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All Seasons

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 Law's Expanding Empire

    • June 23, 2020
    • BBC Parliament

    In the 19th century, the law dealt with only a very narrow range of human problems.

  • S2019E02 In Praise of Politics

    • June 30, 2020
    • BBC Parliament

    Jonathan Sumption discusses state legitimacy and how democracy can be effective in accommodating political differences.

  • S2019E03 Human Rights and Wrongs

    • July 7, 2020
    • BBC Parliament

    In his third lecture, Jonathan Sumption argues that concepts of human rights have a long history in the common law.

  • S2019E04 Rights and the Ideal Constitution

    • July 14, 2020
    • BBC Parliament

    Jonathan Sumption, formerly one of England and Wales's most senior judges sitting in the UK's Supreme Court, assesses the US and UK's constitutional models.

  • S2019E05 Shifting the Foundations

    • July 21, 2020
    • BBC Parliament

    In this final lecture, former judge Jonathan Sumption makes some suggestions to restore faith in democracy – starting by fixing the party system and changing the way we vote.

Season 2020

  • S2020E01 Lecture 1: From Moral to Market Sentiments

    • December 2, 2020

    In this first lecture, recorded with a virtual audience, Mark Carney reflects that whenever he could step back from what felt like daily crisis management, the same deeper issues loomed. What is value? How does the way we assess value both shape our values and constrain our choices? How do the valuations of markets affect the values of our society? Carney argues that society has come to embody Oscar Wilde's old aphorism: "knowing the price of everything but the value of nothing."

  • S2020E02 Lecture 2: From Credit Crisis to Resilience

    • December 9, 2020

    Mark Carney, the former Governor of the Bank of England, takes us back to the high drama of the financial crisis of 2008, which ended a period when bankers saw themselves as unassailable Masters of the Universe. More than a decade on, how much have the bankers changed their ways? How far has the financial sector changed? Dr Carney says that we must remain vigilant and resist the “three lies of finance.” If we don’t, he warns, we will live with a system which is ill-prepared for the next crisis.

  • S2020E03 Lecture 3: From Covid Crisis to Renaissance

    • December 16, 2020

    Mark Carney, the former Governor of the Bank of England, observes that the pandemic has forced states to confront how we value health, wealth and opportunity. During the first few months of the crisis, most states chose to value human life more than the economic well-being of the nation-state. But if that seems to be changing how do we assess value in this sense? Dr Carney elucidates surprising differences in the financial value put on a human life in different nations – and goes on to argue that this reductionist approach fails to take into account deeper thinking about the worth of human existence

  • S2020E04 Lecture 4: From Climate Crisis to Real Prosperity

    • December 25, 2020

    In his four BBC Reith Lectures, Dr Mark Carney, the former Governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, charts how we have come to esteem financial value over human value and how we have gone from market economies to market societies. He argues that this has contributed to a trio of global crises: of credit, Covid and climate. And he outlines how we can turn this around.