Leonid Volkov: Is the anti-Putin movement out of options?
Riyad Mansour: Why are the diplomats failing?
Claude Joseph: Can anything save Haiti?
Jan Egeland: Is the international community failing to protect the most vulnerable?
Chris Mullin: Have lessons been learned from the Birmingham Six injustice?
Luis Abinader: Will the Dominican Republic help Haiti?
Judith Butler: Gender and identity
On the road in Guyana
Mohamed Irfaan Ali: Is oil a blessing or a curse for Guyana?
Lila Rose: Could abortion be banned in the entire US?
Tom Shakespeare: Redefining disability
Naomi Alderman: Power and technology
Humza Yousaf: Is the SNP's supremacy in Scotland under threat?
Job Sikhala: Is change possible in Zimbabwe?
Eddie Marsan: Do the arts neglect working-class people?
Danny Danon: Will Israel listen to its allies?
Arseniy Yatsenyuk: Could Ukraine lose?
Richard Haass: How should the US respond to global risks?
Daniel Dennett: Philosophy and atheism
Joan Donoghue: Has the ICJ ruling changed anything in Gaza?
Amin Salam: Can Lebanon's government avert catastrophe?
Ami Ayalon: Is Israel fighting an unwinnable war?
Mihai Popșoi: Is Moldova the new Russian battleground?
Jonathan Haidt: Should we be worried about children having smartphones?
Gabrielius Landsbergis: Does Europe back Lithuania?
Bill Blair: Canada's defence strategy
Sir Ron Dennis: The need for speed
Alexander Stubb: Has Nato membership left Finland stronger?
Gillian Slovo: Has her writing exorcised demons?
Jim Skea: Are humans bungling our chance to avert disaster?
6 March 2024
23 minutes
Available for over a year
Stephen Sackur speaks to the writer Sathnam Sanghera, whose own identity as the British son of Indian immigrants led him to look afresh at the legacy of the British Empire.
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