*Content warning: this episode includes discussions of suicide that may be potentially triggering. Professor Jemaima Tiatia-Siau is the University's first Pro Vice-Chancellor Pacific, and a researcher with a focus on climate change and Pacific mental health. Jemaima shares her journey of becoming a professor, and discusses the importance of creating a sense of community to support people around us. Read more: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2024/09/19/five-generations-heralds-birth-of-professor.html
Netball has been the most popular game for girls and women in New Zealand for a century. As a fan and former player, Dr Margaret Henley researches the social history of netball and shares how she tracked down a rare film shot in 1932. Margaret also tells the stories of the sport's pioneers such as Jessie Knapp and the role it has in the intergenerational wellbeing of Aotearoa women. Read more: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2024/09/26/the-pioneers-of-netball.html "Our Game" Exhibition: https://www.aucklandmuseum.com/visit/exhibitions/our-game
Associate Professor Chris Ogden is the Programme Director of Global Studies at UoA and specialises in the dynamics of power and identity in Asia and the Indo-Pacific. He discusses how the pandemic revealed authoritarian tendencies in different countries. Using the social credit system in China as an example, he also talks about how technology could be used by regime, and how some degrees of a similar system exists in our societies. Learn more about Global Studies: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/study/study-options/global-studies.html
Professor Kim Phillips is a historian with a special interest in the history of gender, sexuality, and women in the medieval period. Kim’s latest project delves into women who lived in the Middle Ages and the four iconic archetypal images that surrounded them: mermaids, nursemaids, milkmaids, and hags. She discusses the meanings attached to the female body during that time, and how the ideals of beauty shift in the modern, globalised world that we are in. Read more: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2021/05/13/of-mermaids-and-male-fantasies.html
Honorary Associate Professor Avril Bell speaks to Julianne Evans about her latest project. Her book Becoming Tangata Tiriti: Working with Māori, Honouring the Treaty brings together 12 non-Māori voices who have engaged with te ao Māori and have attempted to bring te Tiriti to life in their work. Avril hopes by sharing their wisdom of forging connections with te ao Māori, we could all explore our own identities as New Zealanders. Read more about Avril here: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2024/07/24/becoming-treaty-people.html
Is Sherlock Holmes actually good at logic? Senior Lecturer Dr Patrick Girard is here to talk about logic. We use logic in everyday decision making and it helps to slow down our thoughts. Patrick discusses his own experience of using logic for a healthy pursuit of common goals, suggests how it might improve our interactions on social media, and whether Einstein's logical decision to write a letter to President Roosevelt was the "right" course of action. You can find Patrick's new book Logic in the Wild and read his blog here: https://www.logicinthewild.com/
Associate Professor Ethan Cochrane led a team that discovered ancient rock walls and high mounds in dense jungle in the Falefa Valley on ʻUpolu Island in Sāmoa. Combining archaeology, genetic study and environmental science, their research makes new connections between a dramatic population rise in Sāmoa about a thousand years ago, and the rise of chiefly system. Click here to read more about their research: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2024/06/21/rare-samoan-discovery-offers-clues-to-the-origins-of-inequality.html
With the 21st anniversary of the decriminalisation of sex work in New Zealand coming up, Dr Cheryl Ware from the School of Humanities discusses our history of sex workers. Cheryl talks about her most recent project where she interviews sex workers and explores the experiences of women in the industry to tell their stories. Her book on the subject is due to be released in 2025.
Associate Professor Erin Griffey is recreating Renaissance beauty recipes with a team of scientists to analyse active ingredients and effectiveness. Erin talks about how she works through thousands of beautifying recipes from ancient Egyptian sources through to the 18th century. Her research also looks at the broader societal perception of ageing for women during the Renaissance period and how it affects our attitudes towards beauty today. Click here to read more about her project: https://theconversation.com/remaking-history-how-we-are-recreating-renaissance-beauty-recipes-in-the-modern-chemistry-lab-176461
Mareike Schmidt discusses different language teaching and learning methods, such as implementing podcasts as a tool for students to use and learn a new language. She also suggests that by studying abroad, we could immerse in new languages and cultures, and thus learn more about ourselves. Mareike is a Professional Teaching Fellow and the Study Abroad Adviser for German. If you're interested in researching or studying in other countries, visit this page to find more: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/arts/current-students/student-exchange-and-study-abroad.html
Senior Lecturer Dr Chris Wilson and his team researched the online postings of the Christchurch terrorist, and discovered he had been posting anonymously about his plans four years before the attack. Chris talks about how they combined different methods, such as linguistic characteristics, to comb through thousands of posts and identify the attacker. He explains how, if we understand how such people act, we might be able to detect and prevent similar atrocities in the future. Read more about the research here: https://theconversation.com/christchurch-terrorist-discussed-attacks-online-a-year-before-carrying-them-out-new-research-reveals-223955
Professor Neal Curtis talks about how his academic career in comics started and how it led to collaborating with brain researchers and illustrators to raise awareness of brain tumours. Neal also discusses Batman as an example of sovereignty and how Wonder Woman's origin story is connected to the history of women's reproductive rights. *Neal mixed up the names of mother and daughter in Marston's story. Olive was Marston's partner while Ethel was imprisoned for handing out leaflets to women about contraception. She went on a hunger strike and was released from jail after her sister Margaret Sanger promised to lessen her activities. You can read more about Neal's project here: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2023/10/16/comics-a-no-brainer-for-bringing-research-to-life.html
With the announcement of Newshub closing, Associate Professor Luke Goode discusses what this means for us and what the future of media could look like.
With the US presidential election fast approaching, Associate Professor Jennifer Frost discusses the history of youth voting rights and how young people could make a difference. Jennifer's book "Let Us Vote!" Youth Voting Rights and the 26th Amendment is available here: https://www.paperplus.co.nz/shop/books/non-fiction/education-reference/literature/let-us-vote-1117795
How do your views align with New Zealand’s political parties? Associate Professor Jennifer Lees-Marshment discusses the relaunch of Vote Compass ahead of the election on 14 October. Used by almost half a million people during the last election, the online tool is backed by the Electoral Commission and delivered by the University of Auckland and Victoria University. She also talks about her new book, which illustrates the challenges facing political staff in democracies around the world. Find out more: Vote Compass The Human Resource Management of Political Staffers
Associate Professor Alice Mills discusses the challenges ex-prisoners face when they are thrust back into the outside world with just $350 for rent. She highlights a lack of support and limited resources which often lead to unstable housing situations and former inmates returning to a life of crime. You can read the report in full here: Going Straight Home: Post-prison housing experiences and the role of stable housing in reducing reoffending in Aoteaora.
Associate Professor Paula Morris discusses an upcoming anthology of contemporary Māori short stories; Wharerangi, a Māori literature hub; and the foundation of Aotearoa New Zealand Review of Books. Find out more about the projects and websites Paula is involved with: Academy of New Zealand Literature Wharerangi, The Māori Literature Hub Hiwa: Contemporary Māori Short Stories) Auckland University Press
John Middleton discusses the impact of climate change on low-lying atolls like Tokelau and the challenges they face in maintaining their language due to the possibility of forced migration.
Dr Carisa Showden shares insights from Fierce Hope: Youth Activism in Aotearoa, a new book that explores the motivations and experiences of young activists in New Zealand.
Dr Tom Gregory discusses the weaponisation of civilian protection in conflicts like Afghanistan. He highlights the impact of shifting perspectives on civilian casualties, which came to be viewed more as a strategic setback than a humanitarian crisis by coalition forces.