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RightsUp
Author: The Oxford Human Rights Hub
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The Oxford Human Rights Hub (OxHRH) aims to bring together academics, practitioners, and policy-makers from across the globe to advance the understanding and protection of human rights and equality. Through the vigorous exchange of ideas and resources, we strive to facilitate a better understanding of human rights principles, to develop new approaches to policy, and to influence the development of human rights law and practice.
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In this two-part podcast series, we are exploring why efforts to mitigate climate change need to be aware of women’s equality and why efforts to achieve women’s equality must respond to the climate crisis.
This series is a joint project from the Oxford Human Rights Hub, led by Professor Sandra Fredman, and the National Research Foundation-funded South African Research Chair in Equality, Law, and Social Justice at the University of the Witwatersrand, held by Professor Cathi Albertyn.
The conversations in this podcast series stem from a new edited collection, ‘Feminist Frontiers in Climate Justice: Rights, climate change and gender equality’, published by Edward Elgar in February 2023 and edited by Cathi Albertyn, Meghan Campbell, Helena Alviar García, Sandra Fredman, and Marta Rodriguez de Assis Machado.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
Executive Produced by Meghan Campbell.
Produced, edited and narrated by Sophie Smith.
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allmann.
In this episode, Meghan Campbell talks with Dorothy Estrada-Tanck, Chairperson of the UN Working Group on discrimination against women and girls, about the concept of gender apartheid in light of the horrific denial of the equality and human rights of women and girls in Afghanistan. Dorothy and other members of the Working Group have been advocating for understanding this violation as gender apartheid.
In our conversation, we explore what this concept means, what salience it has in thinking more broadly about the current backlash against women's rights and how gender apartheid can be utilized to fight for women's equality.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
This episode was produced in partnership with the EUniWell Fund and the University of Birmingham.
Executive produced and hosted by Meghan Campbell.
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith.
Music for the series is by Rosemary Allman.
Virtually all constitutions guarantee women's right to equality, yet, there is a rise in backlash against legal, political, economic, social and cultural efforts to achieve women's equality.
This podcast series speaks with leading legal scholars from the US, Canada, South Africa and India to explore how constitutions can frustrate efforts to achieve women's equality, and to imagine a new constitutionalism that places women as equal actors and participants in the constitutional project.
On today's episode Meghan Campbell is joined by Judge Dhaya Pillay of the High Court in Pietermaritzburg and Durban, to discuss women in the South African Constitution.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
This series, Women in Constitutions, was produced in partnership with the British Academy and the University of Birmingham.
Executive produced and hosted by Megan Campbell.
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith.
Music for the series is by Rosemary Allman.
Virtually all constitutions guarantee women's right to equality, yet, there is a rise in backlash against legal, political, economic, social and cultural efforts to achieve women's equality.
This podcast series speaks with leading legal scholars from the US, Canada, South Africa and India to explore how constitutions can frustrate efforts to achieve women's equality, and to imagine a new constitutionalism that places women as equal actors and participants in the constitutional project.
On today's episode Meghan Campbell is joined by Professor Jennifer Koshan, from the University of Calgary, to discuss women in the Canadian Constitution.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
This series, Women in Constitutions, was produced in partnership with the British Academy and the University of Birmingham.
Executive produced and hosted by Megan Campbell.
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith.
Music for the series is by Rosemary Allman.
Virtually all constitutions guarantee women's right to equality, yet, there is a rise in backlash against legal, political, economic, social and cultural efforts to achieve women's equality.
This podcast series speaks with leading legal scholars from the US, Canada, South Africa and India to explore how constitutions can frustrate efforts to achieve women's equality, and to imagine a new constitutionalism that places women as equal actors and participants in the constitutional project.
On today's episode Meghan Campbell is joined by Dr. Aparna Chandra, an Associate Professor of Law at the National Law School of India University, to discuss women in the Indian Constitution.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
This series, Women in Constitutions, was produced in partnership with the British Academy and the University of Birmingham.
Executive produced and hosted by Megan Campbell.
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith.
Music for the series is by Rosemary Allman
Virtually all constitutions guarantee women's right to equality, yet, there is a rise in backlash against legal, political, economic, social and cultural efforts to achieve women's equality.
This podcast series speaks with leading legal scholars from the US, Canada, South Africa and India to explore how constitutions can frustrate efforts to achieve women's equality, and to imagine a new constitutionalism that places women as equal actors and participants in the constitutional project.
On today's episode Meghan Campbell is joined by Professor Julie Suk from Fordham University to discuss women in the US Constitution.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
This series, Women in Constitutions, was produced in partnership with the British Academy and the University of Birmingham.
Executive produced and hosted by Megan Campbell.
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith.
Music for the series is by Rosemary Allman.
This is the final episode in a four part series on the project "Rebuilding Ukraine For All: Inclusive Recovery for a Resilient Ukraine," led by Professor Freya Baetens, Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia, and Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Today’s podcast explores the energy dimension of Ukraine’s recovery lead by Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia.
Joining the discussion is Anastasiia Zagoruichyk is a Research Associate at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Dr Vlad Mykhnenko, an associate professor of sustainable urban development at University of Oxford.
This series is supported by the Oxford Policy Engagement Network Seed Fund.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
Executive Produced by Meghan Campbell.
Produced, edited and narrated by Sophie Smith.
Hosted by Ievgeniia Kopytsia.
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allmann.
This is the third episode in a four part series on the project "Rebuilding Ukraine For All: Inclusive Recovery for a Resilient Ukraine," led by Professor Freya Baetens, Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia, and Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Today’s podcast explores the scope of an inclusive economic recovery for Ukraine led by Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Joining the discussion is Yurii Gaidai, a Senior Economist at the Kyiv-based independent think tank the Centre for Economic Strategy.
This series is supported by the Oxford Policy Engagement Network Seed Fund.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
Executive Produced by Meghan Campbell.
Produced, edited and narrated by Sophie Smith.
Hosted by Daryna Dvornichenko.
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allmann.
This is the second episode in a four part series on the project "Rebuilding Ukraine For All: Inclusive Recovery for a Resilient Ukraine," led by Professor Freya Baetens, Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia, and Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Today’s podcast explores Ukraine’s recovery from a gender perspective led by Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Joining the discussion is Ukrainian lawyer and an Associate Professor at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Kateryna Busol and, Gender Democracy Program Coordinator at the Heinrich Böll Foundation, office Kyiv Ukraine, Galyna Kotliuk.
This series is supported by the Oxford Policy Engagement Network Seed Fund.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
Executive Produced by Meghan Campbell.
Produced, edited and narrated by Sophie Smith.
Hosted by Daryna Dvornichenko.
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allmann.
This is the first episode in a four part series on the project "Rebuilding Ukraine For All: Inclusive Recovery for a Resilient Ukraine," led by Professor Freya Baetens, Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia, and Dr. Daryna Dvornichenko.
Today’s podcast explores the environmental dimensions of Ukraine’s recovery led by Dr. Ievgeniia Kopytsia.
Joining the discussion is Anna Ackermann, a policy analyst at the International Institute for Sustainable Development, working on Ukraine's green reconstruction and Doug Weir, a Research and Policy Director of Conflict and Environment Observatory.
This series is supported by the Oxford Policy Engagement Network Seed Fund.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub.
Executive Produced by Meghan Campbell.
Produced, edited and narrated by Sophie Smith
Hosted by Ievgeniia Kopytsia.
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allmann.
In today's episode we speak to Judy fudge, professor in Labor Studies at McMaster University. She is published widely in employment and labor law, feminist approaches to the law and the political economy of law. Today, we will be discussing the Dindigul agreement, and efforts to address gender based violence and harassment in supply chains in India.
This episode is produced in partnership with the University of Birmingham, and McMaster University.
In today's episode, we'll be talking to Olivier De Schutter, a Belgian legal scholar specialising in economic and social rights. Mr De Schutter was appointed as the UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights by the Human Rights Council at its 43rd session in March 2020. The discussion today focuses on his recent submission to the UN Human Rights Council on eradicating poverty beyond growth.
RightsUp is brought to you by the Oxford Human Rights Hub, https: //ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/
Executive produced by Meghan Campbell
Produced and edited by Sophie Smith
Hosted by Francis Hand
Music for this series is by Rosemary Allman
In this special episode guest interviewer, Judy Fudge, a professor in labour studies at McMaster University, interviews Gayatri Krishna, a doctoral student in the School of Labour Studies at McMaster University. Their discussion focuses on Gayatri Krishna's research on the impact of the World Bank on urban development projects and how informal workers develop livelihood strategies in resettlement townships in India.
In this episode, we are exploring some of the key themes in Professor Sandra Fredman’s monograph, Discrimination Law – the new, third edition of which was published by Oxford University Press in December 2022. Sandra Fredman FBA KC is Professor of the Laws of the British Commonwealth and the USA at Oxford University, a fellow of Pembroke College Oxford, and Director of the Oxford Human Rights Hub. She is joined in conversation by Rosalie Abella, formerly a Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada; Jayna Kothari, a Senior Advocate in the Supreme Court of India; and Helen Mountfield KC, a barrister practising at Matrix Chambers in the UK and Principal of Mansfield College Oxford.
In this episode, we are exploring some of the key themes in Professor Sandra Fredman’s monograph, Discrimination Law – the new, third edition of which was published by Oxford University Press in December 2022. Sandra Fredman FBA KC is Professor of the Laws of the British Commonwealth and the USA at Oxford University, a fellow of Pembroke College Oxford, and Director of the Oxford Human Rights Hub. She is joined in conversation by Rosalie Abella, formerly a Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada; Jayna Kothari, a Senior Advocate in the Supreme Court of India; and Helen Mountfield KC, a barrister practising at Matrix Chambers in the UK and Principal of Mansfield College Oxford.
In this episode, we are exploring some of the key themes in Professor Sandra Fredman’s monograph, Discrimination Law – the new, third edition of which was published by Oxford University Press in December 2022. Sandra Fredman FBA KC is Professor of the Laws of the British Commonwealth and the USA at Oxford University, a fellow of Pembroke College Oxford, and Director of the Oxford Human Rights Hub. She is joined in conversation by Rosalie Abella, formerly a Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada; Jayna Kothari, a Senior Advocate in the Supreme Court of India; and Helen Mountfield KC, a barrister practising at Matrix Chambers in the UK and Principal of Mansfield College Oxford.
In October 2023, a historic decision was made by the Indian Supreme Court that held that there was no fundamental right to marry, denying the legal recognition for same-sex marriage in India under the Special Marriage Act. Frances Hand sat down with Devina Malaviya, to discuss the intricacies of this case Supriyo v. Union of India. Devina Malaviya is an Assistant Professor of Legal Practice and Assistant Dean in Clinical Legal Education at O.P.Jindal Global University. Devina's interests lie in the area of family law, constitutional law and criminal law. After graduating from National Law University in Delhi in2016, she worked as a law clerk, cum research assistant with Justice Kurian Joseph at the Supreme Court of India.
Vox pops on key human rights issues with human rights experts. Transcript available on the Oxford Human Rights Hub website (ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/).
Vox pops on key human rights issues with human rights experts. Transcript available on the Oxford Human Rights Hub website (https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/).
In this week's episode, we talk to Ruth Rubio, Professor in the School of Transnational Governance at the European University Institute, about her book, Global Gender Constitutionalism and Women’s Citizenship: A Struggle for Transformative Inclusion, published by Cambridge University Press (ISBN: 9781316630303).
Transcript available on the Oxford Human Rights Hub website: ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk
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