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.
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Episodes
The global politics of waste 22.05.2020 1:01:53
"All waste is global," said Kate O'Neill, a professor in the the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management at UC Berkeley , at a campus event in February. "What we throw away has value. What we throw away often travels the globe. And that's not just the things we know about like electronic wastes, but also plastics... and things like cars, used cars, secondhand cars, clothes, bike...
Poet Laureate Robert Hass reads new collection ‘Summer Snow’ 08.05.2020 55:47
Robert Hass, a professor in UC Berkeley's Department of English and U.S. Poet Laureate from 1995 to 1997, read from Summer Snow — his first poetry collection since 2010 — on Feb. 6, 2020, at the Morrison Library's monthly event, Lunch Poems. Geoffrey O'Brien, a Berkeley English professor and poet, introduced Hass: "He has a remarkable way of making a language that's tensile and full of prosodies,...
Art Cullen on journalism and politics in the Corn Belt 24.04.2020 1:24:52
Art Cullen, editor of the Storm Lake Times , a family-run newspaper in Storm Lake, Iowa, joined Berkeley Journalism professor and author Michael Pollan on Jan. 29, 2020, to discuss journalism in rural America, Trump and the farm vote, immigration, regenerative agriculture and the potential for farmers to sequester carbon to help curb climate change. In 2017, Cullen won a Pulitzer prize for his rep...
How the real estate industry undermined black homeownership 10.04.2020 46:07
In 1968, following a wave of urban uprisings, politicians worked to end the practice of redlining by passing the Housing and Urban Development Act. While the act was meant to encourage mortgage lenders and the real estate industry to treat black homebuyers equally, the disaster that came after revealed that racist exclusion hadn’t been eradicated, but rather transformed into a new phenomenon of pr...
Naomi Klein on eco-facism and the Green New Deal 27.03.2020 1:15:44
"...At this very moment in our history, the men rising to the highest office in country after country... are full-fledged planetary arsonists," said Naomi Klein at a Berkeley Journalism event on Oct. 24, 2019. "They are pouring fuels on these fires with defiance. We have Trump rolling back every environmental law conceivable, cracking open public lands to unrestricted drilling and fracking, trolli...
Deirdre Cooper Owens on gynecology’s brutal roots in slavery 13.03.2020 1:25:57
On Feb. 21, 2020, Deirdre Cooper Owens, a professor of the history of medicine at the University of Nebraska, was on campus to discuss her work tracing the origins of medical racism back to its roots. In her book Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the origins of American Gynecology , Cooper Owens reveals the ways the field of gynecology, pioneered by 19th century medical men, was deeply inte...
Poetry and the Senses: 'Emergency is not separate from us' 28.02.2020 1:18:45
"During global climate crisis, we need more writing in and through water," read poet Indira Allegra at UC Berkeley earlier this month. "This is the perspective through which we must contextualize ourselves. The downward squint into saltwater mysteries or the movement of light across the surface of freshwater above. Emergency is not separate from us. We have to partner it. We must find ways in our...
Journalist Jemele Hill on the intersection of sports and race 15.02.2020 1:31:05
On Jan. 23, 2020, Jemele Hill, a staff writer for the Atlantic and host of the podcast Jemele Hill is Unbothered, spoke at UC Berkeley's Cal Performances about her career at the intersection of sports, race and culture in the U.S. In conversation with with KALW's radio host and reporter, Hana Baba, Hill touched on the NFL and Colin Kaepernick, what it's like reporting on sports as a black woman an...
Denise Herd and Waldo Martin on Berkeley's '400 Years' initiative 07.02.2020 42:16
In this episode of Who Belongs?, a podcast by UC Berkeley's Othering and Belonging Institute, Berkeley professors Denise Herd and Waldo Martin discuss 400 Years of Resistance to Slavery and Injustice , a yearlong initiative that marks the 400th anniversary of the forced arrival of enslaved Africans in the English colonies. "The commemoration of the 400th anniversary of slavery — it's part of a nat...
Film historian Harry Chotiner on the state of American cinema 31.01.2020 1:02:35
Harry Chotiner, a film historian and an adjunct assistant professor at New York University, gave a lecture on Jan. 22, 2019, about film in the past year, from Hollywood blockbusters and indie favorites to the impact of the #MeToo movement, changes in the film academy and the Oscars. The lecture was part of a series of talks sponsored by UC Berkeley's Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) . "The...
Chilean novelist Isabel Allende on war, loss and healing 25.01.2020 1:03:19
"People say, 'Oh no, the institutions in the United States can support anything. We are safe.' No, beware. Nothing is safe. Nothing is forever. Everything can change. We have to be aware of that and be therefore very alert. I wouldn't say vigilant because the word vigilant has a double meaning, but alert." That's Chilean author Isabel Allende in conversation with playwright Caridad Svich, who won...
Paul Butler on how prison abolition would make us all safer 17.01.2020 1:34:53
The United States now locks up more people than almost any country in the history of the world, and by virtually any measure, prisons have not worked, said Paul Butler, a law professor at Georgetown University, during a UC Berkeley lecture in October. Instead, Butler advocates abolishing prisons and finding alternative ways to deal with those who cause harm — something that he says would create a...
Consciousness guide on using psychedelics as medicine 10.01.2020 42:22
"The purpose of medicine is to create a bigger, deeper, more thorough experience of our inner functioning, our physical functioning, our emotional functioning, our energetic functioning, our spiritual functioning, our relational functioning, how we are with the land," said author and consciousness guide Françoise Bourzat. "... Mushrooms bring it to your face, like, 'This is your illness.' By ...
Artist Paul Chan on the 'Bather's Dilemma' 03.01.2020 1:09:28
On Oct. 29, artist Paul Chan delivered the 2019-20 Una's Lecture , a series sponsored by the Townsend Center for the Humanities since 1987. In his talk, called the "Bather's Dilemma," Chan explores the figure of the bather — a visual trope with a rich history, and a prominent theme in his own work — as an embodiment of pleasure that is linked to the act of renewal. "The bather in art history has a...
Professor Emerita Beverly Crawford on lies about migrants 27.12.2019 1:01:09
"If rights aren't enforced, do they really exist?" asks Beverly Crawford, a professor emerita of political science and international and area studies at UC Berkeley. "We can say, 'Yes, they exist,' but if they're not enforced, people can be treated as if their rights don't exist ... Once a person steps outside their own borders, let's say they're fleeing persecution, or they're fleeing poverty, or...
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on overcoming the odds 14.12.2019 1:36:30
At 13, Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote an article in her school paper about the importance of the Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence. But she didn't think about pursuing a career in law because she didn't see any women in the field. When she began college at Cornell, however, she learned about how attorneys were defending people called in for questioning during the wave...
Berkeley scholars on the politics and law of impeachment 07.12.2019 1:20:00
With the 2020 general elections looming, the nominee for the Democratic Party undetermined and a defiant and volatile president at the helm, the impeachment inquiry is heating up. At stake in this topsy-turvy political theater are our democratic institutions, which may be forever altered. In this Nov. 5 talk for UC Berkeley's Social Science Matrix event, Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of Berkeley Law, an...
Comedian Maz Jobrani on noticing the good in his life 27.11.2019 19:05
Growing up in an immigrant family, comedian Maz Jobrani knew his parents wanted him to be a lawyer or doctor, maybe an engineer. When he became a comedian, he says, the whole community was sad for the family. "They were like, 'Did you hear about Jobrani's son? Yeah, it's a shame. He's almost a drug dealer." Jobrani was recently a guest on the Science of Happiness, a podcast from the Greater...
Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky on defending DACA 22.11.2019 50:54
An important case of the current U.S. Supreme Court term is about Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA — a program that some 700,000 undocumented people depend on for the right to work and protection from deportation — and whether or not it was properly ended by the Trump administration in 2017. The program has been kept in place since then by federal court injunctions. The Supreme Cour...
California Surgeon General Nadine Burke Harris on the health impacts of childhood stress 15.11.2019 1:05:37
Nadine Burke Harris, named the first surgeon general of California in January, has seen how childhood stress and trauma leads to declining health in adulthood. She began studying the correlation as a pediatrician years ago, and continued her research as medical director of the Bayview Child Health Center in San Francisco and founder of the Center for Youth Wellness. "I believe, fundamentally, that...
Berkeley Law's Ian Haney López on defeating racial fearmongering 08.11.2019 1:12:35
People across the country, from presidential hopefuls and engaged voters to journalists and activists, are grappling with how to think and talk about racism in American politics. In this Oct. 11 talk, Berkeley Law professor Ian Haney López, one of the nation's leading thinkers on how racism has evolved in the U.S. since the civil rights era, discusses his new book, Merge Left: Fusing Race and Clas...
Author Andrew Marantz on the hijacking of the American conversation 01.11.2019 1:10:42
To write his new book, ANTISOCIAL: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians and the Hijacking of the American Conversation, New Yorker reporter Andrew Marantz spent three years embedded with alt-right trolls to better understand how they had become powerful enough to influence our politics, our media — our society as a whole. “I suppose I could have sat around and simply had an opinion, but...
Biologist E.O. Wilson on how to save the natural world 25.10.2019 1:54:23
In this talk, renowned biologist and naturalist E.O. Wilson joins former U.S. secretary of the interior and interim CEO of the Nature Conservancy Sally Jewell for a discussion about the core science and common humanity that is driving the success of Wilson's Half-Earth Project — "a call to protect half the land and sea in order to manage sufficient habitat to reverse the species extinction crisis...
Journalist Maggie Haberman on reporting on the Trump White House 18.10.2019 59:55
The unrivaled political insight of reporter Maggie Haberman makes her one of today’s most influential voices in national affairs journalism. In this talk, the New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist offers a riveting look into the Trump White House, the current political waters and the changing perceptions of journalism across the country. "What Trump does with that language, which comes...
Barbara Simons on election hacking and how to avoid it in 2020 11.10.2019 43:17
"There are a number of myths about elections that we've been hearing, saying that they are secure. And I want to shoot down two of those key myths," says Barbara Simons, board chair of Verified Voting, in a talk called "Can we recover from an attack on our election?" that she gave for the annual Minner Distinguished Lecture in Engineering Ethics on Sept. 18. The first myth, says Simons, is that be...
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