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Climate change is upon us. Fires, droughts, hurricanes, sea level rise, and melting ice caps are all part of our new normal. But something else is happening as well. Scientists, innovators, organizations, cities, companies, and citizens are taking action, making progress, and finding solutions.
Climate Break brings you stories of climate progress and interviews with climate innovators from California and around the world, in under 2 minutes. Our solution-oriented, radio-ready shows are produced by students and climate law and policy experts at the University of California, Berkeley.
Climate Break is a co-production of the Center for Law, Energy, and Environment at UC Berkeley Law and KALW 91.7 FM San Francisco Bay Area, in conjunction with the Berkeley School of Journalism.
(For a transcript of the trailer, visit https://climatebreak.org/about-climate-break/) -
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Haith's is a bird food company on a mission to make a positive difference, and so are the people we're interviewing. Nature affects everything - our economy, social framework, health and existence. The natural world is infinite: the animals, rivers & oceans, the food we eat, the rainwater irrigating crops and the air we breathe. Nature is struggling; there is no Planet B, which means making space for nature in our gardens and in commercial & urban settings - which is good for our mental health & may help fight climate change. Interviewer: Simon King (Haith's), Prod. Ed King
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Chemistry as a discipline has a reputation to the public of being boring, hard to understand, and dry. However, there are both people and experiments that changed history. We will cover laboratory and industrial accidents, cases of fraud like Jan Hendrik Schön, and the man that has caused more harm to earth’s atmosphere than any other single organism Thomas Midgley Jr. We will talk about the greatest chemists and their lives from Marie Curie to Rosalind Franklin to Neils Bohr to Glenn Seaborg. The Chemistry of everyday things like medications, tattoo ink, soaps and cleaners, cosmetics, sunscreen, and more! Join us for Cowboy Chemistry!
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On the How To Do Grad School Podcast, our mission is to uncover the habits and systems grad students need to produce great research. We’ll talk with successful current and former graduate students across the world and try to get a sense of what habits, systems and tools they've developed to start and sustain great research projects. New episodes released every Thursday.
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Confessions of a CRA is the podcast for Clinical Research Associates and Aspiring CRA (people trying to break into the CA role). This podcast provides transparent interviews and conversations with real life, true stories of Clinical Research Associates where we discuss their journey of how they got started, life as a CRA, and where they are now. This podcast was created to give CRAs and Aspiring CRAs hope, courage, guidance, and empowerment, so
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The past year has been a tumultuous one -- the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way the world works, but in ways that we do not yet understand, while #BlackLivesMatter has been challenging deep-seated structures of authority around the world.
We know that the COVID-19 pandemic is a pandemic of inequality -- marginalized and racialized communities are far more vulnerable to the SARS-COV-2 virus. We know that #BlackLivesMatter challenges structures of inequality. We live in a world that on the one hand is richer than at any other time in human history but which on the other hand sees hundreds of millions of people living in poverty and global inequality being historically unprecedented. These forces can be starkly illustrated: on 20 July 2020 Jeff Bezos, the richest man in the world, added US$13 billion to his wealth in just one day.
Our world can at times appear to be out of control and beyond our comprehension. Yet it is possible to cut through this complexity and and unpack the key factors shaping the contemporary world. Human inequality in global perspective is designed to enable you to understand how our world of unparalleled affluence and immense deprivation came to be. After all, if we want the world to become a better place the first thing that we must do is try to better understand it. -
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Hello and welcome to a Postcard from Pakistan!
In this podcast, Professor Stephen Lyon, the inaugural dean for the new Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the Aga Khan University (AKU) speaks to thought-leaders, intellectuals, artists, professionals, and others to explore how the liberal arts and humanities creates future leaders and change-makers in order to address complex global issues.
You can watch the podcast on our YouTube channel at https://youtu.be/m1JlH8ikUSM
Learn more about AKU's arts and sciences programme at www.aku.edu/faspk. -
WE ARE CORALS vise à sensibiliser le plus grand nombre sur l’importance des océans, du corail et sa condition actuelle, menacée dans le monde entier. Le but est d’impliquer des ambassadeurs dans le soutien de cette cause pour les fusionner à un corail et donner une portée mondiale à une prise de conscience vis-à-vis de l’essentialité du monde marin.
Chacun pourra se plonger dans l’univers subaquatique à travers des témoignages singuliers de personnalités passionnés par les océans.
WE ARE CORALS est, à l'origine, un concept artistique photographique créé en 2016 par Martin Colognoli, entremêlant art et science. Ce concept s'est transformé en outil de sensibilisation qui associe l'interview et la photographie. Ce projet est maintenant porté par l'association Coral Guardian, W2P production et Martin Colognoli.
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The globally averaged annual precipitation over land is 715 mm (28.1 in), but over the whole Earth it is much higher at 990 mm (39 in).[1] Climate classification systems such as the Köppen classification system use average annual rainfall to help differentiate between differing climate regimes. Rainfall is measured using rain gauges. Rainfall amounts can be estimated by weather radar.
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This feed includes short audio content to supplement an online summer course taught by Chris Wolverton at Ohio Wesleyan University. This class is an exploration of food from a scientific point of view, including the biology, origin, composition, and preparations of many plants used as human food, such as corn, wheat, rice, and many more. Other topics include the adaptive biology and human uses of coffee, tea, chocolate, fruit, nuts, spices, and others. Special attention will be given to the adaptive significance of food products from the perspective of the growing plant.
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