of BU's School of Public Health debate the new national guidelines. Moderated by Susan Reverby. Part of the Celebrating QR Connections series.
Published 03/01/10
Ecological designer Dave Jacke discusses permaculture and the planned Edible Forest Garden at Wellesley College.
Published 11/13/09
Robert J. Lieber is Professor of Government and International Affairs at Georgetown University. He is author or editor of fifteen books on international relations and U.S. foreign policy and has been a foreign policy advisor in several presidential campaigns and a consultant to the State Department and for National Intelligence Estimates. His most recent book is The American Era: Power and Strategy for the 21st Century (2008). Michael Allen is Special Assistant to the Vice President,...
Published 11/18/08
Bliss Broyard grew up feeling there was something about her family that she didn’t know. As her father Anatole — a literary critic for The New York Times — lay dying, her mother revealed what her father wouldn’t — he was part black. “My father truly believed that there wasn’t any essential difference between blacks and whites and that the only person responsible for determining who he was supposed to be was himself,” Broyard wrote in One Drop: My Father’s Hidden Life — a Story of Race and...
Published 11/14/08
Charles Franklin, co-founder of Pollster.com, discusses the state of the 2008 Presidential race and logic of statistical comparisons as he heads to ABC News' Decision Desk to project the winners on Election Night.
Published 11/04/08
Dr. Hillygus discusses her book "The Persuadable Voter" and how it relates to the McCain vs. Obama race. Topics include who can be persuaded by campaign information, the impact of race, wedge issues, and micro-targeting.
Published 10/27/08
Anna Greenberg, an expert on public opinion and survey design, discusses the recent history of polling and politics, the skills needed to be a pollster, and the race between Barack Obama and John McCain.
Published 10/16/08
David Card, Prof. of Economics, Berkeley, discusses "Social Interactions, Tipping, & Segregation". Many behaviors are affected by what other people do, e.g., living in a neighborhood. Choice models with social interactions can have unstable equilibria.
Published 10/03/08