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The Prospect Interview

Oliver Burkeman: The power of negative thinking

This week, journalist and author Oliver Burkeman joins Prospect’s Ellen Halliday and Mindful life columnist Sarah Collins to talk mental health and building a meaningful life—and why his new book, Meditations for Mortals, really isn’t self-help.


Plus, freelance political journalist Jonn Elledge dials in from the Lib Dem conference in Brighton to help us decide whether Ed Davey's party is a “banger” or a “dud”.

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  • Yanis Varoufakis on Mamdani, hope and resistance

    48:30|
    How should the left resist fascism?This week, Prospect’s Ben Clark speaks to Yanis Varoufakis, economist and Greece’s former finance minister, whose most recent book is Raise Your Soul: A Personal History of Resistance.Yanis reflects on writing a feminist history as a man, what his family’s encounters with Nazism taught him, and whether today’s left can still speak to young men drifting toward the far right.He also weighs in on Ukraine, as well as Zohran Mamdani’s performance in the New York mayoral race, despite the decline of the Democrats.Plus, Yanis reflects on optimism, resistance and the women who taught him both.Stay tuned for Ben’s profile of Yanis, which will be published at prospectmagazine.co.uk
  • The Future of Aid

    36:55|
    In this episode of Policy Insights, sponsored by ASI and produced by Prospect Publishing, Prospect deputy editor Ellen Halliday talks to Annalisa Prizzon from ODI Global, Daniel Pimlott from ASI, and Stefan Dercon from the Blavatnik Institute and Oxford University about the future of foreign aid.Our expert guests share their perspectives on the changing dynamics of foreign aid and explore how and why the international development sector is changing.They discuss the impact of cuts in budgets from the UK, USA and elsewhere, the shift towards localisation and how the UK and other countries can maintain their influence and drive change in the global development sector.ASI is a social impact business that works with governments, international organisations, companies and civil society to design and deliver aid programmes that address the big challenges facing the world.
  • Halloween special: AI and modern monsters

    38:56|
    Zombies, werewolves and...ChatGPT?In this week’s spooky special, Ellen and Alona are joined by historian and “monster consultant” Surekha Davies, who argues that humans have always created monsters to understand the world—and ourselves.In her new book Humans: A Monstrous History, she explores a history of monsters, as well as the weird and horrifying monsters we’ve created in modern day life, including through Silicon Valley’s visions for artificial intelligence. Is technology pushing flesh-and-blood humans to the margins?The three also discuss “monsterification” in political rhetoric as a way to frame the Other, including discourse about asylum seekers.Plus, Ellen and Alona talk celebrity authors: banger or dud?Surekha’s book ‘Humans: A Monstrous History’ is available now. Halloween Werewolf Intro by miksmusic.
  • ‘Petty rules make no sense in an authoritarian takeover!’

    52:19|
    Does Washington need a shake up?As the Democratic party faces its lowest favourability ratings on record, one man wants to completely change its brand. This week, Prospect’s Ben Clark speaks to Saikat Chakrabarti, progressive political adviser and former chief of staff to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is now running for Congress himself.Saikat discusses running against Democratic powerbroker Nancy Pelosi, reveals his frustration with conventional Washington politicking, and shares what he thinks the Democrats are doing wrong. He also talks about how his Silicon Valley career radicalised him, “opportunist” tech billionaires, and meeting Peter Thiel.Plus, Ellen and Alona discuss Celebrity Traitors: “banger” or “dud”?To read Ben’s piece “Saikat Chakrabarti is coming for the Democratic establishment”, click here: https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/views/people/71150/saikat-chakrabarti-is-coming-for-the-democratic-establishment
  • Trump, texting and taking a stand

    37:16|
    This month our writers are reflective: Alice Goodman asks how to be a priest in divided times, while Gen Z-er Alice Garnett questions the assumptions that underpin modern texting etiquette. Mindful life writer Sarah Collins decides to shift her pessimistic mindset, while rural life writer Kiran Sidhu learns to let go.
  • Robert Jenrick and the rise of British ethnonationalism

    41:48|
    This week, political columnist Ben Ansell joins Prospect’s Alona and Imaan to discuss the rise of ethnonationalism in British politics, and the popularisation of the term “white British”. Ben explains the origin and implications of a term that has gone politically “viral”.He also discusses how a national conversation about asylum policy has “metastasised” into criticism of legal migrants—and now a suspicion that white British citizens are losing out to non-white Brits. Was this an inevitable consequence of an existing trend in the Conservative party, or not? How should the Labour government respond? And where does this end?Plus, Imaan and Alona talk sibling rivalries and whether AI book summaries are a “banger” or a “dud”.To read Ben’s column “Who’s ‘white British’? Who cares?”, click here: https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/71217/whos-white-british-who-cares
  • Israeli genocide scholar: ‘My country is in denial’

    32:48|
    This week, Alona is joined by Omer Bartov, the Israeli-American historian and professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Brown University. Two years after the Hamas-led attack in southern Israel, Israel’s retaliation has killed one in 33 Gazans. Omer argues that the war on Gaza is genocidal—and that many Israelis are in denial about what their government is doing. On the podcast, Omer explains how this denial operates and its historical parallels. He argues that denialism has roots in his country’s origin story, as the onslaught becomes a “second Nakba”. And he reflects on his personal journey, as an Israeli who grew up in the early days of the state. To read Omer’s essay “A State of Denial”, the cover of Prospect’s latest issue, out today, head to prospectmagazine.co.uk.
  • Does Labour have a ‘culture problem’? With Lucy Powell and Stella Creasy

    52:51|
    The Labour government is struggling and the party is divided. Meanwhile, Reform is on the rise, and the Tories are collapsing. What kind of change does Labour need, if it is to get back on track? This week, Ellen and Alona dial in from the party conference in Liverpool, where they’re joined by Walthamstow MP Stella Creasy, and deputy leadership candidate Lucy Powell.Powell explains why she’s running, and the importance of wrestling back the political narrative from Reform, while Creasy criticises the party’s current lack of internal dialogue and emphasises the need for cultural change.How can the party reconnect with voters? And, despite all the deputy leadership candidates being women, why has Labour never had a female leader?To read more of our coverage of the Labour party conference, click here.
  • Cass Sunstein: How corporations are manipulating us

    39:03|
    Are we all being manipulated? This week, Ellen and Alona are joined by Cass Sunstein–one of the scholars behind “nudge” theory–who explains how companies exploit our cognitive biases for their own profit.Cass is the founder and director of the Program on Behavioral Economics and Public Policy at Harvard, and author of Manipulation: What It Is, Why It’s Bad, What to Do about It. He explores the place of manipulation in a capitalist system, and whether technology is making manipulation a bigger problem than ever before. But can we protect ourselves from it?Plus, Ellen and Alona discuss the return of Bake Off: “banger” or “dud”?