Rachel Botsman and Helen Lewis on Technology and Trust

Rachel Botsman and Helen Lewis on Technology and Trust

In this episode of the Intelligence Squared podcast we were joined by Rachel Botsman, world renowned trust expert, Oxford academic and author of Who Can You Trust? She was interviewed by Helen Lewis, associate editor of the New Statesman, for a wide-ranging conversation on our relationship with trust and how technology is radically rewriting the rules. Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/intelligencesquared. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Episoder(1511)

Archive: Killer in the Kremlin, with John Sweeney

Archive: Killer in the Kremlin, with John Sweeney

The recent death of Russian anti-corruption activist, opposition leader and political prisoner Alexei Navalny while serving a decades-long sentence in a remote Arctic penal colony shocked the world la...

21 Feb 202431min

Six Centuries of Feminist Writing, with Hannah Dawson and Merve Emre

Six Centuries of Feminist Writing, with Hannah Dawson and Merve Emre

How has feminist thought evolved throughout the ages? Beginning in the fifteenth century with Christine de Pizan, who imagined a City of Ladies that would serve as a refuge from the harassment of men,...

19 Feb 202458min

Material World: How Six Crucial Substances Shape the Global Economy

Material World: How Six Crucial Substances Shape the Global Economy

There are six crucial substances in human history, according to writer and broadcaster Ed Conway: sand, iron, salt, oil, copper and lithium. They took us from the Dark Ages to the present day. They bu...

18 Feb 20241h 2min

Energised: How Do We Create A Green Jobs Revolution?

Energised: How Do We Create A Green Jobs Revolution?

Solar panel installers, architects, environmental scientists, recycling coordinators, wind turbine engineers, geologists, project managers, electric vehicle manufacturers – these are just a small subs...

16 Feb 20241h 6min

Novelist Helen Oyeyemi on Why the City of Prague has Main Character Energy

Novelist Helen Oyeyemi on Why the City of Prague has Main Character Energy

The latest book from critically acclaimed writer Helen Oyeyemi, Parasol Against the Axe, is a novel set among the city of Prague’s streets. It’s often said that a city can feel like a character in a b...

14 Feb 202427min

Why the Political World's a Stage

Why the Political World's a Stage

Richard Sennett is a sociologist and the Centennial Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics, whose work has given particular focus to areas such as how we co-exist in urban spaces and...

12 Feb 202447min

Is Democracy Future-proof? with Jonathan White and David Runciman

Is Democracy Future-proof? with Jonathan White and David Runciman

2024 is set to be the biggest election year in history but what happens to politics when it’s always about the next election? We lose our sense of perspective, says Professor of Politics at London Sch...

11 Feb 202452min

Alastair Campbell on Starmer, Sunak, and Saving Britain From Itself, Part Two

Alastair Campbell on Starmer, Sunak, and Saving Britain From Itself, Part Two

This is the second instalment of a three-part discussion. Often described as the second most powerful figure in Britain during the Blair governments, Alastair Campbell was pivotal as a strategist in l...

9 Feb 202435min

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