276 | Jill Lepore on the Destructive Power of Tech

David talks to the American historian Jill Lepore about the damage new technology can do to democracy, from the 1960s to the present. Who first tried to manipulate the minds of the electorate? Where did the money come from? What happened when the same technology was applied to fighting the Vietnam War? Plus we discuss US presidential elections from 1960 to 2020: do the machines really decide who is going to win, and if he does win this time, what might Joe Biden be able to do about it?

276 | Jill Lepore on the Destructive Power of Tech
Talking Politics Podcast

274 | The Politics of Loneliness

David talks to economist and author Noreena Hertz about loneliness and its impact on all our lives.  How does the experience of loneliness shape contemporary democracy?  What kind of politics could make us feel more connected?  Can technology bring us together or is it driving us further apart?  Plus we discuss the consequences of the pandemic for the future of work and the possibility of building a better world.

274 | The Politics of Loneliness
Talking Politics Podcast

271 | Judith Butler: Then and Now

This week two conversations with the feminist theorist and writer Judith Butler: one recorded the week Trump won the presidency in 2016 and one recorded a few days ago, as his presidency (just maybe) approaches its end.  We reflect on what has changed over the last four years, what has stayed the same, and whether our worst fears were realised.  Plus Judith tells us what she sees when she sees Biden and what she hopes might come next.  Two linked conversations about misogyny, racism, representation, empowerment, hope, rage, and the damage one man can do to democracy.

271 | Judth Butler: Then and Now
Talking Politics Podcast

267 | Twilight of Democracy

David talks to the writer Anne Applebaum about her highly personal new book, which charts the last twenty years of broken friendships and democratic failure.  We start in Poland with the story of what happened to the high hopes for Polish democracy, including what we've learned from this week's presidential election.  But we also take in Trump and Brexit, Hungary and Spain. What explains the prevalence of conspiracy theories in contemporary politics? Why are so many conservatives drawn to the politics of despair?  Is history really circular?  And is democracy doomed?

267 | Twilight of Democracy
Talking Politics Podcast

255 | Brexit in the Age of Covid

We have passed the deadline for any extension to the Brexit trade negotiations - now it's 31 December or bust.  We catch up with three of our resident experts to explore what this means, what the chances are of getting a deal and where the sticking points might be.  Plus we asses the impact of the Covid crisis on the fate of Brexit and its implications for what might happen later this year.  With Anand Menon, Catherine Barnard and Helen Thompson.

255 | Brexit in the Age of Covid
Talking Politics Podcast

254 | Burma's Hidden History

In this extra episode David talks to Thant Myint-U about the fraught recent history of Burma (Myanmar) and asks what it can teach us about twenty-first century politics.  Why did the West have so many illusions about Aung San Suu Kyi?  Can democracy really rescue the country?  What model of development might work in the age of Covid and climate change?  A wide-ranging conversation about the forces shaping our world.

254 | Burma's Hidden History
Talking Politics Podcast