Start Worrying Details To Follow

Ein Podcast von Aftonbladet

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26 Folgen

  1. "Capitalism is another form of oppression" - Lea Ypi

    Vom: 11.3.2022
  2. “We need to think hard on why it is so difficult to achieve real democracy.”

    Vom: 11.6.2021
  3. How Can We Build a Better Democracy?

    Vom: 16.4.2021
  4. Post-corona capitalism – with Adam Tooze

    Vom: 16.12.2020
  5. "Freedom is impossible under capitalism"

    Vom: 6.10.2020
  6. “Attacking the media is a part of a political strategy” - Jay Rosen

    Vom: 20.9.2018
  7. „Any discussion of technology needs to be grounded in geopolitics” - Evgeny Morozov

    Vom: 15.8.2018
  8. “Davos-man is Finally Being Challenged” - Katrine Marcal

    Vom: 9.5.2018
  9. ”The Real Problem isn’t Populism” - Cas Mudde

    Vom: 16.3.2018
  10. ”Facebook has the power to swing elections” - Zeynep Tufekci

    Vom: 8.2.2018
  11. „Don’t be an asshole would be a good slogan for the 21st century” - Yascha Mounk

    Vom: 6.12.2017
  12. „The propaganda of globalization" - Pankaj Mishra

    Vom: 2.11.2017
  13. "Politics has been turned into a carneval" - Peter Pomerantsev

    Vom: 13.10.2017
  14. „The internet drives populism“ - Anne Applebaum

    Vom: 1.9.2017
  15. „Silicon Valley is full of people with Asperger“ - Joi Ito

    Vom: 27.6.2017
  16. „Facebook is dangerous for democracy“ - Ethan Zuckerman

    Vom: 14.6.2017
  17. „Globalisation is not fate“ - Dani Rodrik

    Vom: 30.5.2017
  18. „Technology tears down the foundations of society“ - Daron Acemoglu

    Vom: 23.5.2017
  19. „Keynesianism in one country is not possible“ - Arthur Goldhammer

    Vom: 8.5.2017
  20. „Capitalism cannot continue forever“ - Wolfgang Streeck

    Vom: 27.4.2017

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Start Worrying, Details to Follow is a podcast by Aftonbladet Kultur. Hosted by Karin Pettersson, culture editor for Aftonbladet and Georg Diez editor in chief of The New Institute: Conversations with leading scholars and thinkers about radical new ideas and the future of democracy in an age of technological disruption and exploding inequalities.

Visit the podcast's native language site