Later beluisteren
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In the second part of our tea-time episode, I am talking with the sociologist Ruud Koopmans from the Science Center Berlin about Islamic fundamentalism, the historic roots of it and what it means for our societies in Europe.
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In my newest tea-time episode, I am talking with the sociologist Ruud Koopmans from the Science Center Berlin. His main focus as a scientist, but also well-known book author, is migration policy and Islam in Europe. These are also our discussion topics today.
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Zu Gast im Studio: Ruud Koopmans, niederländischer Sozialwissenschaftler, Professor für Soziologie und Migrationsforschung an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin und war von 2020 bis 2022 Vorsitzender des Kuratoriums des Deutschen Zentrums für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung (DeZIM)
Ein Gespräch über Ruuds Werdegang und Forschung, Stellung in der Migrationsforschung-"Community", die politische Situation in den Niederlanden, der Aufstieg der AfD in Deutschland, die sogenannte Flüchtlingskrise 2015, strukturelle Probleme und Lösungen für Migration nach Europa, "Asyl-Lotterie", das Dublin-System, Ruuds neues Asylmodell, Resettlement-Kontingente, Schutzbedürftige und Nichtschutzbedürftige der Asylpolitik, junge männliche Geflüchtete, Tote im Mittelmeer, Marginalisierung von rechter Gewalt, Ruuds Migrations-"Vorbilder" Australien und Kanada sowie notwendige Migration von 1,5 Millionen pro Jahr für Deutschland + eure Fragen via Hans
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PayPal ► http://www.paypal.me/JungNaiv -
Sociologen Ruud Koopmans ryggar inte för de svåra frågorna om islam och integration i Europa. Kvartal ställer några frågor om hans forskning. Detta är den tredje artikeln i en serie. Av Henrik Höjer Inläsare: Staffan Dopping
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Zu Gast im Studio: Michael Lüders, Politik- und Islamwissenschaftler, der als Publizist sowie Politik- und Wirtschaftsberater tätig ist. 2015 bis 2022 war Lüders Präsident der Deutsch-Arabischen Gesellschaft. Außerdem war er Beiratsmitglied des Nah- und Mittelost-Vereins (NuMOV) und stellvertretender Vorsitzender der Deutschen Orient-Stiftung.
Ein Gespräch über Michaels Tun in den letzten fünf Jahren, Situation in Ägypten, Sanktionen gegen Russland, Alternativen zu Sanktionen, der Krieg in der Ukraine, dessen Vorgeschichte, die Rolle der USA, Geopolitik, Moral und Werte in der Politik, nationale Interessen sowie die Situation in Iran uvm. + eure Fragen via Hans
Bitte unterstützt unsere Arbeit finanziell:
Konto: Jung & Naiv
IBAN: DE854 3060 967 104 779 2900
GLS Gemeinschaftsbank
PayPal ► http://www.paypal.me/JungNaiv -
Ska vi diskutera islam behöver vi ha högt i tak och inte fler språkpoliser, skriver Jacob Rudenstrand vid Svenska Evangeliska Alliansen i ett svar till Kashif Virk.
Inläsare: Staffan Dopping -
Allt fler efterfrågar reformer inom islam. Men hur ska det gå till när Koranen är Allahs ord och ansenliga delar av den muslimska världen är bokstavstroende, frågar sig Kvartals Henrik Höjer.
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Svensk socialtjänst kidnappar muslimska barn! Detta budskap har den senaste månaden spridits i många arabiskspråkiga sociala medier. Det har lett till demonstrationer på flera platser i Sverige. Hur kommer det sig att uppenbara osanningar kan slå rot hos många migranter? Migrationsforskaren Bi Puranen, generalsekreterare i världens största pågående sociala forskningsprojekt World Values Survey (WVS), analyserar läget.
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Becky Ripley and Emily Knight dive into the watery world of rainbowfish to confront the age-old myth that fish have bad memories. In actual fact, they are much more intelligent than we like to think, with an incredible capacity for learning and memory, as seen in almost all fish species. Their ability to remember complex things over a long period of time means they can build social relationships, navigate huge distances, and even form cultures, as knowledge is passed down over generations.
So, the science has spoken: fish have way better memories than we like to think. But what about us humans? Well, turns out our memories are way worse than we like to think. From the very first perceptual moment when you experience something, your brain is constantly filtering your memories so that it only keeps the information that it thinks you need. And the more you recount a memory, the more it deviates from "the truth". Which means, in reality, we forget most of our lives, and we misremember most of the rest! Begging the question: are we who we think we are?
Featuring Professor Culum Brown, head of The Fish Lab at Macquarie University, and Dr Julia Shaw, criminal psychologist at UCL and author of 'The Memory Illusion'. Produced and presented by Emily Knight and Becky Ripley.
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Becky Ripley and Emily Knight explore the art and science of medicine: What makes you sick? What makes you well again? And how on earth do we (and animals) tell the difference?
Deep in the rainforest of Sumatra, one clever orangutan called Rakus has pretty much got it figured out. Astonished researchers spotted him making and then applying a sophisticated plant-based medicinal paste to a painful wound. It was anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, and it numbed his pain, helping him to heal in record time. This might be one of the more sophisticated examples out there, but Rakus is far from the only one; lots of animals are incredibly skilled at using the plants and minerals around them to heal wounds, treat infection, or stave off nasty bugs. It's called, wait for it... zoopharmacognosy.
In the human world, we've honed our own medicinal skills into something slick, sterile and very high-tech, but you might be surprised how many of the medicines we use today have natural origins. The age-old skills of the shamans and herbalists of the past are still extremely relevant, and we have yet to fully unlock all the healing secrets of the plants around us.
Featuring Dr Isabelle Laumer, cognitive biologist and primatologist at the Max Planck Institute for Animal Behaviour, and Sarah Edwards, Plant Records Officer from Oxford Botanic Gardens and an ethnobotanist from the University of Oxford. Produced and presented by Emily Knight and Becky Ripley.
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Becky Ripley and Emily Knight explore whether we can ever know what others know, and how we figure out if they're telling fibs.
Beneath the surface of the ocean, darting around in the dappled sunlight of the reef, you can find some of nature's most prolific liars. The cephalopods. Squid, octopus and cuttlefish; filthy con artists, the lot of them. They communicate with each other, and with both predators and prey, using dazzling patterns of shifting colour and texture on the surface of their skin. The messages they send can be sophisticated, but they're not always honest; males pretending to be females, octopuses pretending to be sea-snakes, cuttlefish on the hunt for love, pretending to have more innocent intentions. To deceive another, you might think, implies a level of understanding about what that other being knows, or is thinking. The philosophers call this Theory of Mind. But how much do the cuttlefish really KNOW about the tall tales they tell - and how much can we deduce about their intelligence as a result?
If cuttlefish are some of nature's best liars, let's meet some of the worst: human toddlers. Oh they lie alright, but they're terrible at it - they tell the most outrageous fibs that we can all see through. That's because they are just beginning to develop the complex skills of Theory of Mind for themselves, and they haven't quite perfected it. How they lie, and how they learn to do it better, gives us fascinating insights into the developing mind of a child.
Featuring Dr Jon Copley, professor of Ocean Exploration at the University of Southampton, and Dr Emily Jones, from Toddlerlab, at the Centre for Brain & Cognitive Development at Birkbeck College. Produced and presented by Emily Knight and Becky Ripley.