エピソード

  • Journalist Connie Walter on uncovering her family's dark history
    2025/06/20

    She’s one of Canada’s most decorated journalists, having won a Pulitzer Prize, a Peabody and a Columbia-Dupont Prize for her podcast series, Stolen: Surviving St. Michael’s. Yet Connie Walker had been reluctant to feature stories about her family in her journalism. Until she realized her family's survival in residential schools embodies the defining reality for virtually all Indigenous Peoples in Canada. *This episode originally aired on Dec. 2, 2024.

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    54 分
  • How Latin translation made Western philosophers famous
    2025/06/19

    From Greek to Arabic and then to Latin, translators in 8th-century Baghdad eventually brought to Europe the works of Plato, Aristotle, Galen, and others who became central pillars of Western thought. IDEAS explores what is known as the Graeco-Arabic Translation Movement.

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    54 分
  • Inside our loneliness epidemic
    2025/06/18

    Some experts are calling loneliness an epidemic in Canada and throughout much of the world. Social isolation is a public health risk with consequences for individuals, communities and for our social systems. A multi-disciplinary panel, hosted at the University of British Columbia, examine loneliness from perspectives of men's and women's health, interpersonal relations, climate change and public policy.


    Guests in this episode:


    Dr. Kiffer Card is an assistant professor at Simon Fraser University’s Faculty of Health Sciences. He was the moderator of the panel presentation, All the Lonely People: the Search for Belonging in an Uncertain World.


    Mandy Lee Catron is from the School of Creative Writing, at UBC.


    Dr. John Oliffe is a professor and Canada Research Chair in Men’s Health Promotion at the School of Nursing, at UBC.


    Dr. Carrie Jenkins is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at UBC.


    Dr. Marina Adshade is an assistant professor of teaching at the Vancouver School of Economics, at UBC.

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    54 分
  • Perdita Felicien on how to navigate life’s biggest hurdles
    2025/06/17

    Champion hurdler Perdita Felicien has climbed to the summits of international glory throughout her track career, and endured the excruciating lows of defeat. Those peak experiences inform the talk she gave at Crows Theatre in Toronto, in which she parses the comparison of sport to life, and life to sport. In her words: "It isn't that sport is life exactly. It's that it reveals life. It's the part of life where we play with purpose. Where effort is visible. Where character is tested. Where failure is not final, just part of the arc. It's where we try. Fully. Openly. Without guarantee."

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    54 分
  • The making of an ‘authoritarian personality’
    2025/06/16

    A groundbreaking study conducted in the wake of the Second World War by a group of scholars rocked the academic world when it was published in 1950 — but fell out of favour. Now a new generation of scholars is reviving the lessons of The Authoritarian Personality to understand who is drawn in by fascist propaganda.

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    54 分
  • Canadian universities as safe havens for scholars-in-exile
    2025/06/13

    There is a growing number of researchers who are 'forcibly displaced' worldwide. Thirty-four Canadian universities and colleges are currently hosting scholars who’ve left their jobs and homes to find safety. Scholars-in-exile from dozens of countries gathered at Carleton University in Ottawa to discuss ways to support free thinking and research whenever it is threatened.

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    54 分
  • Black history, vividly told through the colour blue
    2025/06/12

    From planting periwinkles on the graves of slaves, to the blues itself, the colour blue has been core to Black Americans’ pursuit of joy in the face of being dehumanized by slavery, argues Harvard professor Imani Perry. In her latest book, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of my People, she unpacks the deep, centuries-long connection between Black people and the colour blue, from the complex history of indigo dye to how the blues became a crowning achievement of Black American culture.

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    56 分
  • How Indigenous ecology is reviving land destroyed by wildfires
    2025/06/11

    What happens to the land after a brutal wildfire? IDEAS visited St'át'imc territory near Lillooet, B.C., to follow land guardians and scientists from the Indigenous Ecology Lab at the University of British Columbia, as they document the effects of wildfires and chart a new future based on Indigenous approaches to healing and balancing an ecosystem. *This is part two of a two-part series.


    Guests in this series:


    Chief Justin Kane, elected Chief of Ts'kw'aylaxw First Nation


    Michelle Edwards, Tmicw coordinator for the St'át'imc Chiefs Council and the former Chief of the communities of Sekw'el'was and Qu'iqten


    Sam Copeland, senior land guardian for the P'egp'ig'lha Council


    Luther Brigman, assistant land guardian for the P'egp'ig'lha Council


    Travis Peters, heritage supervisor and interim lands manager for Xwísten First Nation


    Gerald Michel, council member and the Lands Resource Liaison for Xwísten First Nation


    Denise Antoine, natural resource specialist for the P'egp'ig'lha Council


    Dr. Jennifer Grenz, assistant professor in the department of forest resources management at the University of British Columbia. She leads the Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC, which works entirely in service to Indigenous communities on land-healing and food systems revitalization projects that bring together western and Indigenous knowledge systems and centres culture and resiliency.


    Virginia Oeggerli, graduate student in the Indigenous Ecology Lab in the faculty of forestry at UBC


    Dr. Sue Senger, biologist working with the Lillooet Tribal Council


    Jackie Rasmussen, executive director of the Lillooet Regional Invasive Species Society

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    54 分