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Audio Trailer Episode

We live in a world where travel, immigration, and broader mobility changes are emerging, disrupting, and creating opportunities for employees and employers. These opportunities not only affect the ...

An episode of the The Open World: The future of work and beyond podcast, hosted by Ray Rackham, titled "Audio Trailer Episode" was published on October 13, 2023 and runs 0 minutes.

October 13, 2023 ·0m · The Open World: The future of work and beyond

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We live in a world where travel, immigration, and broader mobility changes are emerging, disrupting, and creating opportunities for employees and employers. These opportunities not only affect the business travel community, but also impact societies in new, exciting, and often unanticipated ways. We live in a world of altered expectations, changing behaviours, and fluctuating norms, where new dialogues between human resources professionals, employees, and nation-states are affecting relationships on every level. We live in a world where the future of work has never been more exciting. Yet new obstacles present unique challenges given the way we work has changed forever. Join host Ray Rackham, and thought leaders from across the travel, immigration, and broader mobility industry, as we embark on a journey of discovery; exploring ways in which we can truly inhabit "The Open World". Visit https://newlandchase.com/ and https://CIBTvisas.com/.
Open Gov Stories Open Gov Stories Why do you care about changing the world? Open Gov Stories is a Global Podcast Series, which goes behind the scenes to explore why social change makers really do the work they do. In each episode, listen to candid interviews between friends and colleagues who have devoted their lives to changing the world. Using the StoryCorps model and app, they share personal origin stories, lessons on how to open up governments, empower citizens and change the world, and their visions for the future. Listen to their stories and add your own.This podcast is a partnership of Open Gov Hub and the Transparency and Accountability Initiative, in collaboration with StoryCorps. Interviews provided courtesy of StoryCorps, a national nonprofit whose mission is to preserve and share humanity's stories in order to build connections between people and create a more just and compassionate world. www.storycorps.orgMusic from https://filmmusic.io:"Promises to Keep" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)Lic 29PALMS STUDIOS Sörmlandspodden med Pehr Flühr WELCOME TO MY WORLD OF MUSIC DEMOS!ALWAYS OPEN FOR COWRITES AND MUSIC PRODUCTIONS WORLD WIDE!INDEPENDENT UNSIGNED MUSIC PRODUCER, COMPOSER, SOLO PERFORMER, ARRANGER, KEYBOARDS, MIDIPROGRAMMER AND PRODUCER AT PEHR FLÜHR MEDIA/ TWENTYNINE PALMS STUDIOS IN ÖREBBRO/ SWEDEN. AWARDED BY THE RECORDINDUSTRY IN SWEDEN FOR THE WORK WITH THE GERMAN ARTIST ANEEKAA. FOUNDER OF THE JAZZFUSIONGROUP DELICIOUS FISH, FORMER RADIOPRESENTER AND PRODUCER AT SVERIGES RADIO (RADIO SWEDEN), SINGER/SONGWRITER, TALENT SCOUT, MENTOR, TEACHER FOR YOUNG MUSICIANS AND PRODUCERS OF THE FUTURE MUSIC SCENE IN SWEDEN AND WORLDWIDE SINCE MANY YEARS. WORKED AS A DEMONSTRATOR FOR KAWAI. PEHR FLÜHR PLAYS ON KAWAI VPC 1 AND PRODUCES ON CUBASE PRO 15. STUDIED AT DEPARTMENT OF MUSICOLOGY AT UPPSALA UNIVERSITY. STUDIES MUSIC AND SOUND DESIGN AT MID -UNIVERSITY IN SWEDEN, CLASSICAL COMPOSING AT ÖREBRO MUSIC COLLEGE, MUSIC PRODUCTION AT THE ROYAL MUSIC COLLEGE, PRIVATE LESSONS ; IN CLASSICAL PIANO BY LENNART WALLIN, IN ACCO Darwinian Demons - Audio The Open University Is 'natural selection' inimical to bio-diversity? Why is the natural world not dominated by a few 'super' species? And in the future, can the richness of nature be preserved? In this album, Jonathan Silvertown, Professor of Ecology at The Open University, explains how Darwinian theory uses the concept of niche specialisation to account for the diversity of flora and fauna on Earth. If it were not for environmental niches, Darwinian 'demons', might emerge, powerful species whose evolutionary fitness makes them all conquering. However, according to Darwin, the natural world is infinitely complex and inhabited by a multitude of different species, each of which is peculiarly adapted to its local environment.The tracks on this album were produced by The Open University in collaboration with the British Council. They form part of Darwin Now, a global initiative celebrating the life and work of Charles Darwin and the impact his ideas about evolution continue to have on today’s world. © Briti Darwin and language diversity - Audio The Open University Can Darwin's theory of evolution be applied to languages? If so what are the analogues for natural selection and species diversification? What truths does this approach reveal and what problems does it throw up? In this album Professor Mark Pagel of Reading University and Quentin Atkinson, an evolutionary biologist at Oxford, discuss the pitfalls and the up-sides to approaching language through a Darwinian model. Focussing on Indo-European languages, they show how mathematical and statistical models can be used to study the development of both particular words and of grammatical terms. Looking to the future they speculate on how language will develop in the new globalised culture. The tracks on this album were produced by The Open University in collaboration with the British Council. They form part of Darwin Now, a global initiative celebrating the life and work of Charles Darwin and the impact his ideas about evolution continue to have on today’s world. © British Council 2009.
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