Forum Basiliense

#4 Supply chains from the dawn of humanity until today

44 min · 24 de dic de 2025
portada del episodio #4 Supply chains from the dawn of humanity until today

Descripción

The relations between business practices, EU regulations, and the first human settlements Industrial production today relies on complex, often global supply chains which are a major source of carbon dioxide and other polluters. Elizabeth Bennett examines, how the European Union approaches the regulation of supply chains, showing which aspects are addressed, which are ignored, and the surprising consequences of these decisions. Meanwhile, Óscar Ricardo Solis-Torres goes back in time, literally diving into prehistorical underwater caves in the Gulf of Mexico, in search of very early remains of human activity, which also means: finding evidence of preliminary developments of supply chains. To understand them is understanding the Anthropocene. https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/ [https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Forum Basiliense!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

5 episodios

episode #1 Das Anthropozän, und was Frankenstein damit zu tun hat artwork

#1 Das Anthropozän, und was Frankenstein damit zu tun hat

Ein Gespräch über das Zeitalter, in dem wir leben, und über Literatur Das Anthropozän begann, sagt der Literaturwissenschaftler Alexander Honold, als der Mensch die ersten Furchen durch die Erde zog, es setzte sich fort in der Schrift, die erst eine städtische Verwaltung ermöglichte. Das Anthropozän ist, ergänzt die Religionswissenschaflterin Almut-Barbara Renger, ein offenes Konzept, das sowohl buddhistische, indigene, aber auch andere Vorstellung eines neuen Zusammengehens von Mensch und Natur umfasst. Ein Gespräch über die Dimensionen des Denkens im Anthropozän, und was sowohl Max Frisch wie auch Frankenstein damit zu tun haben. https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/ [https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/]

24 de dic de 202548 min
episode #3 The sound of cracking ice, and why language matters artwork

#3 The sound of cracking ice, and why language matters

A dive into melting glaciers and lies about climate change When ice cracks, it produces sounds that are often imperceptible to the human ear. Using specialized equipment, artist and anthropologist Saadia Mirza translates these sounds into immersive installations that invite audiences to engage with the effects of climate heating. Climate change is also the subject of Doriana Cimmino's work, but in different sense: she explores the way newspapers and social media influencers talk about this subject in order to distort public perception. In the age of the Anthropocene, both skills are essential: to listen to nature, and to distinguish lies from truth. https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/ [https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/]

24 de dic de 202544 min
episode #4 Supply chains from the dawn of humanity until today artwork

#4 Supply chains from the dawn of humanity until today

The relations between business practices, EU regulations, and the first human settlements Industrial production today relies on complex, often global supply chains which are a major source of carbon dioxide and other polluters. Elizabeth Bennett examines, how the European Union approaches the regulation of supply chains, showing which aspects are addressed, which are ignored, and the surprising consequences of these decisions. Meanwhile, Óscar Ricardo Solis-Torres goes back in time, literally diving into prehistorical underwater caves in the Gulf of Mexico, in search of very early remains of human activity, which also means: finding evidence of preliminary developments of supply chains. To understand them is understanding the Anthropocene. https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/ [https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/]

24 de dic de 202544 min
episode #5 Reinventing rural landscapes, and holding their destroyers accountable artwork

#5 Reinventing rural landscapes, and holding their destroyers accountable

Why new regulations matter for the protection of nature and for new approaches When urban inhabitants settle in rural areas in Spain, they bring along their own ideas of how to produce food and how to engage with nature. While they bring innovation, they sometimes also cause disruption, says nature anthropologist Elena Concepción, and all this requires (new) regulations. Regulations are also an essential part of efforts to protect nature and the environment in many South American states, and the question Martina Lasalle explorse in her work is why so many states have been reluctant to regulate crimes against nature. Both approaches explore how we relate to, exploit, or protect landscapes, nature and the environment in the Anthropocene. https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/ [https://forum-basiliense.unibas.ch/en/]

24 de dic de 202544 min