The Gist - This Is Your Brain on Political Correctness
Trigger warning: Scrutiny of safe spaces ahead. Jonathan Zimmerman discusses the political-correctness fever sweeping the nation’s elite college campuses. Zimmerman is the author of Campus Politics: What Everyone Needs to Know.
In the Spiel, blinded by a baccalaureate.
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Cato Daily Podcast - Undoing Executive Action in a Trump Presidency
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Hayek Program Podcast - Emily Chamlee-Wright on The Economic Way Of Thinking & The Messiness Of The Social World
Start the Week - Island Mentality
On Start the Week Amol Rajan considers the making of the British landscape and an island mentality. The President of the Royal Geographical Society Nicholas Crane looks back over the last 12 millennia to understand how we have shaped our habitat but also how the landscape has shaped our lives. Madeleine Bunting travels through the Hebrides to see what the furthest reaches of these isles can tell us about the country as a whole. David Olusoga re-tells the story of the relationship between Britain and the people of Africa, which reaches back to the Romans, to demonstrate how black history has shaped our world, and the poet Imtiaz Dharker reflects on displacement and belonging. Producer: Katy Hickman.
More or Less: Behind the Stats - WS More or Less: Liberia?s Rape Statistic Debunked
Sexual violence was widespread in Liberia?s brutal and bloody year civil war. But were three quarters of women in the country raped? We tell the story behind the number and reveal how well-meaning efforts to expose what happened have fuelled myths and miss-leading statistics that continue to be propagated to this day, including by the UN.
We speak to Amelia Hoover Green from Drexel University, Dara Cohen from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, researcher Phyllis Kimba and Aisha Dukule from the think tank Center For Liberia's Future in Monrovia.
(Photo: Liberian women and children wait for rice rations in overcrowded Monrovia, June 2003. Credit: Georges Gobet/AFP/Getty Images)
50 Things That Made the Modern Economy - Haber-Bosch Process
The Gist - The Fault in Our Polls
Did the polls lead us astray in this election, or did we simply fail to heed everything they were telling us? FiveThirtyEight senior political writer Harry Enten says the lesson of 2016 is familiar to any close observer of politics: “There are no permanent majorities.”
Julian Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University, puts the 2016 election in historical context. Zelizer hosts the Politics & Polls podcast produced by the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
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The Gist - Solidarity, Sister?
It’s a rare Saturday Gist, as the show’s post-election interview blitz continues:
New York Times columnist Gail Collins explains what we tend to forget about the way women vote, and NPR’s David Folkenflik ponders the media problems exposed by the presidential race and its surprise outcome.
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CrowdScience - The Edge of Space
What do scientists think is outside our universe? Asks Rebecca Standridge from San Francisco in the US.
It’s a question which goes right to the limits of human understanding.
We look for the answer using balloons, bubbles and the world’s oldest radio telescope.
If you have a question about science that you'd like us to investigate email crowdscience@bbc.co.uk.
Photo: Lovell telescope Jodrell Bank