Podcast appearances and mentions of ellen mcarthur

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Best podcasts about ellen mcarthur

Latest podcast episodes about ellen mcarthur

Un Jour dans l'Histoire
La folle semaine de Lucile Poulain

Un Jour dans l'Histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 21:31


Les baisers les plus mémorables du cinéma, la naissance du mouvement Dada, Ellen McArthur battant le record du tour du monde à la voile, la mort de Mary Wilson, célèbre membre des Supremes ou encore celle de la comtesse de Ségur, voilà le programme de cette nouvelle folle semaine avec Lucile Poulain pour ce mardi" Sujets traités : Ingrid Bergman , Humphrey Bogart Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Dada, Hugo Ball,Ellen MacArthur ,Mary Wilson ,Diana Ross, comtesse de Ségur Illustration: Affiche Dada/T. van Doesburg (Wikipedia commons) Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 15h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.

Ocean Matters
World Oceans Day, by Ellen McArthur and Wendy Schmidt

Ocean Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 16:41


A great article helping us see how oceans can be healed by changing systemic anthropogenic based problems :) The article I share is from Fortune.com authored by Wendy Schmidt and Ellen McArthur. 'A handful of companies have the power to save the oceans. Here's why we're urging them to reinvent our land-based food systems.

Ganamos con Ellas
Ganamos con Ellas. Las mujeres en el deporte - 332 - 27 octubre 2022

Ganamos con Ellas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 60:00


Conocemos el parkour, una modalidad que será deporte de demostración en los Juegos de París 2024, con Stefy Navarro que acaba de proclamarse subcampeona del mundo en los primeros mundiales de la historia. Protagonismo para el balonmano porque empieza el Europeo para las Guerreras y el Lobas Oviedo es el actual líder de la nueva Liga Oro. Nos lo cuenta Andrea Martínez y entrevistamos a la figura clave del Lobas Global Atac, Aida Palicio. Y hablamos de los Premios Princesa de Asturias con Ana Amelia Menéndez que compartió un acto con el Equipo Olímpico de Refugiados y pudo hablar con Lydia Murungi, responsable de Game Connect en Uganda. Y nuestra campeona olímpica, Ángela Pumariega, nos habla de la figura de Ellen McArthur, premio Cooperación Internacional por la economía circular que empezó a desarrollar circunnavegando el planeta en solitario.

Ganamos con ellas
Programa 332

Ganamos con ellas

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2022 60:00


Conocemos el parkour, una modalidad que será deporte de demostración en los Juegos de París 2024, con Stefy Navarro que acaba de proclamarse subcampeona del mundo en los primeros mundiales de la historia. Protagonismo para el balonmano porque empieza el Europeo para las Guerreras y el Lobas Oviedo es el actual líder de la nueva Liga Oro. Nos lo cuenta Andrea Martínez y entrevistamos a la figura clave del Lobas Global Atac, Aida Palicio. Y hablamos de los Premios Princesa de Asturias con Ana Amelia Menéndez que compartió un acto con el Equipo Olímpico de Refugiados y pudo hablar con Lydia Murungi, responsable de Game connect en Uganda. Y nuestra campeona olímpica, Ángela Pumariega, nos habla de la figura de Ellen McArthur, premio Cooperación Internacional por la economía circular que empezó a desarrollar circunnavegando el planeta en solitario.

Ganamos con ellas
Programa 332

Ganamos con ellas

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2022 60:00


Conocemos el parkour, una modalidad que será deporte de demostración en los Juegos de París 2024, con Stefy Navarro que acaba de proclamarse subcampeona del mundo en los primeros mundiales de la historia. Protagonismo para el balonmano porque empieza el Europeo para las Guerreras y el Lobas Oviedo es el actual líder de la nueva Liga Oro. Nos lo cuenta Andrea Martínez y entrevistamos a la figura clave del Lobas Global Atac, Aida Palicio. Y hablamos de los Premios Princesa de Asturias con Ana Amelia Menéndez que compartió un acto con el Equipo Olímpico de Refugiados y pudo hablar con Lydia Murungi, responsable de Game connect en Uganda. Y nuestra campeona olímpica, Ángela Pumariega, nos habla de la figura de Ellen McArthur, premio Cooperación Internacional por la economía circular que empezó a desarrollar circunnavegando el planeta en solitario.

Ganamos con ellas
Programa 332

Ganamos con ellas

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2022 60:00


Conocemos el parkour, una modalidad que será deporte de demostración en los Juegos de París 2024, con Stefy Navarro que acaba de proclamarse subcampeona del mundo en los primeros mundiales de la historia. Protagonismo para el balonmano porque empieza el Europeo para las Guerreras y el Lobas Oviedo es el actual líder de la nueva Liga Oro. Nos lo cuenta Andrea Martínez y entrevistamos a la figura clave del Lobas Global Atac, Aida Palicio. Y hablamos de los Premios Princesa de Asturias con Ana Amelia Menéndez que compartió un acto con el Equipo Olímpico de Refugiados y pudo hablar con Lydia Murungi, responsable de Game connect en Uganda. Y nuestra campeona olímpica, Ángela Pumariega, nos habla de la figura de Ellen McArthur, premio Cooperación Internacional por la economía circular que empezó a desarrollar circunnavegando el planeta en solitario.

Choses à Savoir CÉLÉBRITÉS
Pourquoi la navigatrice Ellen MacArthur s'est-elle engagée en faveur de l'environnement ?

Choses à Savoir CÉLÉBRITÉS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 2:32


Navigatrice de renom, Ellen McArthur s'est notamment illustrée en battant le record du tour du monde à la voile en solitaire, en 2005. Entre-temps décorée de la Légion d'Honneur française, la Britannique a également décidé de changer de cap après sa retraite. La voilà du coup engagée en faveur du développement durable.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Fashion Feed
089 - 10 Design Pillars for Circular Fashion with Sandra Nicole Freiman

The Fashion Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 58:31


Sandra is a Swedish designer with a long experience in the fashion industry, in recent years focusing on sustainability. She started out working for some of Sweden's biggest fashion chains and then decided to move to Paris to learn more about handcraft, do her masters and freelance for mid to luxury brands. There she got the inspiration for her slow fashion brand called Scandienne, a wordplay of Scandinavia + Parisienne that marries the two aesthetics. Now she has more than 10 years of experience and wants to spread the word about circular design and strategies.   In this episode we discuss : the 10 key areas to consider within circular design   LINKS MENTIONED IN THE EPISODE Nike's design guide: https://www.nikecirculardesign.com/guides/CircularityGuide.pdf   Ikea's design guide: https://about.ikea.com/en/about-us/our-view-on/designing-for-circularity-and-our-future   Ellen McArthur's design guide: circulardesignguide.com   Redress design award's winner runner up: https://www.redressdesignaward.com/2021/jin-pei-wen YOU CAN KEEP IN TOUCH WITH SANDRA VIA THE LINKS BELOW: https://www.instagram.com/sandranicolestudio http://sandranicole.se   LISTEN You can listen by clicking through to Apple Podcast here Remember to hit the subscribe button so you don't miss an episode!   contact me If you'd like to find out more about working together on your brand, click here

DispatchCast
Haunted Brainerd: Last Turn Saloon

DispatchCast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2020 25:15


The Last Turn Saloon is one of Brainerd’s oldest and most iconic businesses, dating back to the early pioneer and railroad days of the city that grew from the banks of the Mississippi River. Its current location on South Eighth Street is not the original — the first Last Turn was located at the corner of Fourth Street South and Front Street. The original saloon was the site of one of Brainerd’s darkest moments, as was recently recounted in the pages of the Dispatch by contributor Jeremy Jackson. A public lynching of two brothers of mixed Native American and European heritage accused of murdering a white woman named Ellen McArthur took place outside. That was July 1872. The brothers pleaded not guilty, were never tried and no verdict was ever brought in the case.  With a morbid history like that, it would be understandable if a creepy feeling persisted with the place. But it’s actually the second location on Eighth Street that appears to be haunted by any number of apparitions. At least, that’s what many former employees would swear by. The DispatchCast speaks with one of those employees to hear the haunted tales of the Last Turn Saloon. Host/Producer: Chelsey Perkins Guests: Jennifer Karas, Ed Mattson

Radio Ponton
Les entretiens de Radio Ponton, EP.5 : Roland Jourdain raconte son Vendée Globe 2001

Radio Ponton

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 21:25


Rageant de passer des jours à réparer au mouillage au Chili, alors que “Bilou” menait la danse à la barre de Sill… N’empêche, cette escale forcée  lui a laissé de sacrés souvenirs ! C’était sur le Vendée Globe 2001, Michel Desjoyeaux et Ellen McArthur en profitaient pour prendre le pouvoir et ne le lâcheraient plus. … Continuer la lecture de Les entretiens de Radio Ponton, EP.5 : Roland Jourdain raconte son Vendée Globe 2001

Live Inspired Podcast with John O'Leary
11 Ways to Be 'Superhuman' (Rowan Hooper) Ep. #105

Live Inspired Podcast with John O'Leary

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2018 48:32


What makes someone superhuman? Is it their cape? Their blue tights? Their ability to fly, jump or leap? My guest today was curious about the subject and, instead of turning to Marvel, Superman or the X-Men franchise for answers, he searched the world to find the finest examples of individuals who personify the 11 'super-human' traits. Today he shares what his research means for us. Grab your journal, your cape (put it on!) and get ready to soar into life with Rowan Hooper.  SHOW NOTES: "People who try lots of different things are more likely to find things they really like and are really good at." Check out this recent article from chess grandmaster John Nun who Rowan shares innately understood math since age 4. "IQ itself is quite stable throughout life, but it does not guarantee personal outcome. Lots of people who are incredibly successful do not have particularly high IQs." Memory, on the other-hand, is something we can all improve with tricks and practice. John and Rowan discuss the Marshmallow test check it out. This video shares the story of Ellen McArthur, the British sailor, Rowan talked about her drive + her world record for fastest solo circumnavigation of globe. What have you learned about focus, that we can apply as we try to sell more insurance + lead better lives? "It's about having a goal, something you want to do in the future or something you need to complete in the next hour. Either way, identifying the reason for doing it + keeping it clear in your mind. It doesn't have to be dramatic. Identifying a goal and finding steps towards it will help you achieve that goal." "That moment her life changed + she chose to make something of it. She was empowered by this appalling thing that happened." With longevity comes happiness. People I met over 100 had an incredible positivity, can-do attitude + innate happiness. Get back up again and carried on. that is something we can all strive to do a bit more, not to get disheartened or knocked down. to carry on. they had a curiosity about life, that trait did seem to be spread across all the people I met in different ways. Get a copy of Rowan Hooper's book SUPERHUMAN here.  If you enjoyed thinking about what you can do to improve your business, life + impact through Rowan's insights: Check out episode #103 with Brené Brown to get tips on how to improve your leadership through vulnerability. Or, episode #98 with Radha Agrawal on how to improve your sense of community + feel more connected.  ROWAN HOOPER'S LIVE INSPIRED 7 1. What is the best book you’ve ever read? Lonesome Dove, Larry McCurty. It's an American Western, the characters in it stay with you forever, just like Huckleberry Finn. 2. What is a characteristic or trait that you possessed as a child that you wish you still exhibited today? Intensity of focus + ability to become obsessively interested enough to delve in and find new things. 3. Your house is on fire, all living things and people are out. You have the opportunity to run in and grab one item. What would it be? A steal box with old travel journals and photos. The reason it is in a steal box is that if there ever is a fire, it can survive. 4. You are sitting on a bench overlooking a gorgeous beach. You have the opportunity to have a long conversation with anyone living or dead. Who would it be? Charles Darwin. He was my hero growing up because he was an incredibly wise and passionate man who changed our world. The first question I'd ask: What do we do now about understanding the world? I'd try to update him and then ask his advice. 5. What is the best advice you've ever received? Do what you want to do. Don't force people to do things they don't want to do. Let them find their own way. 6. What advice would you give your 20-year-old self? Don't drink so much! Just enjoy your youth. Feel it while you've got it. 7. It’s been said that all great people can have their lives summed up in one sentence. How do you want yours to read? He was a nice guy, did a few cool things and inspired people with the stories he told of other people. *** If you enjoyed today’s episode: Subscribe, rate & review on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts. See you here next Thursday! Live Inspired with John daily on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Instagram + get his Monday Motivation email. Get a John's #1 National Best-selling book ON FIRE here (use code podcast at checkout for 15% off).

WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare Press
Eva Kruse, on the Copenhagen Fashion Summit

WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare Press

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2018 52:28


How can we begin to solve fashion’s most pressing sustainability issues? We need collaboration, knowledge-sharing, and a willingness to look fearlessly at what's wrong as well as the opporunities for positive change. We need the movers and shakers to get involved, and stakeholders from all areas of the industry to join them. We need fresh ideas and points of view. Enter, the Copenhagen Fashion Summit.  Organisers liken the summit "the Davos of the fashion industry", and say: "it’s a nexus for agenda-setting discussions on the most critical environmental, social and ethical issues facing our industry and planet.” So this is a table you want to be at! Which is why... We are bringing you some special Episodes of the Wardrobe Crisis podcast from this year’s event, starting with this one, with its very engaging CEO and president Eva Kruse. Eva founded the summit in 2009 to coincide with United Nations summit on climate change that happened in Copenhagen that year. Very forward-thinking - at a time when it was rare for businesses to discuss sustainability in public, even if you were working away at it behind the scenes. And fashion really wasn’t part of the climate change conversation. Fast-forward nine years, and everyone wants a ticket - from designers like Stella McCartney to media leaders such as Graydon Carter, from circular economy leaders like Ellen McArthur and William McDonough, to the CEO's of the big fashion companies and the founders of small ones. The daughter of activist parents, Eva Kruse attended a progressive Danish business school called Kaos Pilot. She fell into a TV career then went onto become a renowned magazine editor. She was instrumental in the creation of the Danish Fashion Institute and Copenhagen fashion week in 2005, and is much loved in the industry for her big ideas and, more importantly, her ability to make them happen.    How fab is our music? THANK YOU Montaigne. She is singing an acoustic version of Because I love You. Follow Clare on Instagram and Twitter @mrspress Love the podcast? We have a Patreon page if you'd like to support us. We are always grateful for ratings and reviews on iTunes - it helps new listeners to find us.  Happy listening!

Impact Revolution
023 The Circular Economy

Impact Revolution

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2018


The circular economy is a fascinating concept: it is a way to reorganise our society in a more sustainable way that creates a win-win-win situation for consumers, producers and the environment. I’m a huge fan myself and believe that everyone interested on sustainability topics should know something about the circular transformation. And that's why this episode is dedicated to circularity! So what is this circular economy? As it’s name suggests, the circular economy reorganises our economic system in continuous circles, or loops. It is built on Michael Braungart and William McDonough’s principle of “cradle to cradle”, the understanding that all resources shall be used and reused over and over again. By seeing waste as food for new things, the circular economy eliminates the idea of trash as we know it, and sees every component as valuable even after the life cycle of its original use is over. And of course, the circualr economy uses renewable energy sources of greener production, too. The circular ecocnomy uses a methodology called biomimicry, which basically means imitating nature. Think about it: in nature, waste simply doesnt exist, everyhing is one ecosystem. If a tree produces an apple, it gets eaten and digested by an animal, then pooped out somewhere else where a new plant can grow. Each leave that falls down or animal that dies will naturally decompose into healthy soil. Landfills, and the accumulation of resources that find no further use are a fairly stupid invention of human beings that have never before existed in the natural environment. Why do we need a circular system? There is a strong connection between globalization, our spike in consumption and climate change: In the last century, the world population has quadrupled and our economic output was multiplied by twenty, and we’re now stretching far beyond what our planet can naturally provide. Last year, human production and consumption already needed 1.7 earths to recover all the resources we used - this means we are irreversibly damaging the natural ecosystem. On top, our waste generation is getting out of hand, household trash alone is expected to double and reach 3,000 million tons per year in 2030. And as the population keeps rising, so does the amount of people entering the middle class and aspriring the western lifestyle - so increasing the demand for cars, meat, devices, clothes and so on, or to put it simply: stretching our resource extraction and waste generation even more. It's not only the amount of resources and products we consume and the trash we generate, it is also the way we do it. We buy, use, and throw away, we make, take and dispose. Every few months, it seems, we need a new cellphone, every few weeks new clothes. And what happens with our stuff after we use it is something we barely think about - all that matters is to be always up to date. Global supply chains make us forget where our products even come from, how they work and how we could repair them. On top, products are often engineered in a way that is neither made to last nor to repair, a strategy called built-in obsolescence. The cost for the environment of our linear economy is huge: Just the electronic waste we produce in Europe per year amount to 1.500 million tons of co2, as much as the energy production in Germany, the UK and Poland together, as the European Environmental Buerau calculates.As Ken Webster, one of the leading economists of the Ellen McArthur foundation, points out, the linear "take, make dispose" model is based on on short-term profitability and dependent on the abundance of materials, easy credit, low-priced energy and cheap labour. However, all of these factors are becoming more and more expensive due to legislations, economic development, increasing labour right awareness and learnings from the global financial crisis.Changing the way we make thingsThe circular economy on the other hand frees itself from the dependency of such factors by redesigning production and consumption. As Hawken, Lovens and Lovens describe in their book Natural Capitalism, increasing natural productivity and moving from a product- to a service based economy are some ways to realise the circular economy. It provides us with an opportunity to source from materials that are already available and engage in new sorts of innovation. This way, we can alleviate many of the previously mentioned pressures on the natural environment: it reduces virgin resource usage, carbon emissions, waste creation and the release of toxins.Creating a win-win-win situationhe fantastic news is that the circular economy can provide a win-win-win situation: companies can grow their profits, customers save costs and the environment become more sustainable. McKinsey has calculated that circular economy has the potential to generate annual economic benefits of €1.8 trillion by 2030 in Europe alone. Even though you might think that we Europeans are not doing not such a bad job in recycling, research shows that we currently capture only 5% of raw materials this way - that leaves a 95% opportunity for improvement and value creation! Also, the circular economy can provide new jobs and improve the overall wellbeing of everyone in society. They further estimate that each of us Europeans could save 60-80% in mobility expenses, reduce our food spending by 25-40% and also decrease our housing costs by 25-35%. In this way, fighting climate change could not only improve the water and air around us, but also give us more money to spend on things we really like. Isn’t that good news? How to make it happenOne of the main barriers of implementing the circular economy are high economic investments from the public sector to guarantee necessary research, design, subsidies, asset investment as well as digital and physical infrastructure. The British government has calculated that on a european level, a fully efficient reuse and recycling system would require costs of €108 billion. Reality looks different: the European Commission only commits to around 6 billion euro for this program. And apart from sufficient financing, both business and policy leaders must adopt a different mentality to think about production, product lifecycles and material usage and shift their focus from short-term profitability (or election periods) to sustainability and success in the long term. We as customers must understand and demand circular products, make switches and refuse the comfort of their current disposable lifestyle . Furthermore, business and policy must show willingness to collaborate rather than compete, as knowledge sharing is one of the key elements of the circular economy: there needs to be an active exchange of skills, technologies and research in order to create system-wide loops and facilitate the composition, decomposition and new assembly of a variety of products. I’ve spoken about the benefits of an open source circular economy with economist and artist Lars Zimmerman, in an earlier episode of Impact Revolution. Also, states must provide necessary infrastructure to facilitate the flow of materials, such as recycling facilities, sorting and collection systems and give access to all actors along the supply chain, including the end-user. That means that it should become easy for you as a consumer to get rid of the things you no longer use and disassemble them into their reusable components. Circular solutions already existLet me give you some examples of circular solutions that area already out there!1) Recycle and recoverThese are business models based on recyclable materials which we usually see as waste. Its a very important step for greener production, as the extraction of raw resources can take around 75% of the whole energy necessary in the manufacturing process. Examples here are streets built out of plastic waste and a British brewery that uses old bread to make delicious beer. What a solution to food waste! 2) Replace materialsThe Circular supply chain tries to find alternatives for rare or environmentally harmful resources, such as smartphone components or water-intense cotton and replace them with renewable, reusable materials. These are companies that make rain jackets out of pet bottles or grow vegan leather out of mushrooms.3) Make it last Here it is imporatant to increase the lifetime of each product. We usually throw things away becasue they break, they become out of fashion or we simply do’t need them anymore. In each of those cases, there is still some value in the product, so we need to find ways to make it easier to reuse, repair, sell second hand and update products that are already there. Secondly, companies should take the end of the product life into account by making decomposion of products as easy as possible. 4) Share Sharing platforms are a big deal in the circular economy - and something our generation loves! I probably won’t have to tell anyone how airbnb or carsharing works and in which way it improves our resource consumption, but have you ever heard of a library of things where you can rent electric drills or lawnmowers? The digitalisation makes it so much easier to connect and share with others, especially since we use 80% of the things we own less than once a month. 5) Services, not productsConnected to the sharing economy are models where the producers remain the owner of what they make, and merely rent it out to the end users. Philips now sells light as service to buildings instead of light bulbs, which drastically shifts the objectives of their engineers and sales people. Instead of focusing at high quantity and lower quality, engineers now have to create the best and most durable bulbs, and suddenly energy efficiency of their products reflects directly on the company’s balance sheet. And even if a product fails, it goes back directly to the producer, becomes his responsibility and available for repair or reuse. See the difference?There is hopeThis podcast episode should be able to give you the basics of the circular economy, make you learn why it makes so much sense and in which way it would be possible to realise. One of the most powerful characteristics of this model is the win-win-win situation it describes, and to me the fact that both governments and corporations, as well as many entrepreneurs are already working on creating circular products and processes is a clear symbol that we're on the right way. Let's use the power we have through our purchasing decisions and support anyone in transition to this model!If you have any further questions on this, please get in touch! You can reach me on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/theimpactrevolution/) and Instagram (instagram.com/impact_revolution/) - I'm excited to read your messages. Folge direkt herunterladen

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2016. Gendering Economic History. Professor Jane Humphries. Lecture 1 Women, work and wages: from the Black Death to the industrial revolution

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2016 49:33


Eve also Delved: Gendering Economic History, Professor Jane Humphries, Ellen McArthur Lectures 2016 Women from all times and regions will be seen about their daily lives, at work and at home, in these 4 lectures. New sources will be used to reconstruct and analyze their many productive contributions to their families and communities. Snapshots in time and micro studies underpin a more general account which can then be related to the grand narratives of British economic history. I will argue that we need to acknowledge the productive activities of women and children to build not only a more complete but a more correct economic history.

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2016. Eve also Delved: Gendering Economic History. Professor Jane Humphries Lecture 2. The spinster: a tragic heroine of the industrial revolution?

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2016 56:36


Eve Also Delved: Gendering Economic History, Professor Jane Humphries. Women from all times and regions will be seen about their daily lives, at work and at home, in these 4 lectures. New sources will be used to reconstruct and analyze their many productive contributions to their families and communities. Snapshots in time and micro studies underpin a more general account which can then be related to the grand narratives of British economic history. I will argue that we need to acknowledge the productive activities of women and children to build not only a more complete but a more correct economic history.

Economic and Social History
Ellen McArthur Lectures 2016. Eve also Delved: Gendering Economic History, Professor Jane Humphries, Lecture 3

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2016 54:40


Eve also Delved: Gendering Economic History, Professor Jane Humphries, Lecture 3 Women from all times and regions will be seen about their daily lives, at work and at home, in these 4 lectures. New sources will be used to reconstruct and analyze their many productive contributions to their families and communities. Snapshots in time and micro studies underpin a more general account which can then be related to the grand narratives of British economic history. I will argue that we need to acknowledge the productive activities of women and children to build not only a more complete but a more correct economic history.

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 3 Q&A

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 20:50


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Q&A following Lecture 3 of 4, Falling Behind in the Golden Age of European Economic Growth, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 4

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 64:01


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Lecture 4 of 4, Reversing Relative Economic Decline: Thatcher and Sons in HIstorical Context, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 1 Q&A

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 24:11


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Q&A following Lecture 1 of 4, The First Industrial Revolution: Perspectives from Before and After, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 1

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 56:59


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Lecture 1 of 4, The First Industrial Revolution: Perspectives from Before and After, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts, Lecture 2

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 63:44


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Lecture 2 of 4, What were the Real Penalties of the Early Start?, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 2 Q&A.

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 24:32


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Q&A following Lecture 2 of 4, What were the Real Penalties of the Early Start?, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick

Economic and Social History
The Ellen McArthur Lectures 2009. Professor Nick Crafts. Lecture 4 Q&A

Economic and Social History

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2010 31:02


The Ellen McArthur Lectures, 2009 “From the 18th to the 21st Century: a Perspective on 250 Years of Economic Growth” Q&A following Lecture 4 of 4, Reversing Relative Economc Decline: Thatcher and Sons in Historical Context, by Professor N.F.R. Crafts, University of Warwick