Academy of Ideas show

Academy of Ideas

Summary: Subscribe for weekly Podcasts of the most stimulating Battle of Ideas sessions from our archive, aswell as our most recent events

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Podcasts:

 Highlights from our Justice, Money and Power series | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Highlights from the Institute's Justice Money Power debates at the City of London Festival In this week’s podcast we here some of the most informative and inspiring speeches from the Institute’s recent Justice, Money and Power debates at the City of London Festival, including chairman of the Night Time Industry Association’s Alan Miller’s defence of the night-time economy as a force for societal good at our Fight For Your Right To Party debate at the Bishopsgate Institute. Economist Phil Mullan gives a worrying prognosis for the British economy unless we can stimulate real econonic growth at our Are We Heading For Another Crisis? event, also at the Bishopsgate Institute. Architect Alastair Donald makes a powerful argument for building huge numbers of new houses across the UK to end the housing crisis at A Tale Of Two Cities: Skyscrapers And Slums at London Partners, and Professor of Law John Fitzpatrick gives a history of the development of human liberties since Magna Carta and proffers what his thinks should be the next great leap in human freedom at A Twenty-First-Century Magna Carta. Full recordings of the Justice, Money and Power series will be available for download soon. 

 Whose social justice is it anyway? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A debate from the Institute's "Justice Money Power" series at the City of London Festival2015 marks the deadline of the Millennium Development Goals. 25 years on from the publication of the UN’s first Human Development Report, attitudes towards social justice have changed profoundly. Where once it was simply hoped that economic growth could deliver justice for the world’s poor, increasingly development and aid focuses on enhancing capability and reducing inequality. Would developing countries benefit from more trade than aid, and let themselves decide how best to deliver social justice?SpeakersDaniel Ben-Ami, financial journalist; author, Ferraris For AllLord Paul Boateng, former British High Commissioner to South AfricaProfessor Henrietta L Moore, director, UCL Institute for Global ProsperityGonzalo Viña editor, Disclaimer MagazineChairJoel Cohen

 Whose social justice is it anyway? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A debate from the Institute's "Justice Money Power" series at the City of London Festival2015 marks the deadline of the Millennium Development Goals. 25 years on from the publication of the UN’s first Human Development Report, attitudes towards social justice have changed profoundly. Where once it was simply hoped that economic growth could deliver justice for the world’s poor, increasingly development and aid focuses on enhancing capability and reducing inequality. Would developing countries benefit from more trade than aid, and let themselves decide how best to deliver social justice?SpeakersDaniel Ben-Ami, financial journalist; author, Ferraris For AllLord Paul Boateng, former British High Commissioner to South AfricaProfessor Henrietta L Moore, director, UCL Institute for Global ProsperityGonzalo Viña editor, Disclaimer MagazineChairJoel Cohen

 Podcast of Ideas12: Free speech in education, a great Renaissance thinker, plus our take on the week’s news | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In this week’s Podcast of Ideas, Rob speaks to Greg Lukianoff from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) about the fight for freedom of speech on US campuses amid an increasingly intolerant climate. Following the Institute’s inaugural University in One Day this week, we hear Sebastian Morello’s mini-lecture from the event on why Pico della Mirandola’s 1486 Oration on the Dignity of Man is a foundational work for humanist thought. David Bowden and Adam Rawcliffe come in to give us their views on the week’s news stories, and Nadia Butt reports back on last weekend’s Debating Matter National Final at the British Library in London.

 The First World War: a quest for meaning? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Podcast: Frank Furedi examines the ramifications of a key moment in twentieth-century history.In this week’s podcast from our Academy archive, Professor Frank Furedi reexamines our view of the First World War and challenges the tendency to read history backwards, imposing contemporary preoccupations on the past. Furedi argues that while in today’s society a war can never be considered truly just, the Great War was perhaps the last time that nations entered into a war enthusiastically, with everyone from liberal theologians to philosophers taking up the call to arms to fight for what they believed was noble cause.This lecture was recorded as part of the history strand of The Academy 2014. If you would like to find out more about this year’s Academy, which takes place on 18-20 July at Wyboston Lakes in Bedfordshire, visit the Academy 2015 page.

 Podcast of Ideas 11. Progress from Renaissance to Enlightenment, the politics of gender and race, and a look forward to the Debating Matters National Final. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In this week’s Podcast of Ideas, Rob Lyons and David Bowden dissect the week’s news including the pope’s encyclical on climate change, the Rachel Dolzeal fiasco and the oppressive licensing laws killing off the nation’s nightlife. Professor Alan Hudson talks about University in One Day, the Institute’s new initiative for sixth formers, and why the Renaissance matters. Jason Smith tells us about next week’s Debating Matters National Final, and we hear some of the highlights from the recent Birmingham Salon event on the rise of transgender issues as a political force. 

 Existentialism to neuro-science: are we condemned to be free? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Professor Frank Furedi's lecture on the legacy of Jean-Paul Sartre at the Academy 2012

 Podcast of Ideas 10. FIFA Scandal, professionalism in crisis and a new approach to primary teaching | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Podcast of Ideas 10. FIFA Scandal, professionalism in crisis and a new approach to primary teaching

 Podcast Are we all vulnerable now? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In official terms, ‘the vulnerable’ used to be narrowly defined by the 1995 Care Commission report as referring to people in extreme circumstances, like the homeless, or those unable to look after themselves mentally or physically. Today, however, it is the term of choice to describe anyone and everyone deemed to be in need of sympathy, especially those hit by government cuts – ‘a savage attack on the most vulnerable members of our society’, etc - but also much more widely.The unemployed are vulnerable to depression; women are vulnerable to ‘everyday sexism’; immigrants are vulnerable to trafficking or even slavery, not to mention FGM; teenage girls are vulnerable to body-image issues; and teenage boys are vulnerable to being warped by pornography. A coroner recently called on the Ministry of Defence to review its care for vulnerable soldiers at risk of suicide and bullying. Meanwhile, more radical campaigners increasingly seem to see ‘vulnerability’ as a collective condition affecting just about everyone under rampageous capitalism.Solutions invariably involve calls for more support and protection for those deemed vulnerable. Nurseries, schools and universities create new systems and activities to support growing numbers of these deemed ‘vulnerable’ – often merely by dint of youth – aiming to ‘build resilience’ and develop ‘survival strategies’. Politicians have called for teacher training to include methods for helping children develop ‘grit, determination and the ability to work in teams in challenging circumstances’. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Social Mobility has said schoolchildren should be taught character and given the resilience and determination to overcome setbacks in life.But can grit and determination really be taught? Or does a preoccupation with vulnerability actually threaten to sap our resilience, making us dependent on external support? If we begin by defining ourselves and others as powerless, how can we hope to change the conditions that undermine material, physical and mental well-being? And with so many labelled vulnerable, how do education and welfare professionals differentiate between competing claims and judge how to allocate scarce resources?SPEAKERSDebora Green head of student support and wellbeing; University of SheffieldJen Lexmond director, Character CountsDr Mark Taylor deputy head of school, Addey and Stanhope comprehensive school; London convenor, IoI Education ForumProfessor Sir Simon Wessely head, department of psychological medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London; president, Royal College of PsychiatristsCHAIRKathryn Ecclestone professor of education, University of Sheffield; author, Governing Vulnerable Subjects in a Therapeutic Age (forthcoming)

 Podcast of Ideas episode 9. Fighting for the right to party, the history of theatre and our upcoming events on justice, money and power. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Podcast of Ideas episode 9. Fighting for the right to party, the history of theatre and our upcoming events on justice, money and power.

 Podcast: An introduction to morality | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In this lecture from The Academy 2014, Angus Kennedy explains why we should strive to do good and what it means to be evil, with reference to Immanuel Kant, Alexis de Tocqueville and Hannah Arendt.

 Can conservatism survive the 21st century? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Can conservatism survive the 21st century?

 Podcast of Ideas 8. The EU in crisis, the UK economy and our round up of the General Election campaign | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:48:22

Podcast of Ideas 8. The EU in crisis, the UK economy and our round up of the General Election campaign

 Time to get serious about Irony. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Time to get serious about Irony.

 Podcast of Ideas 7: Solving the housing crisis, scrapping the Human Rights Act and a breakthrough in autism research | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In this edition of the Podcast of Ideas, Rob Lyons talks to Alastair Donald from the Future Cities Project about what can be done to solve the UK's housing crisis and barrister Jon Holbrook comes in to tell us why he would scrap the Human Rights Act. Rob also talks to Dr Fiona McEwen from King's College London's Institute of Psychiatry on new research, which appears to show that autism is largely caused by genetic and not environmental factors, members of the Institute of Ideas team give us their opinions on the week's stories, and Geoff Kidder reports back from the inaugural session of the Dublin Salon.  

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