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BornCurious

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Apr 4, 2024 • 30min

Tackling Environmental Inequality across Academic Disciplines

Such environmental changes as pollution and climate change affect not only our ecosystem but also our people—those in low-income communities most of all. In this episode, our hosts talk to two recent Radcliffe Engaged Student Grant awardees from different disciplines—healthcare policy and the law—both of whom used the funds to study environmental inequality.This episode was recorded on November 30, 2023.Released on April 4, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestsSeth Gertz-Billingsley is a Harvard Law School student who was awarded a Radcliffe Engaged Student Grant to study air-conditioning and tenants’ rights.Sonya Gupta is pursuing a master’s degree in regional studies—Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia—at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and was awarded a Radcliffe Engaged Student Grant to fund her project GeoAdvocates (formerly Mapping Chicago).Related ContentIn a Warming World, Is Air-Conditioning a Right?Student Spotlight: Sonya Gupta AM ’24Radcliffe Engaged Student Grant ProgramCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Cabin 3 Media for their invaluable contributions to the editing of this podcast episode.
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Mar 21, 2024 • 1h 5min

A Conversation with Ruth J. Simmons

The scholars and university leaders Ruth J. Simmons and Tomiko Brown-Nagin discuss Simmons’s recent memoir, Up Home: One Girl’s Journey (Random House, 2023). Along the way, they consider her personal journey, her pioneering work researching and sharing publicly universities’ historical ties to slavery, and her perspectives on the future of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and higher education in light of recent Supreme Court rulings.This episode was recorded on November 14, 2023.Released on March 21, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestsRuth J. Simmons is a distinguished presidential fellow at Rice University and senior adviser to the president of Harvard University on engagement with HBCUs. She served as president of Prairie View A&M University until March 2023. Prior to joining Prairie View, she was president of Brown University from 2001 to 2012 and president of Smith College from 1995 to 2001.Tiya Miles is a Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at Harvard Radcliffe Institute and the Michael Garvey Professor of History at the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences. She leads the audience Q and A in this episode.Guest HostTomiko Brown-Nagin is dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute, the Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School, and a professor of history in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences.Related ContentUp Home: One Girl's Journey (Random House, 2023)Harvard Gazette: Ruth Simmons Named to Senior Post Advising on HBCU PartnershipsEvent PageTiya Miles: Radcliffe Professor BiographyCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Kevin Grady and Max Doyle from Radcliffe’s event streaming team for their invaluable contributions to recording this podcast episode.
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Mar 14, 2024 • 51min

Math—It’s Not Just Numbers

More than addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, mathematics is a “whole unexplored universe which has no boundaries,” says our guest, Laura DeMarco. In this episode, we reconsider not only what math is but also what it can do—and who can do it.This episode was recorded on November 9, 2023.Released on March 14, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestLaura DeMarco is a Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at Harvard Radcliffe Institute and a professor of mathematics at Harvard University whose research focuses on the theory of dynamical systems and number theory. She is currently investigating the mathematical concepts of stability—if you bump into something, will that knock it out of position?—and complexity, along with how the two are related.Related ContentLaura DeMarco: Fellowship BiographyLaura DeMarco: Harvard Department of Mathematics BiographyCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Kevin Grady is the multimedia producer at HRI.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.
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Mar 7, 2024 • 40min

Is Losing an Hour of Sleep Really That Big a Deal?

With daylight saving time coming up this weekend, one might wonder whether losing a single hour of sleep is that big of a deal. In this episode, we talk with a neurologist who specializes in daily rhythms about what might be lost along with that hour—and finally answer the question, Are you getting enough sleep?This episode was recorded on December 14, 2023.Released on March 7, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestElizabeth B. Klerman is a professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, a physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and a neurologist at Mass General Research Institute whose research focuses on the influences of circadian and sleep rhythms in normal and pathological states. With her colleague Charles Czeisler, Klerman convened a Radcliffe Exploratory Seminar to consider how to better publicize the physical effects of Daylight Saving Time.Related ContentBoston Globe editorial: Making Daylight Saving Time Permanent Would Mean Losing Sleep—and LivesElizabeth B. Klerman: Harvard Medical School BioExploratory Seminar: Should Daylight Saving Time Be Eliminated or Made Permanent? Another Clash between Scientific Evidence and PoliticsCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Cabin 3 Media for their invaluable contributions to the editing of this podcast episode.
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Feb 29, 2024 • 58min

A Conversation with Sherrilyn Ifill

In June 2023, a US Supreme Court ruling on two cases essentially ended affirmative action in higher education. In a 6–3 ruling, the court decided that accounting for race in admissions violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. In this deep dive into the ruling, the civil rights lawyer and legal scholar Sherrilyn Ifill and our dean, Tomiko Brown-Nagin—herself an award-winning legal historian and an expert in constitutional law—unpack the issues underpinning affirmative action and provide analysis of the decision for the layperson.This episode was recorded on October 18, 2023.Released on February 29, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestsSherrilyn Ifill is a civil rights lawyer and the inaugural Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Esq. Endowed Chair in Civil Rights at Howard University, where she leads the 14th Amendment Center for Law & Democracy in collaboration with a variety of institutions in law, business, and the arts, including the Charles Hamilton Houston Center at Harvard Law School. She was the 2022 recipient of the Radcliffe Medal, the Institute’s highest honor.Guy-Uriel E. Charles is the Charles J. Ogletree Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School where he also directs the Charles Hamilton Institute for Race and Justice. He writes about how law mediates political power and how law addresses racial subordination. He leads the audience Q and A in this episode.Guest HostTomiko Brown-Nagin is dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute, the Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School, and a professor of history in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences.Related ContentSherrilyn Ifill Howard University AnnouncementEvent PageTomiko Brown-Nagin: Leadership BiographyRadcliffe Day 2022CreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Kevin Grady and Max Doyle from Radcliffe’s event streaming team for their invaluable contributions to recording this podcast episode.
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Feb 20, 2024 • 1h 2min

Riding the Radcliffe Wave

Today’s episode—released to coincide with the announcement of an astronomical discovery—brings us inside the exciting world of scientific inquiry. In 2020, a group of scientists discovered a star-producing cosmic ripple in the local arm of the Milky Way that changed scientists’ understanding of the galaxy that our solar system calls home. They named it the Radcliffe Wave after the generative environment that inspired the finding. And the discoveries keep coming: new research published in Nature confirms that the Radcliffe Wave is indeed in motion, as its name suggests. Today, we talk to four of the scientists who collaborated on this groundbreaking research about what it all means.This episode was recorded on February 6, 2024.Released on February 20, 2024.Episode TranscriptGuestsJoão Alves is a professor of stellar astrophysics at the University of Vienna. During his Radcliffe fellowship year in 2018–2019, he combined both space and ground-based observational data to build the first map of the space motion of gas and to investigate how giant gas clouds, the nurseries of stars, came to be.Alyssa A. Goodman is the Robert Wheeler Willson Professor of Applied Astronomy at Harvard University, a former codirector for science at Harvard Radcliffe Institute, a research associate of the Smithsonian Institution, and the founding director of the Harvard Initiative in Innovative Computing. She was a Radcliffe fellow in 2016–2017, and her work spans astrophysics, science education, data science, data visualization, and prediction.Ralf Konietzka is a PhD student in astronomy and astrophysics at Harvard University. His research focuses on the formation and evolution of the Milky Way, and he uses a combination of analytic theory, observations, data visualization, and numerical simulations to investigate the structure and dynamics of the local interstellar medium and examine how stars originate.Catherine Zucker, who earned her PhD from Harvard University in 2020, is an astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian whose research focuses on developing novel techniques to tease out the 3D structure and dynamics of our home galaxy, the Milky Way. Much of her work involves the use of “big data” and high-performance computing.Related ContentNature: A Galactic-Scale Gas Wave in the Solar NeighbourhoodRadcliffe Wave VisualsWBUR: Harvard Astronomers Update Map of the Milky Way GalaxyHarvard Gazette: The Giant in Our StarsHarvard Magazine: An Interstellar Ribbon of Clouds in the Sun’s BackyardNew York Times: A New Map of the Sun’s Local BubbleRadcliffe Magazine: Behind Radcliffe Wave, Creative InspirationJoão Alves Personal WebsiteAlyssa A. Goodman ProfileRalf Konietzka BioCatherine Zucker BioAccelerator Workshop: The Radcliffe Wave at RadcliffeCreditsMaxwell Doyle is the A/V support technician at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI).Ivelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial manager at HRI, where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Kevin Grady is the multimedia producer at HRI.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.
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Dec 20, 2023 • 1h 34min

Free Speech, Political Speech, and Hate Speech on Campus

In response to recent events, protest and discord have reached a fever pitch on university campuses. It is in this context that Harvard Radcliffe Institute gathered interdisciplinary experts for a crucial discussion about hate speech, academic freedom, and the legal norms that govern how universities can respond to protest.In this episode, we explore the underpinnings of how antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other identity-based hatreds—issues that have received increased attention in the context of the ongoing Gaza crisis and attendant campus controversies—fit into a broader set of questions about the role of institutions of higher education.This episode was recorded on December 12, 2023.Released on December 20, 2023.Episode TranscriptGuestsTomiko Brown-Nagin, dean, Harvard Radcliffe Institute; Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School; and professor of history, Harvard Faculty of Arts and SciencesErica Chenoweth, Susan S. and Kenneth L. Wallach Professor, Harvard Radcliffe Institute; academic dean for faculty engagement and the Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment, Harvard Kennedy School; and faculty dean at Pforzheimer House, Harvard CollegeJeannie Suk Gersen, John H. Watson, Jr. Professor of Law, Harvard Law SchoolNadine Strossen, John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law Emerita, New York Law School; past president, American Civil Liberties UnionKeith E. Whittington, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics, Princeton UniversityRelated ContentEvent: Free Speech, Political Speech, and Hate Speech on CampusCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial lead at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Kevin Grady and Max Doyle from Radcliffe’s event streaming team for their invaluable contributions to recording this podcast episode.
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Dec 19, 2023 • 39min

The Thrill of Archival Discovery

Tamar Gonen Brown, head of education and outreach at Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library, gives us a peek into the fascinating world of archives. She uses rare archival materials not only to teach students research skills but also to train them on how to be “history detectives” in their own right and to share the thrill of discovery.Some useful background from Gonen Brown:The Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America collects material that documents the history of women, gender, and sexuality in the United States, and the scope and extent of our collections means that there are many topics beyond gender history that researchers can investigate through our holdings. The Library is certainly not the only repository dedicated to documenting gender and US women’s history—there is the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture at Duke University, the Sophia Smith Collection of Women’s History at Smith College, and the Pembroke Center Archives at Brown University, for example. The historian Mary Ritter Beard was an important early advocate, beginning in the 1930s, for the need to collect documents that reflect women’s lives and work, and the Schlesinger Library was in fact called the Women’s Archives until it was renamed in honor of Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger in 1965. Beard’s idea of a singular archives dedicated to documenting all aspects of women’s lives on a global scale never came to pass, and we are now among a cohort of repositories that are explicitly dedicated to documenting the history of women and gender. At the Schlesinger, one of our priorities is working to ensure that the collections document the full range of women’s experiences in American history, including the stories of women of color, immigrant women, queer and trans women, and other historically marginalized communities.This episode was recorded on August 9, 2023.Released on December 19, 2023.Episode TranscriptGuestTamar Gonen Brown, a research and teaching librarian, is the head of education and outreach at the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library for the History of Women in America. She earned a PhD in English and American language and literature from Harvard, a master’s in library and information science from Simmons University, and a bachelor’s from the University of Chicago.Related ContentTamar Gonen Brown: Harvard Library BiographySchlesinger Library: Teaching and Learning with Special CollectionsZooming the Archives75 Stories, 75 YearsCreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial lead at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.
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Nov 30, 2023 • 22min

Using Machine Learning to Listen to Whales

For millennia, humans have regarded other species with curiosity and wonder. We have tried to decode their behaviors and imagine what they are saying—but truly speaking with animals has traditionally been the stuff of stories, such as those featuring Dr. Dolittle. In this episode of BornCurious, we talk with the oceanographer David Gruber, who is spearheading Project CETI, a multidisciplinary collaboration. We learn that understanding animals is rapidly moving beyond the realm of fiction: Gruber and his colleagues are using hard science—state-of-the-art robotics and machine learning—to listen to and translate sperm whale communication.This episode was recorded on May 12, 2023.Released on November 30, 2023.Episode TranscriptGuestDavid Gruber is a visiting researcher at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Harvard and a distinguished professor of biology at Baruch College of the City University of New York. He also founded Project CETI—the Cetacean Translation Initiative—which aims to apply technology to bring us closer to nature.Special AcknowledgmentDavid Gruber and Harvard Radcliffe Institute would like to acknowledge the passing of the environmental scientist and technology expert Karen Bakker RI ’23 in August 2023. Her contributions to the field of bioacoustics, particularly through her book The Sounds of Life: How Digital Technology Is Bringing Us Closer to the Worlds of Animals and Plants (Princeton University Press, 2022), have had an enormous impact. Her book Gaia's Web: How Digital Environmentalism Can Combat Climate Change, Restore Biodiversity, Cultivate Empathy, and Regenerate the Earth (MIT Press, 2024), on which she worked during her Radcliffe fellowship, will be published in April.Related ContentDavid Gruber: Fellowship BiographyProject CETINew Yorker: Can We Talk to Whales?Event: Speaking with Whales: Listening to and Translating Their CommunicationRadcliffe Magazine: Radcliffe’s “Jellyfish Guy” Follows the LightDavid Gruber: Personal WebsiteCreditsWhale recordings are provided courtesy of Dominica Sperm Whale Project and Project CETI.Ivelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial lead at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.
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Nov 16, 2023 • 56min

Justice-Impacted Brilliance

In this episode, Meek Mill, an award-winning rapper and one of the nation’s top voices for parole and probation reform, talks with Brittany White—a practitioner in residence at Radcliffe and Harvard Law School, an organizing fellow at the Institute to End Mass Incarceration, and a formerly incarcerated Black woman—and others. This conversation brings together people with lived experience of incarceration as experts to discuss their efforts to change the probation and parole system, helping to make the US justice system more just.This episode was recorded on May 1, 2023.Released on November 16, 2023.Episode TranscriptGuestsAyana Bean is an activist and founder of A Year and a Day Foundation.Meek Mill is a rapper and cofounder of REFORM Alliance.Wallo is a podcaster, an influencer, and a speaker on prison reform.Brittany White is a 2022–2023 visiting practitioner in residence at Harvard Radcliffe Institute, an organizing fellow at the Institute to End Mass Incarceration, and a voice for formerly incarcerated Black women.Related ContentExperience Is ExpertiseBrittany White: Fellowship BiographyVideo: Organizing for a Pathway to RedemptionBrittany White: Radcliffe Fellow’s PresentationREFORM AllianceA Year and a Day FoundationInstagram: Meek MillPersonal Website: Wallo267CreditsIvelisse Estrada is your cohost and the editorial lead at Harvard Radcliffe Institute (HRI), where she edits Radcliffe Magazine.Alan Catello Grazioso is the executive producer of BornCurious and the senior multimedia manager at HRI.Jeff Hayash is a freelance sound engineer and recordist.Marcus Knoke is a multimedia intern at HRI, a Harvard College student, and the general manager of Harvard Radio Broadcasting.Heather Min is your cohost and the senior manager of digital strategy at HRI.Anna Soong is the production assistant at HRI.Special thanks to Kevin Grady and Max Doyle from Radcliffe's event streaming team for their invaluable contributions to recording this podcast episode.

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