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What Is the State For?

Tom Sutcliffe discusses the nation state with Adrian Wooldridge, Tristram Hunt, Anjan Sundaram and Charu Lata Hogg.

Tom Sutcliffe discusses whether Western states have anything to learn from countries like China and Singapore. Adrian Wooldridge argues that many governments have become bloated and there's a global race to reinvent the state. In the past Britain was at the forefront of exporting ideas on how to run a country, as the Labour MP Tristram Hunt explains in his book on the legacy of empire. Charu Lata Hogg from Chatham House looks at the challenges to democracy in Thailand where the country is in political turmoil, and the journalist Anjan Sundaram spent a year in The Congo during the violent 2006 elections, and looks at day-to-day life in a failing state.
Producer: Katy Hickman.

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43 minutes

Last on

Mon 9 Jun 2014 21:30

Adrian Wooldridge

Adrian Wooldridge is The Economist’s management editor and Schumpeter columnist.

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The Fourth Revolution: The Global Race to Reinvent the State, co-written with John Micklethwait, is published by Allen Lane.

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Tristram Hunt

Tristram Hunt is an historian and the MP for Stoke-on-Trent Central.

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Ten Cities that Made an Empire is published by Allen Lane.

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Charu Lata Hogg

Charu Lata Hogg is Associate Fellow in the Asia Programme at Chatham House.

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Anjan Sundaram

Anjan Sundaram is a journalist.

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Stringer: A Reporter’s Journey in the Congo is published by Atlantic Books.

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Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Tom Sutcliffe
Interviewed Guest Adrian Wooldridge
Interviewed Guest Tristram Hunt
Interviewed Guest Anjan Sundaram
Interviewed Guest Charu Lata Hogg
Producer Katy Hickman

Broadcasts

  • Mon 9 Jun 2014 09:00
  • Mon 9 Jun 2014 21:30

Podcast