Webinar Series on Global Security

This webinar series is a part of the project Global Security: From Evidence-Based Research to Networked Impact.

 

You can listen to the podcast on Spotify or YouTube.

 

https://open.spotify.com/embed/show/5mOqlSFN63VmquAWxq9gnW?utm_source=generator

 

Opening roundtable: Thinking about Global Security

With this opening roundtable, we are launching our webinar series into the meaning and practice of global security. Annette Idler (University of Oxford) will be in conversation with distinguished guest speakers to discuss the theoretical underpinning of global security, its historical context, the contested nature of the global, and implications for policies and strategies to enhance global security. 

Speakers: Amitav Acharya (American University), Deborah Avant (University of Denver), Pinar Bilgin (Bilkent University), Elizabeth Joyce (UNSC CTED) and Adam Roberts (University of Oxford)

Listen on YouTube  

 

Methodologies and Epistemologies in Global Security

The second roundtable of our webinar series will explore different methodologies and epistemologies in Global Security. Annette Idler (University of Oxford) and our distinguished panellists will discuss how we can study global security, what types of data can be used and their challenges, as well as how we can combine different methodologies to study global security.

Speakers: Inanna Hamati-Ataya, Verónica Zubillaga, Neil Johnson

Listen on YouTube  

 

Spaces and Scales of Global Security

In this webinar Annette Idler (University of Oxford) and our distinguished panellists discuss the different spaces and scales of global security. We will interrogate the meaning of the term “global” and how security scales up from the local to the global. To these ends we explore the different spaces in which global security occurs and how we might think of space in global security.

Speakers: Diane Davis, Ranjana Kaul, Ciaran Martin

Listen on YouTube  

 

Global Security and its Political Dimensions

In this webinar, Dr. Annette Idler (University of Oxford) will be in conversation with our distinguished guest speakers to untangle the political dimension of global security. The webinar will explore the role of (geo)politics in global security, what the political dimension of global security consists of, and how it intersects with other dimensions of global security.

Speakers: Rana Mitter, Samuel Makinda, Igor Gretskiy, Thomas Tieku and Samira Duale

Listen on YouTube  

 

Global Security and its Economic Dimensions

In this webinar, Dr. Annette Idler is in conversation with our distinguished panellists to discuss the economic dimensions of Global Security. The panel will interrogate licit and illicit dimensions, as well as the micro- and macro-economic dimensions of Global Security.

Speakers: Nickolas Roth, Timor Sharan, Frances Stewart

Listen on YouTube  

 

Global Security and its Social Dimensions

In this webinar, Dr. Annette Idler is in conversation with our distinguished panellists to interrogate the social dimensions of global security. It will discuss the lived experiences of individuals, the role of social sectors such as public health, and innovative ways of studying the social dimensions of global security.

Speakers: Amesh Adalja, Nayef Al-Rodhan, Francesca Soliman

Listen on YouTube  

 

Global Security and the Dynamic Interactions between its Dimensions

In this webinar, Dr Annette Idler is in conversation with our distinguished panellists to discuss how political, social, and economic dimensions of global security interact with each other.

Speakers: Frank Abumere, Neta Crawford, Dan Seng Lawn

Listen on YouTube  

 

The Future of Global Security

In this webinar, Dr. Annette Idler is in conversation with our distinguished panellists to discuss future challenges of Global Security and how we may be able to address them.

Speakers: Emmanuel Kwesi Aning, Joanne Crouch, James Forest

Listen on YouTube  

 

 

This webinar is co-hosted by the Minerva Global Security Programme, Blavatnik School of Government, and the Global Security Programme, Pembroke College. It is generously funded by the DT Institute.