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Genre: Ethics & Morality
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Nick Peters

Shop Floor 14 Feb 2016

Nick Peters
Original Broadcast:

Shop Floor

Shop Floor 14 Feb 2016
Nick Peters hits the shop floor for another packed edition on workplace issues. This week, social mobility, the goal of productive work and enterprise, comes under attack. Nick Peters talks to Matthew Taylor, Chief Executive of the RSA, about the idea that social mobility could be cruel or even evil. Digital skill levels among young people mean employers are finding it harder to get qualified staff and many young people risk missing out on good jobs - Nick Peters finds out more from Nigel Walsh at CapGemini. The Prime Minister says he wants ex-offenders to have much more support moving from jail into jobs and productive lives. It’s already happening - Nick Peters discovers how from Jane Gould, a trustee of Christian charity CleanSheet. And we head east to Vietnam to meet the "Digital Nomads", young people who are taking the idea of remote working to extraordinary lengths.
Guests:

Matthew Taylor, Nigel Walsh, Jane Gould


Published:

In partnership with

Inspirational Development Group
Rita Lobo

Questions of Faith: Climate Change

Rita Lobo
Original Broadcast:

Questions Of Faith

Questions of Faith: Climate Change
Rita Lobo and Marc Shoffman are joined by Shanza Ali from the Muslim Climate Action campaign and Jean Leston from Christian environmental group Operation Noah, to discuss climate change and whether it is up to faith groups to lead on tackling the issue, only on Questions of Faith. With guest Imam Mansoor Ahmad Clark explaining the significance of change in Islam.
Guests:

Marc Shoffman, Imam Mansoor Ahmad Clark, Shanza Ali, Jean Leston


Published:
Rita Lobo

The History of Booms, Busts and Bubbles: The Bengal Famine of 1770

Rita Lobo
Original Broadcast:

The History of Booms, Busts and Bubbles

The History of Booms, Busts and Bubbles: The Bengal Famine of 1770
Rita Lobo is joined in the studio by Dr Jon Wilson, senior lecturer in British Imperial and South Asian History at King's College London, to discuss the Bengal Famine of 1770, what happened during this devastating time and how it impacted the country over the long term.
Guest:

Jon Wilson


Published:
Sarah Pennells (1)

Ask Sarah: Consumer Rights

Sarah Pennells (1)
Original Broadcast:

Ask Sarah

Ask Sarah: Consumer Rights
On 1st October 2015, new legislation to protect and clarify consumer rights comes into force. Sarah is joined in the studio by James Walker, CEO of Resolver, and Martyn James from the Financial Ombudsman's Service, to answer your questions about consumer rights, what they are, and how they apply in different situations.
Guests:

James Walker, Martyn James


Published:
Sarah Pennells (1)

Your Money, Your Future: Tax-Efficient Charitable Giving

Sarah Pennells (1)
Original Broadcast:

Your Money, Your Future

Your Money, Your Future: Tax-Efficient Charitable Giving
Sarah Pennells is joined in the studio by Anita Monteith from the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, and over the phone by George Bull, a Senior Tax Partner at Baker Tilly, and Rachel Smith, co-founder of GlobalGiving UK, to discuss giving to charity in a tax-efficient way. Find out how to give as you earn, how to leave part of your estate, and what the tax benefits can be.
Guests:

Anita Monteith, George Bull, Rachel Smith


Published:
Juliette Foster

How Quakerism can influence business for the better today

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Ethics, Charities and NGO's with Juliette Foster

How Quakerism can influence business for the better today
Mike King, author of 'Quakernomics: An Ethical Capitalism' discusses how Quakerism can influence business for the better today

Published:
Colin Bloom

Share Politics: Right To Die

Colin Bloom
Original Broadcast:

Share Politics

Share Politics: Right To Die
Colin Bloom is joined by Liberal Democrat politician, Dr Evan Harris, about the recent Right To Die bill.
Guest:

Evan Harris


Published:
Georgie Frost

How to Change the World

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

Fair Deal

How to Change the World
In 1971, a group of friends set off to sail into a nuclear test zone in a boat called Greenpeace, and their protest captured the world’s imagination. Now a new documentary called How to Change the World reveals never before seen archive to bring their story to life, and in this show Georgie Frost chats to director Jerry Rothwell.
Guest:

Jerry Rothwell


Published:
Georgie Frost

High Profile names call for action on Climate Change

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

Fair Deal

High Profile names call for action on Climate Change
Many high profile figures including Desmond Tutu and Vivienne Westwood are calling for mass climate change action ahead of the UN's Paris conference in December. Their statement, published in the book Stop Climate Crimes, reads "We are at a crossroads. We do not want to be compelled to survive in a world that has been made barely liveable for us..." In this show Georgie finds out more from 350.org who are one of the environmental groups behind the project.
Guest:

Nicolas Haeringer


Published:
Ed Mitchell

What make a city liveable?

Ed Mitchell
Original Broadcast:

Ethics, Charities and NGO's with Juliette Foster

What make a city liveable?
Robert Van Egghen reports on the Economist Intelligence Unit's annual report on the world's most liveable cities

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