More or Less: Behind the Stats - Immigrant Crime Rate in the US
Do immigrants commit more crime than native-born Americans in the United States?
More or Less: Behind the Stats - The spread of fact-checking in Africa
With misinformation so easy to spread, how can it be stopped or challenged?
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Pregnancy prohibitions ? the evidence
Taking a statistical look at what expectant mothers should avoid.
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Missing women from drug trials
How medical testing on just men causes problems.
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Zimbabwe?s economy: Are sanctions to blame?
We look at politicians? claims that sanctions are to blame for Zimbabwe?s difficulties.
This is Capitalism - Nanoseconds and Megabucks
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Two World Cups: Football and Cricket
On this week?s More or Less, Ruth Alexander looks at the numbers involved with the two world cups that are going on at the moment.
Are more men than women watching the Women?s World Cup and how accurate is the Cricket World Cup rule of thumb that suggests if you double the score after 30 overs you get a good estimate of the final innings total?
Producer: Richard Vadon
Image: Cricket World Cup Trophy 2019 Credit: Getty Images/ Gareth Copley-IDI
Start the Week - Epic quests and Greek myths
The playwright David Hare is adapting Ibsen’s Peer Gynt, an epic story of vanity and egotism. He tells Tom Sutcliffe his radical new working keeps the mountain of trolls but becomes a contemporary reflection of toxic masculinity in the age of the selfie.
The writer Lucy Hughes-Hallett reincarnates ancient myths and folklore in her collection of short stories, Fabulous. Old tales from Orpheus to Mary Magdalen and Psyche, find new homes in the lives of a people-trafficking gangmaster and a well-behaved librarian.
The great story-teller Stephen Fry breathes fresh life into the Greek myths as he prepares to embark on his first UK tour for forty years. From the creation of the Cosmos and the feuding of the Gods, to the extraordinary battles and epic journeys of the heroes, these tales still echo for audiences today.
Alison Balsom is a world-renowned trumpeter who moves seamlessly through different periods of music in her curation of this year’s Cheltenham Music Festival. She explains her deep passion for the world of baroque music and the excitement of playing a new piece for the very first time, as she prepares for the premiere of Thea Musgrave’s Trumpet Concerto.
Producer: Katy Hickman
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Is nuclear power actually safer than you think?
We questioned the death count of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in last week?s More or Less podcast. In the end, Professor Jim Smith of Portsmouth University came up with an estimate of 15,000 deaths.
But we wondered how deadly nuclear power is overall when compared to other energy sources? Dr Hannah Ritchie of the University of Oxford joins Charlotte McDonald to explore.
Image:Chernobyl nuclear plant, October 1st 1986 Credit: Getty Images
