UC Berkeley

Berkeley Talks

A Berkeley News podcast that features lectures and conversations at UC Berkeley Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Author

UC Berkeley

Category

Education

Podcast website

news.berkeley.edu

Latest episode

Jul 10, 2026

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Episodes

Inna Sovsun on what's next in Russia's war on Ukraine 02.12.2022

Ukrainian Member of Parliament Inna Sovsun joins Yuriy Gorodnichenko, a professor of economics at UC Berkeley, and Janet Napolitano, a professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy and former secretary of homeland security, to discuss the impact of the war and what comes next for the people of Ukraine. This Nov. 8 event was co-sponsored by UC Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy; the Cent...

Poet Alex Dimitrov reads from 'Love and Other Poems' 18.11.2022

Alex Dimitrov reads from his 2021 book of poems  Love and Other Poems.  The Sept. 8 reading was part of the UC Berkeley Library’s monthly event, Lunch Poems. Here’s “July,” one of the poems Dimitrov read during the event: At last it’s impossible to think of anything as I swim through the heat on Broadway and disappear in the Strand. Nobody on these shelves knows who I am but I feel so se...

Judith Heumann on the long fight for inclusion 04.11.2022

In Berkeley Talks episode 154, leading disability rights activist and UC Berkeley alumna Judith Heumann discusses her lifelong fight for inclusion and equality. This Oct. 26 talk was part of the Jefferson Memorial Lectures , a series sponsored by Berkeley's Graduate Division. Read a transcript and listen to the episode on Berkeley News. Music by Blue Dot Sessions. Photo courtesy of Judith Heumann....

Indigenous access, political ecology in settler states 22.10.2022

Clint Carroll, an associate professor of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, gives a talk called "Reuniting with Our Lands and Waters: Indigenous Access and Political Ecology in Settler States." "The early periods of what is known as the U.S. Federal Indian Policy are defined in terms of the specific type of dispossession they entailed," begi...

U.S. military bases in World War II Latin America 10.10.2022

UC Berkeley history professor Rebecca Herman discusses her new book,  Cooperating with the Colossus: A Social and Political History of U.S. Military Bases in World War II Latin America.  She’s joined by Margaret Chowning, professor and Sonne Chair in Latin American History at Berkeley, and Kyle Jackson, a transnational historian of the Americas and a Berkeley Ph. D. candidate in history....

Novelist Ilija Trojanow on the utopian prerogative 23.09.2022

Novelist Ilija Trojanow discusses why we need to embrace the idea of utopia in order to imagine a better future. "It's important to not confuse what does exist with what is impossible, which is how most people use the word "utopian" in everyday parlance," Trojanow says. "Progress has, at times, been utopia come true. By envisaging differing realities, we are imagining alternatives into existence....

Activist Pua Case on the movement to protect Mauna Kea 09.09.2022

Pua Case, a Native Hawaiian activist and caretaker from the Flores-Case ʻOhana family, discusses the movement to protect Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii and the tallest mountain in the world. "We have been standing successfully for 12 years against the building of a huge telescope," Case said at a  Berkeley Center of New Media  event on Aug. 29, 2022. "Not b...

How we learn language across communities and cultures 27.08.2022

In Berkeley Talks episode 149, Mahesh Srinivasan, an associate professor in UC Berkeley's Department of Psychology, discusses the importance of child-directed speech in language learning, how poverty may suppress parents' speech to their children and how children learn language from overheard speech, a main form of children’s early experience with language in many cultures around the world. This M...

Learning from nature to design better robots 13.08.2022

Robert Full, a professor of integrative biology and founder of the Center for Interdisciplinary Biological Inspiration in Education and Research at UC Berkeley, discusses how nature and its creatures — cockroaches, squirrels, centipedes, geckos — inspire innovative design in all sorts of useful things, from bomb-detecting, stair-climbing robots to prosthetics and other medical equipment. Read a tr...

Scholars on using fantasy to reimagine Blackness 29.07.2022

A panel of scholars discusses UC Berkeley professor Darieck Scott's new book  Keeping It Unreal: Black Queer Fantasy and Superhero Comics,  which explores how fantasies of Black power and triumph in superhero comics and other genres create challenges to — and respite from — white supremacy and anti-Blackness. Listen to the discussion and read a transcript on Berkeley News. Graphic courte...

America wants gun control. Why doesn't it have it? (revisiting) 15.07.2022

"If having a gun really made you safer, then America would be one of the safest countries in the world. It’s not," said Gary Younge, a professor of sociology at Manchester University and former editor-at-large at the Guardian , in a lecture at UC Berkeley on March 4, 2020. "Yet while Americans consistently favor more gun control," Younge continued, "gun laws have generally become more lax. That is...

ACLU leader on how voter suppression works 01.07.2022

Abdi Soltani, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Northern California, discussed on Feb. 18, 2022, key moments for voting rights and elections throughout U.S. history, current threats to voting that are unfolding across the country and work the ACLU is doing in California. Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News. Follow Berkeley Talks and review...

'Mother Jones' editor on how the super-rich really live 17.06.2022

In Berkeley Talks episode 144, Mother Jones senior editor Michael Mechanic joins Berkeley Journalism professor David Barstow to discuss his new book, Jackpot: How the Super-Rich Really Live — and How Their Wealth Harms Us All. This conversation was streamed live on May 4, 2022. Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News. Follow Berkeley Talks and review us on Apple Podcasts . Mus...

Climate displacement and remaking the built environment 03.06.2022

In  Berkeley Talks  episode 143, a panel of UC Berkeley experts discuss climate displacement — what it means to abandon places, the power dynamics between the Global South and the Global North, challenges for both the sending and receiving regions, and what needs to happen to address this fast-growing problem. Panelists include faculty members from Berkeley's new cluster in climate equit...

Timnit Gebru on how change happens through collective action 31.05.2022

In a special episode, Timnit Gebru, founder and executive director of the Distributed Artificial Intelligence Research Institute and one of the most prominent researchers working in the field of ethics in artificial intelligence, gives the keynote address to the UC Berkeley School of Information graduating class on May 16. In the speech, Gebru touches on collective action, interconnectedness...

Scholars on Roman Vishniac's photos of Jewish life before the Holocaust 20.05.2022

In Berkeley Talks episode 141, a panel of scholars discuss the work of Roman Vishniac, a renowned Russian American photographer who took thousands of photos over seven decades and across three continents. Although Vishniac’s genres were diverse, he’s best known for images that he took of Jewish life in Central and Eastern Europe before the Holocaust. “These photographs are distinguished by th...

An update on Public Service Loan Forgiveness 06.05.2022

In episode 140 of Berkeley Talks, a panel of student loan experts discuss the Public Service Loan Forgiveness waiver, the recently extended COVID payment pause and student debt cancellation. Panelists of this April 2022 talk included: Kat Welbeck, Student Borrower Protection Center Suzanne Martindale, California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation Kyra Taylor, National Consumer Law C...

Damilola Ogunbiyi on driving an equitable energy transition 22.04.2022

In episode 139 of Berkeley Talks, Damilola Ogunbiyi, CEO and Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary General for Sustainable Energy for All, gives the UC Berkeley Energy and Resources Group's 28th Annual Lecture on Energy and Environment. In the March 31, 2022 talk, Ogunbiyi discusses how to drive a just, inclusive and equitable transition to affordable and sustainable energy for all, and how...

Sociologist Harry Edwards on sport in society 08.04.2022

In Berkeley Talks episode 138, Harry Edwards, a renowned sports activist and UC Berkeley professor emeritus of sociology, discusses the intersections of race and sport, athletes' struggle for definitional authority and the power of sport to change society. "You can change society by changing people's perceptions and understandings of the games they play," said Edwards in March at a campus event sp...

A Poetry for the People conversation 25.03.2022

The Department of African American Studies at UC Berkeley’s 2021-22 Critical Conversations speaker series is a celebration of the life and legacy of June Jordan, an award-winning poet, activist and longtime professor in the department. At Berkeley, Jordan founded the Poetry for the People program, where writers of all levels wrote and showcased their own poems, and taught poetry to other universit...

Mapping the brain to understand health, aging and disease 11.03.2022

UC Berkeley psychology professor Jack Gallant discusses functional brain mapping for understanding health, aging and disease. The lecture, given on Jan. 20, was part of a series celebrating the 100th anniversary of Berkeley Psychology. Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News. Follow Berkeley Talks and review us on Apple Podcasts . ( Image by Milad Fakurian via Unsplash ) Hoste...

UC Berkeley experts on the invasion of Ukraine 28.02.2022

In episode 135 of  Berkeley Talks, UC Berkeley political scientist George Breslauer and economics professor Yuriy Gorodnichenko discuss Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine — what his motivations are and how they compare to Hitler's and Stalin's, if the invasion was avoidable and what should be done about it.  Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News...

The performance of labor 25.02.2022

Black feminist artists and cultural workers communally explore the questions of how the forms and methods of opera, surrealism, free jazz, poetry and dance help us communicate the concerns of radical Black feminisms. This Feb. 11 conversation was organized by the Black Studies Collaboratory , a collaborative initiative to address racial inequality through bold and unique humanities-based research...

How archaeology is used in comics 11.02.2022

Paulina Przystupa, a Ph. D. student at the University of New Mexico, discusses how archaeology inspires comic books and proposes ways archeologists can help build connections with the comic book community. Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News. If you haven't already, follow Berkeley Talks and review us on Apple Podcasts! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more infor...

The EU in crisis 28.01.2022

The co-editors of The Palgrave Handbook of EU Crises discuss their research that explores the European Union's institutional and policy responses to crises across policy domains and institutions, including the Euro crisis, Brexit, the Ukraine crisis, the refugee crisis and the global health crisis caused by COVID-19. "The EU has been surprisingly able to cope with crises of different kinds through...

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