Episoder

  • We like to think that increases in efficiency lead to greater sustainability – to lower resource use. But from cars to computers to bitcoin, it seems the reverse is true – efficiency stimulates demand. It’s an oft forgotten rule of economics called the Jevons Paradox, and it might explain why the demand for almost everything keeps going up even while we simultaneously fret about over-consumption. Also, would you accept a parcel from a stranger, take it on the bus or train with you, and then deliver it to another stranger for a small fee? It might sound dodgy when you put it like that, but it’s part of an emerging delivery trend call “crowdshipping”. And proponents say it’s about reducing the environmental impact of transport.

    Guests

    Dr Blair Fix – Political economist, York University (Canada)

    Dr Adam Dorr – Director of Research, Rethink

    Professor Lynette Cheah – Chair of Sustainable Transport, University of the Sunshine Coast

    Further information

    Blair Fix article - A Tour of the Jevons Paradox: How Energy Efficiency Backfires

    Adam Dorr’s article - Rethinking the Jevons Paradox: why more clean energy efficiency is good for the environment

  • Human beings have a bias toward optimism, says astrophysicist turned author and editor, Sumit Paul-Choudhury. While we may not always acknowledge it, the power of optimism is what drives our species forward. But beware of the modern craze for "Manifesting" — wishful thinking, no matter how intense, only has impact if it's married to action. Also, why we need to rethink globalisation's bad rap. International relations expert, Inanna Hamati-Ataya, argues there are no pure cultures and globalisation is really the means by which humanity flourishes.

    Guests

    Professor Inanna Hamati-Ataya — Chair of Global International Relations, University of Groningen, The Netherlands

    Sumit Paul-Choudhury — author, editor and Managing Director, Alternity Limited

    Associate Professor Laura D'Olimpio — School of Education, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom

    Further information

    Inanna Hamati-Ataya's article on globalisation

    Laura D'Olimpio's article on manifesting

    Sumit Paul-Choudhury's book The Bright Side

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  • Artificial intelligence, it turns out, has a heavy human backend — they're called "data labellers"; they mostly live in developing countries, and there are ethical questions about their pay and work conditions. So, why aren't we talking more about them? Also, Google and other search companies have begun replacing hyperlinks with AI summaries. It's a move seemingly in line with our AI obsessed times, but what will it do to the tapestry of the internet? And will it simply make online information even harder to verify?

    Guests

    Dr Zena Assaad — Senior lecturer, School of Engineering, Australian National University

    Professor Toby Walsh — Laureate Fellow and Scientia Professor of Artificial Intelligence, University of New South Wales

    Dr Collin Jennings — writer and academic

    Further information

    Collin Jennings' article: A linkless internet

  • Does the spirit of the "Futurist" movement live on today in the likes of Elon Musk and America's intrigue of techno-oligarchs? The Italian poet and fantasist Flippo Tommaso Marinetti almost died in a car crash, and out of that experience was born the "Futurist" movement. It went on to inspire the fascism of Benito Mussolini with an energetic emphasis on disruptive technology, conflict and creating an authoritarian future.

    Guests

    Annalee Newitz — Journalist and author

    Dr Jonathan White — Professor of politics, London School of Economics

    Further information

    Jonathan White’s article - How Trump and the new right came to ‘own’ the future – while apparently exploiting the past | Jonathan White | The Guardian

    Annalee Newitz’s article – How futurism took an abrupt right turn in the 20th century

  • Does modern economic thinking act as a roadblock to change? Economists Kate Raworth and Rainer Kattel certainly think so. The alternatives they propose involve acknowledging limits not just obsessing about growth. And a caution from design and management expert Raz Godelink – it always pays to be skeptical when big business puts on the sustainability suit.

    Guests

    Kate Raworth – Economist and co-founder of Doughnut Economics Action Lab

    Raz Godelnik – Associate Professor of Strategic Design and Management at the School of Design Strategies, Parson's School of Design

    Rainer Kattel – Deputy Director and Professor of Innovation and Public Governance, UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London

  • It certainly feels like a very shouty world. But have we really reached a new low point in civility? And, if so, where to from here?

    We examine what civility really entails and how it can help foster cooperation but also lead to the submission of minorities.

    And did you know that even the design of our urban spaces can shape and limit acts of civility? So, how can we make our cities more sociable?

    Guests

    Dr Eduardo Sadoval — Social Roboticist, UNSW

    Dr Saara Liinamaa — Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Guelph. Also, co-investigator, Sociable Cities Project

    Rafi Kohan — US-based freelance writer and author

    Dr Keith Bybee — Professor of Law and Political Science, Syracuse University

    Further information

    Rafi Kohan - Trash Talk: The Only Book About Destroying Your Rivals That Isn’t Total Garbage

    Keith Bybee - How Civility Works

    Sociable Cities Project

  • When a company CEO can be paid 1,000 times the average employee's salary it's probably time to take a long hard look at wealth inequality. And those calling for the rich to pay more aren't always the ones you'd expect – Patriotic Millionaires is a group of mega rich individuals demanding greater, not lesser taxation. Then there's the Dutch philosopher urging ordinary citizens to put a cap on their own personal wealth. She calls her approach Limitarianism. Also, Rewilding the Internet – how to purify an online environment made toxic by monopolistic capitalism.

    Original broadcast on June 21, 2024.

    Guests

    Dr Ingrid Robeyns – author, philosopher and Chair in Ethics of Institutions, Ethics Institute, Utrecht University (The Netherlands)

    Robert Guest – Deputy Editor, The Economist

    Morris Pearl – Chair of the Board, The Patriotic Millionaires

    Professor Jean-Etienne Joullie — EMLV Business School, Paris

    Maria Farrell – Writer and keynote speaker on technology and the future

    Further information

    Ingrid Robeyns: Limitarianism, The Case Against Extreme Wealth

    Robert Guest: The fallacious case for abolishing the rich

    Maria Farrell: We need to rewild the Internet

    Listen to Future Tense - Managerialism and our obsession with hierarchy

  • Are we really facing an attention crisis? Historian, Daniel Immerwahr, has his doubts. In fact, he says ours is an era of obsession as much as distraction and of zeal as much as indifference. Also, the paradox of certainty: we crave it, argues the University of Alberta's, Timothy Caulfield, even though it's so easy to fake.

    Guests

    Daniel Immerwahr — author and Professor of History, Northwestern University and a contributing writer at The New Yorker

    Timothy Caulfield — author and Professor of law, University of Alberta

    Professor Gloria Mark — data scientist and psychologist, Department of Informatics, University of California, Irvine

    Further information

    Timothy Coulfield: The Certainty Illusion. What You Don't Know and Why It Matters

    Daniel Immerwahr's article on Attention

  • They're cheaper and safer than their lithium counterparts, they're easier to scale-up, and they can hold power for much longer than conventional batteries, so why aren't flow batteries better known? The technology has been under development for decades, but enthusiasts now say they're finding their place in the sun. Also, why more and more cargo companies are turning to wind-power; and do developing countries need to rethink their approach to off-grid power.

    Guests

    Emeritus Professor Maria Skyllas-Kazacos — School of Chemical Sciences and Engineering, University of New South Wales

    Emily Mahoney — Researcher, Malapit Lab, Northwestern University (US)

    Adjunct Associate Professor Jens Noack — Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, University of Queensland

    Associate Prof Paul Munro — Associate Professor in Human Geography, The Environment and Society Group, University of New South Wales

    Gavin Allwright — Secretary General, International Windship Association

  • The Victoria and Albert Museum in London is opening-up its storeroom, turning the back end of the operation into a public resource. It's about attracting new patrons, but it's also about accountability, the Museum's managers have declared. Across the Western world museums are having to reexamine their mission and redefine the relationship they have with the public they're meant to serve. We explore why and how. We also look at the balance that's being struck between the physical artefact and its digital equivalent.

    Guests

    Tim Reeve — Deputy Director, Victorian and Albert Museum, London

    Dan Hicks — Professor of Contemporary Archaeology, Oxford University

    Karin de Wild — Assistant Professor in Contemporary Museum and Collection Studies, Leiden University (The Netherlands)

    Kylie Message-Jones — Professor of Public Humanities, ANU Humanities Research Centre

  • A series of massive underground tombs for nuclear waste are currently under construction. They've taken decades to plan and build and they're designed to house the world's nuclear waste for millennia to come. So where are they being built? How safe will they be? And how to devise a toxic waste warning sign that will make sense to people living tens of thousands of years from now?

    Also, the latest research on how climate change is beginning to impact on internal migration within countries.

    Guests

    Mark Piesing — a UK-based freelance journalist

    Dr Shastra Deo — Nuclear semiotics expert and author, School of Communication and Arts, University of Queensland

    Professor Raya Muttarak — Professor of Demography, University of Bologna (Italy)

    Lisa — a climate-concerned resident of South-east Queensland

    Further information

    Mark Piesing's article: How to build a nuclear tomb to last millennia

  • Terms like "Gen Z", "Boomer" and "Millennial" are popular, but they have no basis in science. Demographers and social scientists are now pushing back. Generational labelling, they argue, is akin to Astrology and while politicians, journalists and media influencers find them irresistible, they actually promote pseudo-science, sew social division and can reinforce prejudicial stereotypes. So why are generational labels so popular?

    Guests

    Professor Bobby Duffy — Director of the Policy Institute, King's College London. Author of The Generation Myth.

    Professor Philip Coen — Professor of Sociology, University of Maryland

    Professor Crystal Abidin — digital anthropologist and ethnographer of vernacular internet cultures, Curtin University

    Professor David Costanza — Professor of Commerce, University of Virginia

    Further information

    Philip Coen’s open letter to Pew Research Center on generation labels

    Pew Research Center's response

  • Why does Utopian thinking get such a bad rap? It’s often derided as delusional and dangerous. But what if that stereotype is designed to limit our imagination and choices? We hear often that people are tired of democracy and turned off by short-term political thinking. So, is it time to be much more adventurous and ambitious – dare we say utopian – in our imagining of the future?

    Guests

    Professor William Paris – Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto

    Professor Barbara Prainsack – Professor for Comparative Policy Analysis, University of Vienna

    Professor Anna Abraham – Director of the Torrance Centre for Creativity and Talent Development

  • Privatising public services like trains, hospitals or prisons — is a proven vote loser. But governments of both the left and right continue to privatise — when it suits them. And it suits them, it seems, when large sums of money are needed to pay down debt, or when a government seeks to off load risk and liability to the private sector. So, what conditions should be applied to ensure that privatisations truly serve the public interest and don't simply decrease competition?

    Guests

    Owen Hayford — Strategic legal and commercial adviser, Infralegal

    Nino Bucci — Justice and Courts Reporter, The Guardian

    Richard Denniss — economist and public policy commentator

    Professor Graeme Samuel — Monash University Business School

    Benjamin Goodair – Senior post-doctoral researcher, Oxford Universty

  • Authoritarians rule through fear. We can clearly see that from China to the Middle East to eastern Europe. But why do we constantly overlook the way in which fear also shapes democratic societies? It's fueling populism and distorting our future focus. Then there's anger. It's inspired generations to man the barricades and right society's wrongs. But anger is increasingly becoming a driver of commerce. There's billions to be made in getting you riled up and keeping you that way. Fear fuels anger, and anger blinds you to recognise that your fear might be misguided. A truly vicious cycle.

    Guests

    Erika Ferszt – Owner, founder and lead-consultant, Scintillate Brand Consulting

    Professor Jennifer Lerner – Public Policy, Management and Decision Science, Harvard University

    Professor Robert Peckham – historian and Fellow at the Royal Historical Society, London

    Margot Faraci – Global leadership expert

    Further information

    Robert Peckham – Fear: An Alternative History of the World

    Margot Faraci - Love Leadership Survey

  • Algorithmic feeds are meant to personalise our online experiences, but increasingly they're flattening our culture and fostering a dull conformity, according to best-selling author Kyle Chayka. And the influence they exert on our lives is increasingly physical not just digital. Also, data scientist Gloria Mark who has crunched the numbers on how our attention spans have fared over the past decade or so. If you can keep focused, you might find it fascinating.

    Guests

    Professor Gloria Mark – data scientist and psychologist, Department of Informatics, University of California, Irvine

    Kyle Chayka – author and contributing writer for The New Yorker

    Further information

    Gloria Mark - Attention Span: A Ground Breaking Way to Restore Balance, Happiness and Productivity

    Kyle Chayka – Filterworld: How Algorithms Flattened Culture

  • In our uber-connected world, the development and management of really anything is becoming increasingly complex. Planning for the future has to involve more than just grand ambitions, it also needs to be alert to unintended consequences. Otherwise things you didn't even dream about will go wrong and that can prove enormously costly. Part of the solution is to think past the immediate and adopt a systematic approach to thinking.

    Guests

    Dr Edward Crawley – Ford Professor of Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

    Dr Isabel Sebastian – Research Principal, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney

    Gavin Maguire – Global Energy Transition Columnist, Reuters News

    Nicola Twilley – Writer and podcaster, author of the forthcoming book "The Birth of Cool"

  • Nostalgia triggers our emotions and that in turn makes us vulnerable to manipulation. We speak with Richard King about the commodification and weaponisation of nostalgic sentiment. Also, New York Times critic-at-large, Jason Farago, on why he believes our cultural age might be the least innovative in half a millennium.

    Guests

    Richard King – author and critic

    Jason Farago – author, social commentator and critic-at-large, The New York Times

    Further information

    Richard’s Griffith Review essay - Nostalgia on demand

    Jason’s NYT essay - Why Culture Has Come to a Standstill

  • Most people want to eat better. And many of us have embraced the trend toward "natural" foods and conscious eating.

    We equate "natural" with healthy, nutritious and virtuous, but that can often be way off the mark. New research shows many healthy alternatives are anything but. And our embrace of the term natural is more about expressing identity and morality rather than healthy eating. Empowering people to understand what and how they should eat is what it should be about – and one way to do that is by using a food labelling app.

    Guests

    Professor Sarah Bridle – Chair in Food, Climate and Society, University of York

    Alan Levinovitz – Associate Professor of Religious Studies, James Madison University

    Laura Marchese – Researcher, Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition, Deakin University

    Julie Chapon – Co-founder of the Yuka app

    Lisa – Brisbane-based food-rating app user

    Further information

    Sarah Bridle: Food and Climate Change -- Without the Hot Air, UIT Cambridge

    Climate Stack Calculator - A free tool to help you add up the climate impact of different food choices

    Play the game: Which of your food choices have the biggest climate impact?

    Take A Bite Out of Climate – resources and games to learn how food choices contribute to climate change

    BBC Future – Foodprint Calculator

  • Methane levels are going up — not down, despite decades spent trying to reduce emissions from agriculture and landfill. But some countries are bucking the trend, we find out who and how.

    Breeding sheep and cattle to burp less is one way to reduce methane emissions. ABC Top 5 Science Residency recipient Luisa Olmo talks us through a genetic selection programme that could lead the way forward.

    Guests

    Dr Ed Clayton – Ruminant nutritionist, NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development

    Professor Sam Clark – Professor of Animal Genetics, University of New England

    Dr Pep Canadell – Chief Research Scientist, CSIRO Environment

    Producer

    Dr Luisa Olmo — Research Officer, Meat Science and Value Chains, NSW Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development