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- 3069 - Andrei Kelin: Is Vladimir Putin reshaping geopolitics?Mon, 04 Nov 2024
- 3068 - Fred Fleitz: What would Donald Trump's foreign policy look like?Fri, 01 Nov 2024
- 3067 - Diane Foley: Bringing detained Americans homeWed, 30 Oct 2024
- 3066 - Chris Murphy: Is Kamala Harris a candidate for change?Mon, 28 Oct 2024
- 3065 - John Bolton: Is America too divided to offer global leadership?Wed, 23 Oct 2024
- 3064 - Frank Skinner: What unites his many sides?Mon, 21 Oct 2024
- 3063 - Seyed Hossein Mousavian: How vulnerable is Iran?Thu, 17 Oct 2024
- 3062 - Ali Abbasi: Is censorship a growing cross-cultural problem?Wed, 16 Oct 2024
- 3061 - Marietje Schaake: Is Silicon Valley too powerful?Mon, 14 Oct 2024
- 3060 - Danny Danon: Can force alone deliver security for Israel?Thu, 10 Oct 2024
- 3059 - Tamir Pardo: Does Israel's greatest threat come from within?Wed, 09 Oct 2024
- 3058 - Kim Aris: The fate of Aung San Suu Kyi and MyanmarMon, 07 Oct 2024
- 3057 - Imaan Mazari-Hazir: Seeking justice for Pakistan's disappeared
Mishal Husain speaks to Imaan Mazari-Hazir, a lawyer in Pakistan whose passion for human rights began early in her legal studies. She has become well known in her home country for defending people’s rights against the state – taking on difficult cases of abduction and forced disappearance, and speaking out against the country's powerful military. She has herself faced arrest, and now charges under anti-terror laws. Amid political and economic turmoil, is the rule of law in Pakistan in crisis?
Fri, 27 Sep 2024 - 3056 - María Corina Machado: Defending democracy in Venezuela
Stephen Sackur speaks to the de-facto leader of the Venezuelan opposition, María Corina Machado. Two months after an election which she says delivered a humiliating defeat to the country's authoritarian leader President Nicolás Maduro, he’s clinging on to power and his regime is clamping down on dissent. Have hopes for change again been thwarted in Venezuela?
Fri, 27 Sep 2024 - 3055 - Amin Salam: Can all-out war be averted in Lebanon?Thu, 26 Sep 2024
- 3054 - Ingrid Newkirk: Will humans ever go animal-free?Tue, 24 Sep 2024
- 3053 - Martin Griffiths: Can the humanitarian system survive?
Mishal Husain speaks to Martin Griffiths, who worked for decades within the UN and the wider world of humanitarian aid. From Cambodia to Afghanistan, Sudan to Gaza, he has seen it all. How does he make sense of the inequalities and the suffering, and how does he think the aid system can survive, with funding ever more squeezed?
Mon, 23 Sep 2024 - 3052 - Oliviero Toscani: Photography with a social conscienceWed, 18 Sep 2024
- 3051 - Philippe Lazzarini: Is UNRWA's mission in Gaza impossible?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Philippe Lazzarini, head of UNRWA, the UN’s refugee agency for Palestinians. This week, six UN relief agency staff were killed in an Israeli strike on a central Gaza school that had been turned into an emergency shelter for thousands. UNRWA’s death count in Gaza since the beginning of the war is over 220. Is his agency’s mission now impossible?
Fri, 13 Sep 2024 - 3050 - James Earl Jones: An incredible journey
Following the death of James Earl Jones at the age of 93, another chance to listen to Stephen Sackur’s 2011 interview with the legendary American actor. Known for his deep, rich voice and as the voice of Star Wars’ villain Darth Vader, his was an extraordinary story from poverty and segregation in the Deep South to Hollywood. How hard was his journey?
Image: James Earl Jones receives a lifetime achievement award at the 2017 Tony Awards (Credit: Carlo Allegri/Reuters)
Thu, 12 Sep 2024 - 3049 - Balázs Orbán: Has Hungary's government created a template for far-right movements?Tue, 10 Sep 2024
- 3048 - Senator Lindsey Graham: Will Trump return to the White House?Mon, 09 Sep 2024
- 3047 - Fawzia Koofi: Women's rights in Afghanistan
Stephen Sackur speaks to the former deputy speaker of the Afghan parliament Fawzia Koofi. She was forced to flee into exile when the Taliban returned to power in 2021. Women and girls in Afghanistan have since seen their rights eliminated. How should the world respond to what the UN calls ‘gender apartheid’?
Photo: Fawzia Koofi receiving the Casa Asia Award in Barcelona, 2021 Credit: Getty Images
Thu, 05 Sep 2024 - 3046 - Rev Andrey Kordochkin: Putin and the Church
Vladimir Putin talks of restoring greatness to what he calls the Russian world: an expanse of territory which, as Ukrainians know to their cost, stretches far beyond Russia’s current borders. Putin’s expansionist nationalism requires military power, but it’s harnessed the cultural and spiritual authority of the Russian Orthodox Church too. Stephen Sackur speaks to Andrey Kordochkin, who was a Russian Orthodox priest who spoke out against the Ukraine war and the "Putinisation" of the church. Is he swimming against an unstoppable tide?
Tue, 03 Sep 2024 - 3045 - Motaz Azaiza: Photographing GazaMon, 02 Sep 2024
- 3044 - Andris Sprūds: Is Latvia on a war footing?Fri, 30 Aug 2024
- 3043 - Neil Lawrence: Being human in the age of the machine
Stephen Sackur speaks to leading artificial intelligence researcher Neil Lawrence. He’s Professor of Machine Learning at the University of Cambridge and has a Senior AI Fellowship at the Alan Turing Institute. His new book – The Atomic Human – explores the transformational potential of artificial intelligence, while reflecting on the qualities of the human mind that cannot be replicated by even the most sophisticated machines.
As more and more aspects of our lives are impacted by the rollout of machine learning, as control of big data and the development of algorithms to exploit it becomes a source of immense power in the 21st century, tech futurists are divided on whether we should embrace AI or fear it. In the end what will matter most isn’t the technology but the humans who develop and deploy it. Should we have faith in ourselves to get it right?
Wed, 28 Aug 2024 - 3042 - Nicola Procaccini: How has hard-right rule changed Italy?Sun, 25 Aug 2024
- 3041 - Olha Stefanishyna: Does Ukraine's Russia offensive make sense?Wed, 21 Aug 2024
- 3040 - Karuna Nundy: Human rights and justice in India
Stephen Sackur speaks to the prominent Indian lawyer Karuna Nundy. She has been at the forefront of long battles to better protect women from sexual violence, legalise gay marriage and safeguard freedom of speech. Is she losing this fight for India’s future?
This episode contains references to rape and sexual assault.
Mon, 19 Aug 2024 - 3039 - Shannon Watts: Will the votes of white women swing the Trump-Harris race?Fri, 16 Aug 2024
- 3038 - Pavel Latushka: Can change in Belarus only come with change in Moscow?Wed, 14 Aug 2024
- 3037 - Ian Goldin: Is migration a drag or a driver of progress?
Stephen Sackur speaks to the renowned economist Ian Goldin, who wants to reframe the debate around migration. He’s been a senior official at the World Bank, an economic adviser to Nelson Mandela and he’s now professor of globalisation and development at Oxford University. His latest book, The Shortest History of Migration, illustrates the centrality of movement to the evolution of humanity – from the earliest human travellers leaving East Africa some 300,000 years ago to all of the people seeking sanctuary and prosperity across today's national borders.
Migration is, right now, a hot and contentious topic. Powerful political voices across the world link migration with insecurity, crime and cultural breakdown. Others say migrants bring new ideas and energy and are vital to economic growth. It seems no amount of border security will stop people wanting to move; indeed, global heating and political instability are likely to see the numbers increase. Will migration, and how we deal with it, be the defining issue of this century?
Mon, 12 Aug 2024 - 3036 - Chris Ruddy: Is Trump's team worried?Fri, 09 Aug 2024
- 3035 - Garry Conille: What can he do for Haiti?Wed, 07 Aug 2024
- 3034 - The whistleblowersMon, 05 Aug 2024
- 3033 - Ohad Tal: Is Israel gearing up for a multi-front war?Thu, 01 Aug 2024
- 3032 - Adam Smith: Can Kamala Harris beat Donald Trump?Wed, 31 Jul 2024
- 3031 - Syed Zafar Islam: Will Narendra Modi change course?Mon, 29 Jul 2024
- 3030 - Taro Kono: Can Japan reboot itself for the 21st Century?Fri, 26 Jul 2024
- 3029 - Maria Corina Machado: Can Venezuela's fortunes change?
Sarah Montague speaks to Venezuelan opposition politician Maria Corina Machado. Banned from running in the country’s presidential elections this weekend, she’s still a leading figure in the movement trying to unseat socialist authoritarian Nicolas Maduro. With the country’s economy in ruins and more than a quarter of the population having fled, could the next few days change the fortunes of this oil-rich but very troubled nation?
Tue, 23 Jul 2024 - 3028 - Oliver McTernan: Is peace in the Middle East an impossible dream?
Sarah Montague speaks to former Catholic priest Oliver McTernan who has spent more than two decades working in conflict resolution in the Middle East. He is the director of the organisation Forward Thinking and was involved in negotiations that led to the release of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011. While he has no formal role in the current talks over the war in Gaza, he regularly speaks to senior figures in both Hamas and the Israeli government. Given the history of this protracted conflict, does he hold any hope that it will ever be resolved?
Wed, 17 Jul 2024 - 3027 - Maria Butina: Is time on Russia's side?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Maria Butina, member of the State Duma for President Putin’s United Russia party. The war in Ukraine now hinges on strength of will and staying power: the fighting is attritional, the bloodshed horrendous, and Nato has just reaffirmed its commitment to Kyiv. Two and a half years after the invasion, is time really on Russia’s side?
Mon, 15 Jul 2024 - 3026 - Laurie Bristow: The West's failure in AfghanistanFri, 12 Jul 2024
- 3025 - Ilya Ponomarev: How significant is Russian resistance to Putin?Tue, 09 Jul 2024
- 3024 - Asma Khan: Can cooking change the world?Mon, 08 Jul 2024
- 3023 - Husam Zomlot: Is diplomacy dead in the Israel-Gaza conflict?Tue, 02 Jul 2024
- 3022 - Anne Enright: Changing IrelandMon, 01 Jul 2024
- 3021 - Fabrice Leggeri: What would a far-right victory mean for France?Wed, 26 Jun 2024
- 3020 - Sachin Pilot: Is India heading for consensus or chaos?
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s third term will depend on the reliability of two smaller parties in his ruling coalition. Stephen Sackur speaks to Sachin Pilot, a senior figure in the Indian National Congress party, which will lead a diverse opposition coalition. Is India heading for a period of consensual government or chaos?
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 - 3019 - Dmytro Kuleba: Ukraine war at critical junctureThu, 20 Jun 2024
- 3018 - Mathieu Kassovitz: Where is France going?
Stephen Sackur is in Paris to speak to the acclaimed actor and director Mathieu Kassovitz. Three decades ago, his film La Haine (Hate) focused on inequality, racism and police brutality in a Parisian suburb. He has a powerful voice in French culture, so what is his take on where his country is now and where it’s going?
Tue, 18 Jun 2024 - 3017 - Akinwumi Adesina: Africa rising?Mon, 17 Jun 2024
- 3016 - Jean-Noël Barrot: A snap election in France
Stephen Sackur is in Paris to speak to the French Minister Delegate for Europe, Jean-Noël Barrot. President Emmanuel Macron has just taken the gamble of his political life, calling a snap parliamentary election in an effort to outsmart the extremes of right and left. If it backfires, what will it mean for France and Europe?
Fri, 14 Jun 2024 - 3015 - Eyal Weizman: The politics of architecture
Mishal Husain speaks to the architect Eyal Weizman. He works in what he calls ‘forensic architecture’, where details of buildings and physical spaces – and their destruction – are used to highlight abuses and persecution. Is he right to see architecture as political – a way in which human beings can oppress as well as create?
Wed, 12 Jun 2024 - 3014 - Mickey Bergman: What difference do hostage negotiators make?
Sarah Montague speaks to hostage negotiator Mickey Bergman, who has spent much of the last two decades working behind the scenes to help negotiate the release of Americans kidnapped or detained abroad – either by criminals, political actors or governments. What difference do such “fringe diplomats” make? Are they a help or a hindrance?
Tue, 04 Jun 2024 - 3013 - R. Derek Black: Renouncing white nationalismMon, 03 Jun 2024
- 3012 - Mohammad Shtayyeh: Will the Palestinian Authority work with Hamas?Thu, 30 May 2024
- 3011 - Stephen J Shaw: Are falling birth rates a crisis for humanity?
Stephen Sackur speaks to the data scientist Stephen J Shaw, who argues that humanity faces a looming demographic crisis, with falling birth rates having dire economic and social consequences. But in an age of economic turbulence and ecological concern, do we really want to be promoting the idea that humans need to have more babies?
Mon, 27 May 2024 - 3010 - Espen Barth Eide: Why will Norway recognise a Palestinian state?
Sarah Montague speaks to Norway’s Foreign Minister, Espen Barth Eide. His country, along with Ireland and Spain, says it will recognise a Palestinian state. Israel says that decision sends a message to the world that “terrorism pays”. Will the move help or hinder the path to peace in the Middle East?
Fri, 24 May 2024 - 3009 - Jim Skea: Are humans bungling our chance to avert disaster?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Professor Jim Skea, chair of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He is a key player collating the latest climate science and right now the situation looks grim; global emissions are still rising, so are temperatures and targets seem likely to be missed. Are humans bungling our chance to avert disaster?
Tue, 21 May 2024 - 3008 - Gillian Slovo: Has her writing exorcised demons?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Gillian Slovo, whose acclaimed fiction, plays and memoirs reflect an extraordinary backstory. The daughter of South African parents whose struggle against apartheid brought prison, exile and, in her mother’s case, assassination. Has her writing exorcised demons?
(Photo: Gillian Slovo in the Hardtalk studio)
Mon, 20 May 2024 - 3007 - Alexander Stubb: Has Nato membership left Finland stronger?Fri, 17 May 2024
- 3006 - Sir Ron Dennis: The need for speed
Stephen Sackur speaks to Sir Ron Dennis, founder of the McLaren Group and one of the most successful team leaders ever in Formula 1 racing. He was known as a technical innovator and perfectionist focused on marginal gains in every aspect of race car design. Sir Ron and his McLaren team won a host of F1 constructors' and drivers' world championships with some of greats of motor racing: Niki Lauda, Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna and Lewis Hamilton. What fuelled his drive to win?
Wed, 15 May 2024 - 3005 - Bill Blair: Canada's defence strategyMon, 13 May 2024
- 3004 - Gabrielius Landsbergis: Does Europe back Lithuania?Tue, 07 May 2024
- 3003 - Jonathan Haidt: Should we be worried about children having smartphones?Sun, 05 May 2024
- 3002 - Mihai Popșoi: Is Moldova the new Russian battleground?Sat, 04 May 2024
- 3001 - Ami Ayalon: Is Israel fighting an unwinnable war?Wed, 01 May 2024
- 3000 - Amin Salam: Can Lebanon's government avert catastrophe?Mon, 29 Apr 2024
- 2999 - Joan Donoghue: Has the ICJ ruling changed anything in Gaza?
In an exclusive interview, Stephen Sackur speaks to Joan Donoghue, who has just retired as president of the International Court of Justice. In January, the court found there was a plausible case for Israel to answer for alleged violation of the Genocide Convention. Has the ruling changed anything in Gaza?
Fri, 26 Apr 2024 - 2998 - Daniel Dennett: Philosophy and atheism
Another chance to listen to Stephen Sackur’s 2013 interview with American philosopher Daniel Dennett, who has died aged 82. Described as one of the Four Horsemen of New Atheism, Dennett wrote powerfully against religion. But do humans really want to live in a world where atheism rules and religion is dead?
Wed, 24 Apr 2024 - 2997 - Richard Haass: How should the US respond to global risks?Sat, 20 Apr 2024
- 2996 - Arseniy Yatsenyuk: Could Ukraine lose?Fri, 19 Apr 2024
- 2995 - Danny Danon: Will Israel listen to its allies?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Danny Danon, Israeli MP and former ambassador at the United Nations. Israel and Iran are on the brink of a war which could ignite the entire Middle East. Having neutralised an Iranian missile barrage, will the Israeli government listen to its allies and step back, or seek a new level of retribution and deterrence?
Tue, 16 Apr 2024 - 2994 - Eddie Marsan: Do the arts neglect working-class people?Mon, 15 Apr 2024
- 2993 - Job Sikhala: Is change possible in Zimbabwe?Wed, 10 Apr 2024
- 2992 - Nureldin Satti: Sudan's coup
HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur speaks to Sudanese diplomat Nureldin Satti. It’s surely hard for the people of Sudan to be optimistic about their country’s prospects in 2022. The new year began with the nominal head of the transitional government quitting his post, leaving Sudan, once again, in the grip of the military. Street protests in recent months have left more than fifty people dead. Nureldin Satti was fired from his post as Ambassador in the US after last October's military coup. Will Sudan’s generals ever give up political power?
Fri, 07 Jan 2022 - 2991 - Laurence Tribe: Is the US system of government in peril?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Laurence Tribe, Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard University. It’s a year since pro-Trump protesters stormed the US Capitol and unleashed a spasm of violence which left five people dead. While hundreds of people have since been charged, none have been key associates of Donald Trump, and the former president seems to be contemplating another run for the White House while insisting, without evidence, that the 2020 election was stolen. Is partisanship on both sides eroding faith in American democracy?
Wed, 05 Jan 2022 - 2990 - Neil deGrasse Tyson: Trust in science
Stephen Sackur speaks to Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist and director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of National History in New York. He is one of America’s most popular scientists and shares his fascination with space with millions of Americans. But here on Earth, science is under pressure, from Covid to climate change. Is trust in science dwindling?
Mon, 20 Dec 2021 - 2989 - Ernesto Araújo: Has Brazil failed to protect its people?
Stephen Sackur speaks to Brazil’s former Foreign Minister Ernesto Araújo who was an arch critic of global efforts to contain Covid, calling them communistic. Brazil’s government now stands accused of failing to protect its people. Is that fair?
(Photo: Ernesto Araújo appears via video-link on Hardtalk)
Fri, 17 Dec 2021 - 2988 - Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov: Fighting for a free press
Stephen Sackur is in Oslo to interview the joint winners of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. Both are independent journalists who have defied threats and repression to continue their work. Maria Ressa, founder of the Rappler news website in the Philippines and Dmitry Muratov, long time editor in chief of Novaya Gazeta in Moscow. Theirs is a fight for freedom of expression. But is it a fight they are losing?
(Photo: Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov during the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony. Credit: Stian Lysberg Solum/NTB/Reuters)
Wed, 15 Dec 2021 - 2987 - John Kerry: US Special Envoy for Climate
Can America lead an effective global response to the climate change emergency? At last month’s COP26 summit in Glasgow the chorus of concern from world leaders was deafening, but the really tough decisions on deeper emissions cuts to reduce global warming were put off until next year. Stephen Sackur speaks to the US Special Envoy for Climate John Kerry. His mission is to restore American leadership on the biggest existential challenge facing our planet. But is that mission impossible?
(Photo: John Kerry in the Hardtalk studio)
Fri, 10 Dec 2021 - 2986 - Moeed Yusuf: What will a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan mean for Pakistan?
Stephen Sackur speaks with Moeed Yusuf, National Security Adviser of Pakistan. The Taliban is back in power in neighbouring Afghanistan. US and Nato forces are gone. Pakistan sees opportunities in this new reality but are there grave dangers too?
(Photo: Moeed Yusuf appears via videolink on Hardtalk)
Wed, 08 Dec 2021 - 2985 - Paul Auster: 'We are divided in ways we have never seen before'Fri, 03 May 2024
- 2984 - Ken Buck: Big tech and Republican politicsWed, 01 Dec 2021
- 2983 - Nicolai Tangen: Can Norway move on from fossil fuels?Mon, 29 Nov 2021
- 2982 - Rana Ayyub: Abuse, intimidation and legal threats
Stephen Sackur speaks to the Indian investigative journalist Rana Ayyub whose determination to dig deep into the past and present of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has prompted abuse, intimidation and legal action. What does her case say about the health of India’s democracy?
(Photo: Rana Ayyub appears via videolink on Hardtalk)
Fri, 26 Nov 2021 - 2981 - Péter Márki-Zay: Can Viktor Orban be beaten at the ballot box?
Next Spring, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, the EU's most controversial leader, will seek a new mandate. His grip on power in Budapest is tight, covering the parliament, the media and the economy. His opponents at home and in Brussels call him an autocrat, but can he beaten at the ballot box? Stephen Sackur speaks to Péter Márki-Zay, who will lead a united opposition front into the election. He’s a small town mayor with big ambition, but is being the candidate who is not Orban enough?
Wed, 24 Nov 2021 - 2980 - Ryan Girdusky: Race and education in America
Scratch beneath the surface of everyday American life and you find an increasingly polarised culture. Donald Trump is no longer in the White House, but the culture wars he inflamed are still raging. In a special edition of HARDtalk from New York, Stephen Sackur speaks to an influential conservative activist in the thick of the fight. Ryan Girdusky, the founder of the 1776 Project Political Action Committee, says America’s schoolchildren are being brainwashed about race and he’s out to stop it. What does it say about America that the classroom is now a political battleground?
Mon, 22 Nov 2021 - 2979 - George Takei: Growing up in an internment campWed, 17 Nov 2021
- 2978 - Ritchie Torres: Is America ready to embrace progressive politics?Mon, 15 Nov 2021
- 2977 - Pawel Jablonski: Could Poland exit the EU?
Poland is the biggest rebel in the European family, and matters are coming to a head over its latest disputes with the EU. Brussels accuses the centre-right government in Warsaw of a blatant disregard for EU law, in particular over changes it wants to make to the judicial system. Zeinab Badawi speaks to Pawel Jablonski, the country's deputy foreign minister. Could Poland follow Britain’s lead and exit the EU?
(Photo: Pavel Jablonski appears on Hardtalk via video link)
Fri, 12 Nov 2021 - 2976 - Patrice Evra: The flaws in football
Football's global appeal can’t disguise the problems facing the game. Some fans say the sport is being ruined by financial greed, and racism is still to be rooted out. Stephen Sackur speaks to the former Manchester United and France star, Patrice Evra. He’s just done something most footballers never do, by revealing his deep emotional scars. What made him do it?
Wed, 10 Nov 2021 - 2975 - Mike Leigh: Art and the cinema
Stephen Sackur speaks to Mike Leigh, the acclaimed writer and director of films such as Secrets and Lies, Vera Drake, Happy-Go-Lucky and Mr Turner. For five decades, he has told stories about believable characters facing very human dilemmas. They’re painstakingly put together and not always easy to watch. But is the demand for his kind of artistic vision dwindling?
Mon, 08 Nov 2021 - 2974 - Prime Minister Albin Kurti: Is he a source of instability in the Balkans?
Kosovo has enjoyed independent statehood for 13 years but almost half the world does not recognise it. Stephen Sackur speaks to Prime Minister Albin Kurti who has had a turbulent career. He has been a political prisoner, he launched five tear gas attacks on his own parliament and he has a vision of Kosovo unifying with Albania. Is he a source of instability in the Balkans?
(Photo: Prime Minister Albin Kurti appears on Hardtalk via videolink)
Fri, 05 Nov 2021 - 2973 - Fiona Hill: What did Trump mean for America and the world?
The Trump Presidency challenged many public officials to make a choice: obey directives from the White House against their better judgment, or take a stand and face the wrath of the pro-Trump movement. Fiona Hill, a former Russia adviser at the White House, took a stand. She was a key witness in Donald Trump’s first impeachment trial, and has since had time to reflect on what his presidency meant for America and its geopolitical standing.
(Photo: Fiona Hill, the National Security Council’s former senior director for Europe and Russia. Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Wed, 03 Nov 2021 - 2972 - Fatih Birol: Can greenhouse gas emissions be eliminated?Mon, 01 Nov 2021
- 2971 - Bruno Le Maire: Is France looking for a new economic direction?
Stephen Sackur speaks to French finance minister Bruno Le Maire. France is in recovery mode after the damaging impact of Covid but is struggling to deliver on long promised economic reform. With a presidential election looming, is France looking for a new direction?
(Photo: Bruno Le Maire, Economy and Finance Minister for France. Credit: Oan Valat/EPA)
Thu, 28 Oct 2021 - 2970 - Ariel Dorfman: Ghosts of the past
Stephen Sackur speaks to the acclaimed novelist and playwright Ariel Dorfman. His life has been shaped by political upheaval and exile. He fled Chile after General Pinochet seized power in 1973 and his books were banned and burned. Dorfman’s work explores humankind’s capacity for sin and salvation. Do we have it in us to overcome our worst instincts?
Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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