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News
Thinking Care-fully with Method Workshop: Facing the Discomfort in Research
Researchers face ethical dilemmas in every step of the research process, often unforeseen despite our best efforts of anticipation in the research design. Many complex ethical questions arise from the best intentions of producing inclusive and responsible research while avoiding harm to participants and researchers. These questions become more salient with the emergence of diverse creative and innovative research methods in the field, such as 'go-along', visual, and digital methods. Responding to the ethical and practical challenges in qualitative research, Dr Jennie Middleton, Dr Rosalie Warnock, and Professor Gillian Rose convened a two-part workshop on Thinking Care-fully with Method at SoGE in May.
Remembering Dr Karen Bakker
The School of Geography and the Environment is very saddened to hear of the passing of Dr Karen Bakker in August. Karen was a Rhodes Scholar at SoGE, graduating with a Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil) in 1999, before she moved to the University of British Columbia.
'My home city was destroyed by war but I will not lose hope' - how modern warfare turns neighbourhoods into battlefields
"It has been almost 12 years since I left my city. And I have never been able to return. Homs, the place I was born and grew up, has been destroyed and I, like many others, have been left in exile: left to remember how beautiful it once was. What can a person do when their home - that place within them that carries so much meaning - has effectively been murdered?" Dr Ammar Azzouz, Research Fellow at the School of Geography and the Environment, writes for The Conversation.
Alumni Stories: 'A career in sports journalism is an exciting life but not a lazy or easy life.'
Jen O'Neill (Keble, 1993), Editor of Women's Football Magazine She Kicks gives tips for a career in sports journalism in an article on the Oxford Alumni website.
New book unveils the connections between the built environment, the creation and destruction of 'home', and war in Syria
Dr Ammar Azzouz, a British-Syrian architect and British Academy Research Fellow in the School of Geography and Environment, is author of the new book 'Domicide: Architecture, War and the Destruction of Home in Syria'.
Extreme weather events are exactly the time to talk about climate change - here's why
Josh Ettinger, a doctoral researcher in SoGE, is exploring how extreme weather events may affect the way the public feels, thinks and acts on climate change. In an article in The Conversation he explores how to talk about recent extreme weather events and climate change with people and how to shift their existing concerns about climate change into action.
Just Four Films. BBC-Oxford social sciences join forces to turn four great ideas into fantastic new films
Two projects from SoGE - 'How the humble bean can help the world' from ECI's future of food platform TABLE, and 'How to keep cool (without heating the planet)' led by Dr Radhika Khosla in the SSEE - are among four projects turned into engaging short films in collaboration with BBC Ideas.
The Historic Built Environment as a Long-Term Geochemical Archive: Telling the Time on the Urban "Pollution Clock"
An innovative study led by Dr Katrin Wilhelm, Researcher and Departmental Lecturer at the School of Geography and the Environment, uses Oxford’s historic structures as geochemical "clocks" to reveal past pollution trends.
Go on a journey through time with the Museum of Climate Hope trail
Join us for a tour of the Museum of Climate Hope, a unique museum trail and interactive experience across all six of Oxford's Gardens, Libraries and Museums (GLAM) that cultivates climate hope by reframing the stories of real artefacts around the themes of resilience, innovation and transformation.
Multi-billion-dollar risk to economic activity from climate extremes affecting ports: Oxford report
More than $122 billion of economic activity - $81 billion in international trade - is at risk from the impact of extreme climate events, according to new research from Oxford's Environmental Change Institute.