Episodes
Laura Hubbard and Richard Roberts provide an introduction for the day-long human rights symposium to discuss, share, and learn about teaching human rights in a wide range of world areas, academic disciplines, and classroom settings. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
A panel of speakers discuss teaching about the rights of environmental refugees, the Just War Theory, and human trafficking. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Felisa Tibbits speaks on human rights education in a globalizing world and the responsibility of higher education in fostering human rights. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Tim Maxwell and Enrique Luna present a curriculum project started by Professor Maxwell and developed during the fellowship year. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Sadie Reynolds gives an example of implementing human rights education into a community college classroom using the rights of the detained. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Lindsay Padilla delivers the closing remarks for the 2012 SHREI Symposium, encouraging instructors to teach human rights with intent in community colleges. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Laura Hubbard presents the 2012 SHREI Outstanding Student Project Award to Khin Thiri Nandar Soe for her inspiring work in addressing human rights issues in Burma and the Burmese diaspora. (June 9, 2012)
Published 11/20/12
Steven Pinker argues that, contrary to popular belief, violence has declined over long stretches of time and today we may be living in the most peaceable era in our specie's existence. (June 29, 2012)
Published 07/25/12
Kevin DiPirro leads a discussion on his belief in student-centered teaching and discussing an article that looks deeply at this issue. The talk looks at the situation from many different aspects and he discusses the problems that come. (February 11, 2011)
Published 06/24/11
Program in Writing and Rhetoric Professor Kelly Myers discusses the Greek story of the God Kairos and Metanoia as a literary representation of opportunity and regret. (October 1, 2010)
Published 04/22/11
Stanford's MLA Program hosts American writer Lewis H. Lapham to join a discussion on writing and current events. He is the author of 13 books and the editor emeritus of Harper's Magazine. (March 23, 2011)
Published 04/19/11
Dr. Kathleen Frankovic discusses the development of exit polls and their impact on understanding elections and projecting outcomes -- including the run-up to and results of the 2010 United States' mid-term elections. (November 15, 2010)
Published 12/01/10
Martin Evans discusses Europe's preoccupation with America and how they view America. He tells the audience that Europeans are "obsessed" by America. He offers his ideas for why Europeans care so much about the United States of America.
Published 11/18/10
Professor Martin Evans discusses the similarities and differences between Stanford University and Oxford University and the British and America university systems. (April 21, 2010)
Published 11/10/10
Martin Evans, Stanford Professor of English, gives a brief history of the way in which wine and its effects have been treated in western literature from Homer's "Odyssey" and Virgil's "Georgics" through Keats's "Ode to a Nightingale." (October 19, 2002)
Published 07/02/10
Joy Connolly, Associate Professor of Classics, argues that the Romans' contribution to our politics should be seen not in their abstract concepts but in their adversarial practices of civic speech. (May 5, 2010)
Published 06/11/10
George Schaller, a Senior Conservationist, discusses the pressing need to conserve the world's natural environments by sharing his discoveries about the animals and habitats that he has researched throughout his career. (February 17, 2010)
Published 03/17/10
Ian Hideo Levy discusses language and identity of a writer as well as the difficulties and rewards of gaining the privilege of writing in the Japanese language as a culturally foreign writer. (February 11, 2010)
Published 03/10/10
Lorrey Lokey Visiting Professor, Donald Light, discusses his thesis that the way drugs are tested, approved, marketed, and regulated routinely causes widespread injury and death, with little off-setting benefit. (November 4, 2009)
Published 01/19/10
Victor Fuchs facilitates a discussion with students on the healthcare systems of other nations and the historical roots of the obstacles facing healthcare reform in the United States today. (December 4, 2009)
Published 01/19/10
Sir Geoffry Lloyd analyzes the social and intellectual institutions that favored or inhibited innovation in the study of science, medicine and religion in ancient Greece, China and Mesopotamia. (November 18, 2009)
Published 12/17/09
Lorrey Lokey Visiting Professor, Donald Light, discusses his thesis that the way drugs are tested, approved, marketed, and regulated routinely causes widespread injury and death, with little off-setting benefit. (November 4, 2009)
Published 12/17/09
Shoucheng Zhang discusses a new class of topological states that have been experimentally realized. These topological insulators have an insulating gap in the bulk, but have topologically protected edge or surface states. (September 10, 2009)
Published 12/08/09
Matthieu Ricard, a monk of the Nyingma order, based at the Shechen Tennyi Dargyeling Monastery in Nepal, is well known as an author, photographer, and lecturer. He has been labeled as the "Happiest Man in the World." (October 13, 2009)
Published 11/24/09