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By Bariscope
The podcast currently has 21 episodes available.
This is it: After three seasons we wrap up Bariscope with our last episode. In these 15 minutes we look back on how our initial idea turned out, share our thoughts on international relations and academia and call out to all of you listening to launch critical and curious initiatives. And of course we answer our last question: sharing one tip that we would give our 20 year old selves.
But most importantly we want to thank you, our listeners, and everyone else that has supported us during the last two years. Without your ideas, inputs and interactions we would not have been able to create Bariscope!
In this sense we thank you from the bottom of our hearts and are already looking forward to when our paths will cross next.
Stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
Hello everyone! In this second last episode of Bariscope we sit down and talk all things creating your own podcast: how the idea crystallised, the questions you need to ask yourself before you embark on the journey of podcasting, why preparation is key, the equipment we used, how to find and reach out to potential guests and of course we share our learnings from these two years of podcasting. This episode is for all of you that are curious about starting their own podcast and all others that are intrigued about a behind-the-scenes-ramble from yours truly ;)
Voilà, that’s all. If you have any questions about starting your own podcast, don’t hesitate to reach out on Instagram @bariscope_ccc!
Stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
The equipments mentioned:
Hosting platform (which allows episode uploads on Spotify, Apple etc. and is for free): anchor.fm
Editing audio (for free): Audacity
Theme Music: audionetwork.com (you need to buy a license but it’s quite cheep)
Recording: Zoom (professional licence to allow for unlimited people, duration and recording)
**timestamps below** For the final episode of this three-part series we have the great pleasure to welcome Anna-Lina Müller, Co-Director of foraus (the leading grass root think tank on Swiss foreign policy) since Spring 2022. After starting medicine at the University of Zurich and realising that it simply wasn’t for her, she switched to political science and history. During her bachelor studies Anna-Lina co-founded DiscussIt, an association that organizes political podiums in over 40 partner schools in Switzerland ahead of votations. In 2021 she completed her masters degree in political science and government at the University of Oxford having focused in her thesis on the political consequences of gender-specific job automation. Prior to being appointed Co-Director of foraus, Anna-Lina worked at the Swiss Federal Departement for Foreign Affairs, the UN in Nairobi, various NGOs in Athens and South Africa and think tanks in Zurich, Brussels, Oxford and Berlin. Anna-Lina has covered in her work asylum policy, the conflict in the Middle East, security related questions such as piracy in East Africa, democratic change, welfare politics, EU-Swiss relationships and currently Swiss neutrality. We took full advantage of Anna-Lina’s incredibly broad experience and asked her what it takes to build your own organisation, if moving abroad can be lonely, how Switzerland can have a more courageous foreign policy in a polarised world and how think tanks can contribute to bringing ideas from academia to policymakers and citizens. We promise you'll learn so much from Anna-Lina for example that even at Oxford University « they’re only cooking with water ».
Enjoy and stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
Foraus: https://www.foraus.ch/en/
Anna-Lina on Twitter: @AnnaLinaSophie
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***timestamps***
*02:30: Why did you decide to study political science?
*05:55: Was there a political event that politicised you?
*08:10: Everything Anna-Lina has learned from co-founding DiscussIt
*13:13: What motivated you to move abroad for your studies? And why Anna-Lina doesn’t plan her career ahead
*18:00: Strategies that might help you when moving abroad
*20:23: What are the advantages of a broad approach compared to specialising in a certain field?
*24:10: How does foraus operate?
*26:53: How do you ensure a constant flow of volunteers supporting foraus’ grassroots approach?
*29:30: Why do we need think tanks when we have universities? And what are the limits of think tanks compared with academia?
*33:20: Anna-Lina’s view on neutrality and her participation in the neutrality expert group of federal councillor Ignazio Cassis
*36:35: How can Switzerland be more courageous in foreign policy?
*41:15: A call to all of us to stand up for democracy
*45:45: 3 tips to your 20 year old self?
*Timestamps Below*
In this Episode we talk about the situation of female
Raquel has
We are looking forward to sharing with you this conversation with Raquel Herzog (it's been a long time coming!). Raquel is the founder of SAO association, a Swiss NGO that supports displaced women in Greece since 2015. We actually had the pleasure to welcome Raquel Herzog at the University of Geneva during an event both of us co-organized with foraus (an organization working on swiss foreign policy) back in September 2020. We've received many positive feedbacks on that event and the situation of female refugees continues to be underreported, which is why it made absolute sense to invite her again, this time on the podcast. In our 45 Minute conversation, Raquel will shed light on asylum policy in Europe and the situation of in particular female refugees in Greece, who constitute over 50% of the people on many Greek islands. We will also be talking about the ongoing humanitarian situation regarding the displacement of millions of Ukrainians because of the war.
Do check out SAOs website (you will also find links to support the NGO): https://www.sao.ngo/
Stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
*timestamps below*
Bariscope is back with three great episodes! It’s an honour and pleasure to have a very special guest to kick off this third season: Belkis Wille, Senior researcher in the crisis and conflict division at Human Rights Watch. She has been reporting in Ukraine on the killings, torture and enforced disappearances in areas around Kyiv and Chernihiv as well as the siege of Mariupol in March 2022.
We will talk about the horrible first months of the war in Ukraine, how human rights watch operates in such a context and then hear Belkis' take on how this war compares to the crisis in Yemen and how international humanitarian law can have an impact.
A little more on Belkis: she grew up in Switzerland, moved to the US to complete a bachelor degree in government at Harvard university followed by a master in human rights and humanitarian law at the University of Essex in 2011. After her studies Belkis worked in Geneva at the World Organization against Torture as a human rights officer for the Middle East and for North Africa and then shortly after, joined Human Rights Watch – at age 24. Before starting her current role, she worked as Human Rights Watch’s senior Iraq researcher and published extensively on ISIS and before that was the Kuwait, Qatar and Yemen researcher, based in Sanaa. We hope you learn as much as we did!
Stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
This conversation was recorded mid-May 2022, we encourage you to check out the website from human rights watch for more recent information as well as Belkis’ Twitter account (she has over 18’000 followers!).
Human Rights Watch Ukraine: https://www.hrw.org/europe/central-asia/ukraine
Belkis Wille Twitter: https://twitter.com/belkiswille?lang=en
Timestamps
- 02:50: What for procedures kicked in at Human Rights Watch (HRW) following the invasion of Ukraine on February 24th 2022?
- 06:50: How come HRW prepared for the war but our governments did not really?
- 09:25: How Belkis’ HRW mission operated during the first few weeks of the war
- 10:25: How do you interview survivors and witnesses of war crimes as a human rights lawyer without retraumatizing them?
- 14:00: Concrete techniques that Belkis uses when interviewing victims of war
- 16:00: How does HRW stay accountable to the people they interview?
- 18:00: How is the Ukraine war different in terms of the prosecution of war crimes compared to Syria or Yemen?
- 19:20: What for violations are being examined/prosecuted in Ukraine? (short explanation on the intricacies of international humanitarian law)
- 22:11: Belkis’ Research Report in Mariupol following two weeks of siege and the testimonies she gathered
- 28:00: The tragedy of elderly people and people with disabilities being the least mobile and thus stuck in situations of armed conflicts
- 29:35: The differences Belkis has observed when covering Ukraine compared to Yemen. How come the war in Yemen has been so silenced?
- 35:18: Is international human rights protection today in a better place than 10 years ago?
- 38:59: Our guest’s dream of becoming a human rights lawyer when she was 10 years old
- 42:07: Three tips to your 20 year-old self?
Welcome to the final episode for this semester with Dr. Sandra Penic, senior researcher at the Departement of Political Science and International Relations as well as the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences at the University of Geneva. In this conversation we’re diving into all things emotions: anger, hope, fear, empathy, hate and solidarity – and how and why we can experience them collectively. Emotions have been underlying many of our conversations here on the podcast, especially when talking about populism and the us vs. them discourse in our western democracies, so we’re really thrilled to have an expert to give us context on the role that emotions play in our societies and international relations more broadly speaking. Sandra Penic reminds us that hate is neither inevitable nor natural and that we’re all responsible to foster solidarity as a norm and she calls upon politicians to acknowledge the collective resilience in our societies, that need though to be accompanied by policies that support people to be in fact respectful of covid-measures (not everyone has the means). This conversation provides insights from a heap of research, amongst others on the War in the Former Yugoslavia, which our guest experienced as a child.
Dr. Sandra Penic completed her diploma in (social) psychology at the university of Zagreb and got her PhD in 2014 on “collective victimization and collective guilt in the former Yugoslavia” at the University of Lausanne. Before joining UNIGE, she worked on a large interdisciplinary multi-method research project on collective memories in conflict-torn societies called the Pluralistic Memories Project. She has published extensively on collective violence and its impact on people's attitudes and emotions as well as the role of conflict memories in the processes of conflict transformation most notably, in the former Yugoslavia, Palestine, Burundi and Sri Lanka. Amongst other things, Dr Sandra Penic teaches the BARI-course on emotions and international relations.
We hope you learn as much from the conversation as we did and feel inspired to collectively fight for a better world!
Thank you to all of you listening for your time and interest throughout this whole season and do send us any feedback you have over on Instagram @bariscope_ccc.
Stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
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(02:49) - what are emotions and are there such things as « universal emotions »?
(10:13) - What are the predictors for experiencing collective emotions?
(13:17) - How do groups and social identities form?
(18:48) - We’ve seen violent episodes throughout human history, where hate is so strong between groups that it leads to mass violence. Is hate an inevitable or even natural emotion for humans to feel?
(24:20) - What are the conditions for hate to become the prevalent emotion within a group? How hate is mobilised and violence is legitimised.
(31:37) - How did interethnic hatred in the Former Yugoslavia go from myth to reality?
(36:59) - On Sandra Penic’s childhood experience during the Croatian War (as a refugee), how her city is divided by ethnicity today and why she got interested in social psychology.
(41:09) - Sandra Penic’s evaluation of the emotional landscape in our society right now and why humans are not antisocial during crisis. An introduction into collective resilience.
(45:39) - Can societies be collectively resilient for two or three years (as in throughout the whole pandemic)? What determines if a society is collectively resilient over a long period of time?
(48:23) - The psychological burden during our current crisis and what for policies should be adopted to allow people to respect the covid-measures (spoiler: comprehensive support packages).
(53:15) - Dr. Sandra Penic’s three tips to her 20 year old self
In the second part of our conversation with Oliver Braunschweig we will apply the more general input on Plural Economics from the first episode to concepts of International Relations. We will have a critical discussion on economic growth, trade, climate change and social justice to see how plural economics can offer new input on these concepts that are often used but rarely put into perspective in IR.
Economic ideas and considerations are crucial in International relations, however they are often used without a thorough and critical examination. To present new perspectives we invited Oliver Braunschweig, a representative of Rethinking Economics Switzerland, to hear his opinion and take on current research and new promising thoughts on economics. For Oliver's general explanations on Plural Economics, its history, fundamental concepts and their critique of neoclassical economics listen to the first part of our conversation.
Tune in for new food for thoughts, and let us know on Instagram @bariscope_ccc whether you are convinced by our discussion or if you would like to see other changes to IR.
We are excited to offer you such insightful and critical new approaches to International Relations!
Have a great week and stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
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Timestamps:
(2:27) Alternatives to Economic Growth
(7:10) How does Plural Economics take into account the needs of the environment?
(11:18) Can neoclassical market mechanisms be sufficient to save the environment or do we need more fundamental change?
(14:09) Which ideas exist to render trade more sustainable and inclusive? Where does trade have its limits?
(19:30) Development on the link between trade and inequality
(21:00) Does Plural Economics offer new "tools" to address inequality both within and between societies? How come that neoclassical theory has not addressed the rampant inequality in developed economies?
(27:00) Has populism been caused by economic factors such as inequality and does the economic design of our societies need to be changed in this regard?
(34:27) Feminist economics in general and the perspectives feminist economics offers on the fact that a big share economic research is produced by white men in western countries.
(43:00) Oliver presents Rethinking Economics Switzerland and the goals they pursue
(45:52) Suggestions for further readings and resources on Plural Economics
(48:10) Oliver's three tips to his 20-year old self
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More of Oliver's recommendations, specifically on trade:
Chang, Ha-Joon (2002). Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective: Policies and Institutions for Economic Development in Historical Perspective (Anthem Studies in Development and Globalization). Anthem Press
Klein, Matthew C., and Michael Pettis. 2020. Trade Wars Are Class Wars: How Rising Inequality Distorts the Global Economy and Threatens International Peace. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Milberg, W. and Winkler, Deborah (2013). Outsourcing Economics: Global Value Chains in Capitalist Development. Cambridge University Press.
Evans, P. (1995). Embedded Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
Wade, Robert (1990). Governing the Market. Princeton University Press.
Economics is a crucial component of International Relations. Concepts such as trade, growth and GDP are popular and largely applied without discussions regarding potential shortcomings and how they emerged. In fact, universities almost exclusively teach what is called "neoclassical" economics, a mathematics and market-based theory of economics. This rigid and uniform approach to how economics thaught, defined and looked at is disputed, predominantly by students that want to make room for discussions and publications on alternative takes on economics by redefining the discipline and the concepts it teaches. These new approaches are what is called Plural Economics.
To discuss Plural Economics and its impact on International Relations we invited Oliver Braunschweig to Bariscope, one of the most prominent representatives of "Rethinking Economics Switzerland", a national student network aimed at promoting plural economics.
In the first episode, Oliver presents the fundamentals of Plural Economics by describing different theories, their historic evolution and new inputs. We then discuss why they have not been integrated into curriculas and how academia could make room for new approaches to finish the first episode with Oliver with his take on a potential disconnect between scholars and the wider public.
In the second episode with Oliver we will make a bridge between the more theoretical questions of the first episode and International Relations by applying the theoretical findings to challenges in IR such as growth, trade, the environment and social justice.
We are thrilled to present to you this new subject on Bariscope and hope that it serves for good food of thought!
And do send us any feedback you have on Instagram @bariscope_ccc! We will also be sharing Oliver Braunschweig's top book recommendations over there ;)
Have a great week and stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
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More resources and all the books mentioned by Oliver in the Episode:
On plural Economics in general:
Organizations promoting Plural Economics:
Today we are welcoming the brilliant Coline Rapneau on Bariscope - our first guest from outside academia with extensive experience as a humanitarian worker at the International Committee of the Red Cross. Before joining the ICRC Coline Rapneau completed her Master's Degree in international relations with a major in International Law at the Graduate institute here in Geneva, then worked as a humanitarian officer at the French permanent mission to the UN and spent three years as a legal assistant for the international criminal tribunal for Rwanda and ex-Yugoslavia. At the ICRC she spent 6 years as a protection delegate for victims of sexual violence in different countries, followed by several years as a sexual violence advisor and then as crowdfunding project manager at the Red Cross. After 13 years at the ICRC she is now manager at CHS Alliance (CHS standing for Core Humanitarian Standards) and is specialized in the protection from sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment. Coline Rapneau is also a certified professional and personal development coach, and she is here to give us very valuable tips on how to identify what future career path we should embark on and remind us of the importance of listening - to others and to ourselves, without judgement.
Do check out her powerful Ted Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uP3d4DOoqLo
CHS Alliance - aid workers mental health: https://www.chsalliance.org/get-support/article/aid-leaders-and-organisational-culture/
The Ebola WHO sexual abuse scandal: https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news/2021/9/29/WHO-rocked-by-Ebola-sex-abuse-scandal-in-Congo
The Oxfam sexual exploitation scandal: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jun/15/timeline-oxfam-sexual-exploitation-scandal-in-haiti
It’s a hard conversation and thus all the more important that we have it - thank you for your interest!
And do send us any feedback you have on Instagram @bariscope_ccc! We will also be sharing Coline Rapneau's top book recommendations over there ;)
Have a great week and stay critically curious,
Lea & Lukas
—
Timestamps
(03:13) - How do you get prepared (mentally) for a ICRC mission, how old were you when you went on your first mission and how many people were you working with?
(06:04) - Brief insights into Coline’s different missions
(08:10) - is there a difference between sexual violence in conflict and peacetime?
(12:30) - the role of aid workers and aid organisations in sexual abuse and violence
(16:25) - complaints mechanisms for survivors of sexual violence
(19:00) - how prevalent is sexual violence?
(20:18) - what are effective sexual violence prevention mechanisms?
(21:50) - why women are more vulnerable to be victims of sexual violence in armed conflicts without forgetting that men and boys can be victims too
(23:35) - the role of academia in centering sexual violence in research and potential collaboration with aid organisations
(26:07) - Coline’s advice to young people going into the humanitarian sector
(29:50) - the obstacle you may face when starting in the humanitarian sector
(30:40) - the importance of staff mental health and Coline’s experience dealing with isolation and difficult leaders
(35:45) - Coline’s motivation to be a personal development coach
(38:30) - Questions to ask yourself to find your purpose, values and boundaries
(40:30) - wrap-up: the most urgent changes in the aid sector and good practices to reinforce
(44:10) - Coline’s three tips to her 20-year-old self
The podcast currently has 21 episodes available.