Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Business
Sports
Society & Culture
Health & Fitness
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts6/v4/a8/de/db/a8dedbbe-03f3-a18b-d799-2ad22c073820/mza_3561498578502099924.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
The Open University
14 episodes
11 months ago
On September 11 2001, hijackers took control of four aircraft and crashed into the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, in events that changed the world forever. It raised questions not only about the United States’ foreign policy but also about its assumed dominance as the leading international superpower. Ten years on since 9/11, the political landscape is very different: the US has a different President in the form of Barack Obama, elected in 2008, while the head of Al Qaeda, Osama Bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in May 2011. In this audio series, originally recorded in 2008, Senior Lecturer in Politics, Dr Richard Heffernan, and Dr Simon Bromley, both of The Open University, discuss the consequences of September 11th, and the impact it's had on the United States' hegemony, its global leadership and its diplomatic and military strategy. For an undergraduate course looking at similar political themes, try The Open University's DU301 A world of whose making?
Show more...
Courses
Education
RSS
All content for 9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio is the property of The Open University and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
On September 11 2001, hijackers took control of four aircraft and crashed into the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, in events that changed the world forever. It raised questions not only about the United States’ foreign policy but also about its assumed dominance as the leading international superpower. Ten years on since 9/11, the political landscape is very different: the US has a different President in the form of Barack Obama, elected in 2008, while the head of Al Qaeda, Osama Bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in May 2011. In this audio series, originally recorded in 2008, Senior Lecturer in Politics, Dr Richard Heffernan, and Dr Simon Bromley, both of The Open University, discuss the consequences of September 11th, and the impact it's had on the United States' hegemony, its global leadership and its diplomatic and military strategy. For an undergraduate course looking at similar political themes, try The Open University's DU301 A world of whose making?
Show more...
Courses
Education
Episodes (14/14)
9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Reflecting on 9/11
Richard Heffernon looks back at the tragedy of 9/11.
Show more...
14 years ago
4 minutes

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- Reflecting on 9/11
Richard Heffernon looks back at the tragedy of 9/11.
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
The United States as a Superpower
Is the US the world's only 'Superpower'? Richard Heffernan and Simon Bromley discuss this notion.
Show more...
14 years ago
6 minutes 55 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- The United States as a Superpower
Is the US the world's only 'Superpower'? Richard Heffernan and Simon Bromley discuss this notion.
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
The impact of 9/11 on the US's political leadership
Richard Heffernan and Simon Bromley discuss the significance of the attacks on September 11th.
Show more...
14 years ago
8 minutes 20 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- The impact of 9/11 on the US's political leadership
Richard Heffernan and Simon Bromley discuss the significance of the attacks on September 11th.
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Preventative v's Pre-emptive war
Simon Bromley explains what is meant by Preventative war and Pre-emptive war.
Show more...
14 years ago
4 minutes 34 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- Preventative v's Pre-emptive war
Simon Bromley explains what is meant by Preventative war and Pre-emptive war.
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Military strategy after 9/11
A look at the shift towards a new strategy preventative war.
Show more...
14 years ago
8 minutes 31 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- Military strategy after 9/11
A look at the shift towards a new strategy preventative war.
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Reflections on the US's reaction to 9/11
How did the US react to the 9/11 attacks?
Show more...
14 years ago
5 minutes 32 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- Reflections on the US's reaction to 9/11
How did the US react to the 9/11 attacks?
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Radicalist groups and the US
What do radical Islamists want from the United States, and are the US likely to defeat or deal with them?
Show more...
14 years ago
3 minutes 13 seconds

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
Transcript -- Radicalist groups and the US
What do radical Islamists want from the United States, and are the US likely to defeat or deal with them?
Show more...
14 years ago

9/11: Reflections on political leadership - Audio
On September 11 2001, hijackers took control of four aircraft and crashed into the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, in events that changed the world forever. It raised questions not only about the United States’ foreign policy but also about its assumed dominance as the leading international superpower. Ten years on since 9/11, the political landscape is very different: the US has a different President in the form of Barack Obama, elected in 2008, while the head of Al Qaeda, Osama Bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in May 2011. In this audio series, originally recorded in 2008, Senior Lecturer in Politics, Dr Richard Heffernan, and Dr Simon Bromley, both of The Open University, discuss the consequences of September 11th, and the impact it's had on the United States' hegemony, its global leadership and its diplomatic and military strategy. For an undergraduate course looking at similar political themes, try The Open University's DU301 A world of whose making?