Episodes
For the final episode of the series, Ben goes back to basics and asks: how can democracies hold free and fair elections? It’s not as simple as setting up polling stations and handing out ballot boxes, so what does it take to create a truly even electoral playing field? Guests:  Robin Forestier-Walker, Freelance journalist, based in GeorgiaTanja Hollstein, Head of Practice (Elections) at the Westminster Foundation for DemocracyPippa Norris, McGuire Lecturer in Comparative Politics at the...
Published 10/16/24
Published 10/15/24
This week, we’re looking at another big potential challenge facing democracy: AI, or artificial intelligence. Ben wants to know how worried we should be when it comes to the rise of these new technologies. Might they spell the death knell for trust in our institutions? Or can technology play a helpful role in boosting modern democracies? Guests:  Sarah Kreps, Professor in the Department of Government at Cornell UniversityAlex Krasodomski, Programme Director of the Digital Society Initiative...
Published 10/09/24
One of the biggest challenges of our time is climate change. This week, Ben wants to know how effective democracies are when it comes to fighting the climate crisis. How can we settle on solutions when there’s so many different interests at play? Guests:  Keith Smith, Senior Researcher in the International Political Economy/International Environmental Politics group at the Center for Comparative and International StudiesLouis Wilson, Head of Fossil Fuel Investigations at Global WitnessRafaela...
Published 10/02/24
Democracy can often be knocked off course by political violence, but in some places it’s become an ingrained part of how politics is done. This week Ben wants to find out why violence and democracy can be so hard to separate, and how to stop violence taking hold of our politics in the first place.  Guests:  Arunima Kar, Freelance journalist based in KolkataAmalendu Misra, Professor of International Politics at Lancaster University, and author of ‘Towards a Philosophy of Narco Violence in...
Published 09/25/24
Where does the boundary lie between bad behaviour and outright corruption?  This week Ben wants to understand how corruption and the fight against it are destructive forces in a democracy.  Guests:  Simon Kuper, journalist and author of ‘Good Chaps’ and ‘Chums’Ezequiel González Ocantos, Professor of Comparative & Judicial Politics at Nuffield College, University of Oxford What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced by Tortoise Media and supported by the Open Society Foundations.  To find out...
Published 09/18/24
It often feels like America is stuck in a perpetual election campaign cycle. How much do campaigns matter? Ben speaks to three guests who have followed several US presidential campaigns from the outside, and the inside. How different does this year’s look?  What’s Wrong with Democracy? US election miniseries - part three of three. Guests:  John Sides, Professor at the Department of Political Science at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TennesseeLauren Gambiano, political correspondent for...
Published 09/11/24
American voters have chosen the two candidates who will vie to become the next US president. Kamala Harris and Donald Trump couldn’t be more different. This week, Ben wants to know what kind of leaders American voters are drawn to. What makes a good president? And is the US primary system of choosing candidates a good way of selecting a leader?  What’s Wrong with Democracy? US election miniseries - part two of three. Guests:  Lee Drutman, senior fellow in the Political Reform program at the...
Published 09/04/24
Polling organisations often define Americans by their ethnic and racial identity. Ben wants to know if these voter “blocks” remain intact at the ballot box. Is it possible to predict how people will vote based on their identity? Or is demographic polling pointless?  What’s Wrong with Democracy? US election miniseries - part one of three. Guests:  Christopher Towler,  Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at California State University, SacramentoKira Sanbonmatsu,...
Published 08/28/24
Democratic societies are a melting pot of people from different ethnic and religious backgrounds, but when political alliances are formed around a particular identity it can lead to division and sometimes violence. In this episode Ben explores one of the most extreme examples of ethnic conflict - the Rwandan genocide - and asks whether it’s possible to have a peaceful democracy after so much bloodshed. Guests:  Sharun Mukand,  Professor of Economics at the University of WarwickJames Chin,...
Published 08/07/24
The history of protest and democracy is long and complex, but taking to the streets has resulted in major democratic changes in the past. This week, Ben wants to know if protest still has a role to play in today’s politics. What are the barriers to protesting effectively? Is the time for peaceful protest over? And with autocracies on the rise, do citizens need a new tool to express their discontent? Guests:  Ilya Marritz, journalist at the Boston Globe and co-host of ‘Will Be Wild’Dawn...
Published 07/31/24
In many democracies voter turnout is lower than it’s ever been, especially among young people. Ben wants to know what we can do to get millennials and Gen Z to the polls. Do we need to rethink how we cast a vote? Why aren’t politicians more focused on winning over the next generation of voters? And how can we stop this trend so that political apathy doesn’t become political alienation? Guests:  Viktor Valgardsson, Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow at Southampton University John...
Published 07/24/24
Democracies are made up of people with different views. But when we don’t feel connected, we become polarised. Ben speaks to Noreena Hertz about how loneliness leads to polarisation and then to Wendy Via to find out if opposing worldviews can ever be reconciled. Guests:  Noreena Hertz, economist and author of ‘The Lonely Century’ Wendy Via, Co-founder and president of the Global Project against Hate and Extremism What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced by Tortoise Media and supported by the...
Published 07/17/24
This week, as more of our political institutions are rocked by corruption from partisan forces, Ben wants to know how we can protect the independence of our judiciaries, and what happens when they go wrong. When democratic institutions fail, what does this do to our faith in democracy? And can a compromised judiciary ever be restored? Guests: Fida Hammami, Amnesty International's Tunisia Research and Advocacy Advisor Ben Stanley, Associate Professor at the Centre for the Study of Democracy,...
Published 07/10/24
The freedom to speak truth to power is under threat. Not just in authoritarian states, but increasingly within democracies too. This week Ben asks why access to reliable information is so important for democracy. And how important is the emergence of open source investigation in getting to the truth.  Guests:  Alia Ibrahim, co-founder and CEO of Daraj.com, an independent digital media platform launched in November 2017 Rebecca Vincent, Director of campaigns at Reporters sans frontières -...
Published 07/03/24
This week, Ben’s asking what happens when money meets democracy. As lobbying scandals continue to rock our institutions, Ben wants to know how we can protect our democracies from corruption. Also what role should or could the wealthy, and super-wealthy play in keeping our democracies financially healthy? Does philanthropy have a place in modern functioning democracies?  Guests: Valentina Pop, Europe news editor, the Financial Times Mark Malloch-Brown, former President of the Open Society...
Published 06/26/24
With populists rising to power around the world, Ben wants to know why, and how they flourish. Could establishment politicians learn a thing or two from populists about how to communicate? Do populists offer real solutions to voters’ problems do they ever actually deliver on their promises? Guests:   Lone Sorensen, Associate Professor of Political Communication at the University of Leeds  Kevin Casas-Zamora, Secretary-general of the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral...
Published 06/19/24
Over the past 20 years the British public’s trust in politicians has been tested. Ben Ansell explores how trust is playing out in the UK’s upcoming general election. How can you restore trust in democracy? And is the UK an outlier or part of a wider global movement?    Guests:   Sacha Hilhorst, Senior Research Fellow with Commonwealth Polly Curtis, Chief Executive of Demos  Richard Wike, Director of Global Attitudes Research at the Pew Research Centre  What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced...
Published 06/12/24
Another front on the war against democracy is information warfare. Ben Ansell digs into how modern day autocrats are using this. For almost a decade China has been running a media influencing campaign in Africa. Now Russia has taken it mainstream, and digital. But how effective are these disinformation campaigns? What’s the endgame? And how can we build up our defence arsenal?  Guests:   James Ball, journalist and author of Post Truth and The Other Pandemic Emeka Umejei, research associate in...
Published 06/05/24
In Ukraine, democracy is under attack. Ben Ansell investigates what that means for the country’s future. Is the war a death knell or a rallying cry for democracy? What is at stake and how worried should we be about the rise of autocrats? Guests:   Olya Onuch, Professor of comparative and Ukrainian politics at the University of Manchester Nicole Bibbins Sedaca, interim President of Freedom House  What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced by Tortoise Media and supported by The Open Society...
Published 05/29/24
The world’s biggest democracy is currently in the middle of an election that will take six weeks to play out and involve over a billion people. Ben Ansell takes a closer look at the state of democracy in India, to try to understand what’s happening elsewhere.  Guests:   Dr Pavi Suryanarayan, Assistant professor at the LSE Daniel Ziblatt, author of How Democracies Die Mitali Mukherjee, Director of the Reuters institute’s Journalism programme What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced by Tortoise...
Published 05/22/24
Introducing: What's Wrong with Democracy? By the end of this year, countries making up half the world’s population will have held elections. But not all of them will have been free and fair. In ‘What’s Wrong with Democracy?’ Professor Ben Ansell of Oxford University will, with the help of academics, journalists, activists and writers, figure out whether democracy is working and how best to preserve democratic freedoms, equality and rights.  What’s Wrong with Democracy? is produced by Tortoise...
Published 05/14/24