Fellowship Events
Public Talks
Report
REPLAY
You are here:
Showing 71 to 10 of 897 results
Public talks / Video / Online
27 Oct 2022
Online via YouTube
Celebrated economist Ha-Joon Chang argues that our economic diet is as unhealthy and bland as eighties cuisine, and needs an injection of new thinking and diverse flavour to better nourish society.
21 Oct 2022
RSA House and online via YouTube
Professor Guy Standing joins an expert panel to discuss how the introduction of a UBI can help tackle inequality and improve our individual and collective wellbeing.
20 Oct 2022
Morgan Wild, Citizens Advice, Katherine Chapman, Living Wage Foundation and Kate Bell, TUC, reflect on the worsening pressures on the cost of living and what Britain’s ‘summer of discontent’ can teach us about the power of collective action.
18 Oct 2022
Lisa Nandy and Maurice Glasman look afresh at Blue Labour thinking – a prescription for broken politics rooted in people, place and community.
13 Oct 2022
One of the world’s most celebrated economists, Brad DeLong, explains just how and why the long twentieth century’s explosion of technology and prosperity has failed to deliver us a real utopia.
Public talks / Video
29 Sep 2022
RSA House and Online via YouTube
Astronomer Royal Martin Rees argues that if we are to solve the multiple crises we now face, we need long-term, rational, global thinking, guided by values science alone cannot provide.
From resilience, confidence and grit to the odds stacked firmly in your favour, what does it take to achieve extraordinary success today? Bruce Daisley explores the complex story behind success and sets out how we can all unlock our inner strength.
21 Sep 2022
Webinar via Zoom
Designer George Aye, co-founder of Greater Good Studio, examines the risks and challenges involved when design seeks to intervene in complex social issues.
20 Sep 2022
Lord Andrew Mawson and Sir Sam Everington, recipients of the 2022 RSA Albert Medal, will talk about creating new contexts for health through social prescribing, the innovative approach now widely used in the NHS.
15 Sep 2022
The ways that we interpret and describe our emotions is heavily gendered. Pragya Agarwal, behaviour and data scientist, explores how this came to be and the impact it has on our lives and society.
Sorry, your search produced no results.
Page 8 of 90