An award-winning podcast from the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University, exploring today's biggest global challenges with the world's leading experts. Listen every other week by subscribing wherever you listen to podcasts.
…
continue reading
1
To understand Trump’s victory, look around the world
34:39
34:39
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
34:39
On November 5, Americans went to the polls and once again elected Donald Trump president of the United States. By this point, you probably know the broad strokes of his victory: He won every swing state and, unlike in 2016, the popular vote as well. It also seems clear that a key part of the Democratic Party’s message — that another Trump term woul…
…
continue reading
1
How control of Congress will shape US politics, no matter who’s elected president
25:56
25:56
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
25:56
On November 5, all eyes will be on the race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump for the White House. But no matter who wins the presidency, there’s another close competition that will have a huge impact on U.S. politics: the fight for control of Congress. In fact, next year’s Congress will play a role in our polit…
…
continue reading
1
“Inside the global supply chain”, with New York Times’ Peter Goodman
35:03
35:03
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
35:03
Remember the supply chain problems of 2020 and 2021? The story we were told was that COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the world’s ability to make and transport goods, leaving us with shortages of everything from surgical masks to infant formula (not to mention seven dollar eggs). However, it turns out that the real story behind those shortages is more c…
…
continue reading
1
Why is this election so close? The issues and voters driving 2024
34:38
34:38
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
34:38
While no one knows how this November’s election is going to go in the U.S., there’s one thing most experts agree on: It’s likely going to be close. Very close. Poll after poll suggests that, especially in a few key states, support for the two candidates is evenly split in a way we haven’t seen in decades. So, with just about four weeks to go before…
…
continue reading
1
The state of political journalism in an election year unlike any other
31:53
31:53
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
31:53
Even for an election year, the last few months have seen a head-spinning amount of political news in the United States. So, on this episode, Dan Richards spoke with someone uniquely suited to help make sense of the race as it enters the homestretch. Isaac Dovere is a senior reporter for CNN based in Washington covering Democratic politics. He’s als…
…
continue reading
1
A history of presidents who threatened American democracy (and the citizens who saved it)
37:38
37:38
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
37:38
Many Americans see a potential Trump victory in this year’s election as a threat to American democracy. Whether you share that concern or not, the rise of Donald Trump and the prospect of a second Trump term have brought up new and unsettling questions about presidential power and the fragility of our democratic institutions. But as Corey Brettschn…
…
continue reading
1
The Secret History of the Pope and World War II (originally broadcast 2022)
27:20
27:20
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
27:20
In March 2020, the Vatican’s Apostolic Archives of Pope Pius XII — also known as the Vatican’s “secret archives” — were opened to scholars from around the world. Historian and Watson Professor David Kertzer was one of those scholars. What he found there is helping to reframe the role that the Catholic Church — and its then-leader, Pope Pius XII — p…
…
continue reading
1
South Africa’s elections, 30 years after apartheid: part 2
42:31
42:31
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
42:31
This is the second part in our two-part series on South Africa’s politics 30 years after the election of Nelson Mandela, and with it, the end of apartheid. Around the same time as that anniversary this past spring, there was another momentous event in the country: South Africans went to the polls in May, and for the first time in 30 years, the Afri…
…
continue reading
1
This summer’s UK and French elections explained, with Mark Blyth
32:56
32:56
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
32:56
Over the course of 2024, roughly half of the world’s population will participate in national elections. On this episode, we take a closer look at two of them: this summer’s elections in the United Kingdom and France. In the U.K., the center-left Labour Party won in a landslide in July, ending 14 years of Conservative Party rule. In France, an allia…
…
continue reading
1
South Africa, 30 years after apartheid: part 1
32:28
32:28
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
32:28
This spring marked the thirtieth anniversary of the election of Nelson Mandela as South Africa’s president and the end of apartheid, the system of legalized racial segregation that had existed in South Africa for decades. Around the same time as that anniversary, there was another momentous event in the country: South Africans went to the polls in …
…
continue reading
1
The surprising results of India’s election
28:49
28:49
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
28:49
On June 4, results came in from the largest democratic election in history. Over 640 million people voted in India’s election, which took place at over one million polling places across the country over the course of six weeks. Many predicted that India’s prime minister Nerandra Modi and his party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) would dominate th…
…
continue reading
1
A former police officer (and public health expert) on the opioid crisis and public safety
17:57
17:57
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
17:57
For this week’s show, we’re sharing an episode of “Humans in Public Health,” a podcast from The Brown School of Public Health. It makes a great follow-up to our episode earlier this month about Rhode Island’s first-in-the-nation legally approved proposal for a safe injection site (also known as an overdose prevention center) and how such programs w…
…
continue reading
1
What should the Supreme Court’s role in our politics be?
35:57
35:57
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
35:57
At the Watson Institute, the beginning of summer means commencement festivities, moving trucks, and bittersweet goodbyes. In American politics, the beginning of summer means something very different: the approach of the Supreme Court's summer recess and, with it, the handing down of the Court’s final decisions from this term. This year’s cases will…
…
continue reading
1
How American firearms fuel violence in Mexico
34:03
34:03
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
34:03
Mexico, like the United States, has a gun violence problem. It has one of the highest murder rates in the world, and most of those murders come from firearms. In 2019, for example, almost 70% of the country's 35,000 murders involved firearms. But unlike the U.S., Mexico doesn’t have tens of thousands of licensed firearms dealers. It has two. So how…
…
continue reading
1
Harm reduction, overdose prevention, and the future of treating America’s overdose epidemic
35:05
35:05
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
35:05
In February of this year, Providence became the first city in America to approve opening a state-sanctioned overdose prevention center. Sometimes known as safe injection sites, these are facilities where people can bring illegal drugs and consume them under the supervision of trained volunteers and health professionals. It’s one of the boldest expe…
…
continue reading
1
A new history of the Sandinista Revolution
42:47
42:47
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
42:47
In the 1970s in Nicaragua, left-wing rebels, calling themselves the Sandinista National Liberation Front, fought to overthrow their country’s dictator. It worked. The Sandinistas led a coalition that took over the government in July 1979, in what became known as the Sandinista Revolution. However, within a few years, the Sandinistas faced a violent…
…
continue reading
1
What happened to the ‘American dream’?
32:24
32:24
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
32:24
Here’s a depressing fact: it takes longer to travel from Boston to Los Angeles today than it did 50 years ago. Getting to the airport, getting through the airport, the flight itself — just about every part of the process takes longer than it once did. According to New York Times senior writer David Leonhardt, this is just one example of the stagnat…
…
continue reading
1
From Black Lives Matter to January 6, how ‘Black grief’ and ‘white grievance’ shape our politics
33:28
33:28
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
33:28
The last decade has seen the growth of two political movements that appear diametrically opposed: the Black Lives Matter movement and the rise of Donald Trump. But as our guest on this episode explains, these two movements are linked, and can only be understood together. On this episode, Dan Richards talks with political scientist Juliet Hooker abo…
…
continue reading
1
Mark and Carrie Special: 2024 Primaries, the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, what’s next for the UK’s Labour Party
29:14
29:14
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
29:14
We’ve got a lot of exciting new Trending Globally episodes coming up in the next few weeks and months, but this week we’re sharing an episode of another podcast from the Watson Institute: Mark and Carrie. The show is hosted by political economist Mark Blyth and political scientist Carrie Nordlund. On each episode, they discuss, debate and, occasion…
…
continue reading
1
Ukraine is ‘on the ropes’ two years after Russia’s invasion. What’s next for the Russia-Ukraine War?
29:32
29:32
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
29:32
February 24, 2024, marks two years since the beginning of the War in Ukraine. In the war’s first year, Russia’s assault on Ukraine shook the West, while Ukraine's defense of the territory captivated the world. While no less deadly or consequential, the war's second year has looked very different. The war has become a stalemate on the battlefield, a…
…
continue reading
1
The origins of America's separate and unequal schools
27:43
27:43
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
27:43
In the United States, inequality along the lines of race in education is such a persistent issue that it often fails to make headlines. COVID-19 brought it back to the front of the nation’s consciousness as evidence mounted that nonwhite students were experiencing roughly twice as much learning loss as their white counterparts. Yet, as our guest on…
…
continue reading
1
How backlash came to define American politics, and what it means for the future of public policy
35:49
35:49
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
35:49
Backlash is hardly a new political force — since America’s founding, change has often been driven by citizens mobilizing in opposition to policies, programs, or social movements. But recently, as our guest on this episode explains, backlash movements have come to dominate our politics in unprecedented ways. He argues that to build a more stable and…
…
continue reading
1
The new psychology of nuclear brinkmanship (originally released February 2023)
29:44
29:44
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
29:44
Trending Globally will be back with all new episodes soon, but in the meantime we’re rereleasing some of our favorite episodes from 2023. We hope you enjoy – and have a great start to 2024! *** The beginning of 2023 saw a disturbing milestone: the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moved the ‘Doomsday Clock’ forward to 90 seconds to midnight – the c…
…
continue reading
1
What happens when a prison comes to town (originally released January 2023)
26:05
26:05
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
26:05
“Trending Globally” will be back with all new episodes soon, but in the meantime, we’re rereleasing a few of our favorite episodes from 2023. We hope you enjoy — and have a great start to 2024! *** In 2007, Watson Professor John Eason moved with his family from Chicago to Forest City, Arkansas. At the time Eason was getting his Ph.D. at the Univers…
…
continue reading
1
After four years of COVID-19, are we safer against future pandemics?
29:21
29:21
Afspil senere
Afspil senere
Lister
Like
Liked
29:21
This December marks four years since the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China. On this episode of Trending Globally, Dan Richards speaks with two experts from the Pandemic Center at Brown University’s School of Public Health about the ways our society’s approach to public health has changed since 2019. They discuss how we should be thin…
…
continue reading