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The Forgotten Victims Podcast, hosted by Scott Modell Ph.D. and Staci Whitney, LMSW, educates and empowers multidisciplinary team members to successfully investigate crimes against individuals with disabilities and other vulnerable populations. With decades of experience between them, they share how teams can successfully seek justice for vulnerable victims by discussing research, case examples and sharing practical skills for every step of an investigation. Join Scott and Staci to learn more about how you can make an impact in your community and better serve victims with disabilities through your work.
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What is the most unequal region of the world? How deep does gender discrimination run in our societies? What happens to poor households during a housing boom? How is land distributed today? How can minimum wage reduce racial inequality? Can we really expect politicians to fix inequality? InequaliTalks presents accessible research done by young economists on one of the most pressing issues in the public conversation: inequality.
InequaliTalks is supported by School of Cities at the University of Toronto. -
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Hosted by Dr. Robert Casares, The Reframe brings you conversations with leaders and legends of the counseling profession, experienced clinicians working in agency and private practice settings, as well as masters- and doctoral-level counseling students. Guests discuss cutting-edge research, share stories about their own professional successes and setbacks, and offer insights and encouragement drawn from a diverse range of professional backgrounds.
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Great grades start here! Learn from a highly experienced AP Human Geography teacher and reader, who will share her successful strategies and techniques to help you navigate the exciting but challenging world of human geography content. An in-depth podcast where we unpack human geography concepts and effective study habits that get you the grade you want. Whether its economic, social, political, or environmental (ESPN) geography, the Byte-Size Human Geography podcast covers it all. It's human geography, made simple!
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Sometimes all it takes is one little fact or one little piece of wisdom to change your life forever. That's the purpose and the hope of "Something You Should Know." In each episode, host Mike Carruthers interviews top experts in their field to bring you fascinating information and advice to help you save time and money, advance in your career, become wealthy, improve your relationships and help you simply get more out of life. In addition, Mike uncovers and shares short, engaging pieces of "intel" you can use to make your life better - today. Right now.
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Psychotherapy and Applied Psychology is hosted by Dr. Dan Cox, a professor at the University of British Columbia.
This show delivers engaging discussions with the world's foremost research experts for listeners interested in or practicing psychotherapy or counseling to provide expert insights and practical advice into mental health, psychotherapy practice, and clinical training.
This podcast provides valuable insights whether you are interested in psychotherapy, an applied psychology discipline such as clinical psychology, counseling psychology, or school psychology; or a related discipline such as psychiatry, social work, nursing, or marriage and family therapy.
If you want to learn about cutting edge research, improve your psychotherapy/counseling practice, explore innovative therapeutic techniques, or expand your mental health knowledge, you are in the right place.
This show will provide answers to questions like:
*How will technology influence psychotherapy?
*How effective is teletherapy (online psychotherapy) compared to in-person psychotherapy?
*How can psychotherapists better support clients from diverse cultural backgrounds?
*How can we measure client outcomes in psychotherapy?
*What are the latest evidence-based practices?
*What are the implications of attachment on psychotherapy?
*How can therapists modify treatment to a specific client?
*How can we use technology to improve psychotherapy training?
*What are the most critical skills to develop during psychotherapy training?
*How can psychotherapists improve their interpersonal and communication skills? -
The Abstract is a podcast from the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research highlighting the best and brightest speakers sharing their work in all fields of the social sciences.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This is a set of interviews that were recorded as supplementary teaching material for both our new online Yale Certificate Program in Medical Software and Medical AI, and the original Yale/Coursera Class Introduction to Medical Software. The topics cover issues important to medical software and medical artificial intelligence, ranging from regulatory issues, to algorithm development and software engineering, to clinical implementation, and other related areas. We try to keep most of the material at the introductory to intermediate level. We hope that you feel them useful and educational.These interviews are also available in video form on YouTube. .For more information on the certificate program see: online.yale.edu/medical-software-ai-programThe audio theme is excerpted from the song “Opening” by Magiksolo.
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Official Podcast for Sovrumano.com. We'll talk Game Theory, Behavioral Psychology, and Philosophy. I work in Practical Philosophy and Intelligence. I also happen to be the prophesied Christ of the NT, Buddha of the Sutras, and a few other things. This is not a religious platform in any way.Sovrumano is now the world's #1 agency.
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This podcast analyzes inequities by examining the intersections of sociology, culture, politics, economics, and history. Our cross-disciplinary subject matter ultimately aims to dismantle discrimination, one conversation at a time. Follow us on social media!
Instagram: @discriminology_podcast
Twitter/Facebook: @Discriminology3
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Where political communication theory meets on the ground strategy. Host, Professor Elizabeth Dubois, picks a political communication theory, explains it to a practitioner, and then they have a chat about whether or not it makes sense at all out in the world of politics and communications. She chats with political staffers, journalists, comms experts, lobbyists, activists and other political actors. Elizabeth quizzes them on pol comm theory and they tell her how ridiculous (or super helpful) that theory actually is.
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The Brains pod comes from the Brains blog, a leading forum for research in the philosophy and science of mind since about 2005, with over 2000 blog posts drawing over 15,000 visitors per month on average. (Brains also has a YouTube channel with thousands of monthly viewers). If you’re a cognitive scientist who wants to talk about your latest peer-reviewed publications on the podcast, get in touch using our “Contributors” page! If you want to contribute to the costs of hosting our blog, podcast, etc., check out the Patreon and PayPal buttons on our site. And, of course, follow our social feeds to learn what else we’re up to.
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Dissertation Nation is a podcast which showcases innovative research in social sciences and education. The host, a professor in counseling, interviews researchers, clinicians, and scholars who recently finished their dissertation or thesis about their groundbreaking research. Listeners will enjoy how passionate the guests are about their topics. All dissertation research featured helps listeners learn: about how humans think and function, how to increase equity in education and mental health services, and what it’s actually like to get a PhD and do a large research study. If you love to learn, and also like to laugh and be inspired to make a difference, check out Dissertation Nation today! Follow us on Twitter: @DissNationPod