BBC Radio 4

Currently

News EN ↓ Odcinki: 52

Reactive features from Radio 4, exploring what's really happening behind the headlines and unearthing untold stories, both at home and abroad.

Koniecznie odwiedź stronę podcastu i wesprzyj twórcę: www.bbc.co.uk

Autor

BBC Radio 4

Kategoria

News

Strona podcastu

www.bbc.co.uk

Ostatni odcinek

15 cze 2026

Gdzie słuchać?

Podcasty w aplikacji Replaio Radio Już wkrótce

Podcasty trafią do aplikacji już wkrótce. Zainstaluj teraz i jako pierwszy zobacz nowe podejście do podcastów

Pobierz z Google Play Zainstaluj za darmo Android 5 mln+ pobrań · ocena 4,8 iOS niedługo

Odcinki

Lebanon's Abandoned Lives 15.06.2026

People who've had to abandon their homes because of the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, explain what life is like in Lebanon, a country which has been repeatedly hit by war. A social worker describes how she thinks most Lebanese citizens now keep a bag of important belongings packed and ready to go by their front door in case they need to leave home at a moment's notice. A mother is close t...

England’s Identity Crisis 04.06.2026

England’s men's football team is once again preparing to shoulder the hopes of millions across the nation. A World Cup is traditionally a time to come together, but this tournament takes place in a tense political moment, when the question of who is – and isn’t - English is being contested. Should Englishness be linked to ancestry and ethnicity, to living in the country for generations, as some se...

When Shiraz Calls 24.05.2026

A personal account of day-to-day life in Iran told through the calls of two Iranian sisters – one in the UK, the other in the Iranian city of Shiraz. Since the outbreak of war at the end of February, a near total internet blackout and a shutdown of international phone lines by the Iranian authorities has meant limited information has got out of the country. Despite the risks involved, the sisters...

Under Fire in the Strait of Hormuz 23.05.2026

Sunil was 26 when he went to work on a ship for the first time. He travelled from Rajasthan, India to a port in Dubai for a job on an oil tanker. When he boarded the ship, he met Dalip, who was from a neighbouring village. They helped support each other when they felt homesick, working on a ship so far from home for the first time. But then a few weeks into their contract, Sunil heard a loud bang...

Who’s Winning Muslim Voters? 18.05.2026

Following last week’s local elections, it's clear there’s a huge shift happening when it comes to the voting habits of British Muslims across the country. Why are so many British Muslims moving away from the Labour Party? And are they really all going to the Greens? Presenter Rima Ahmed returned to her hometown of Harehills in Leeds, once a Labour stronghold, just before the local elections to spe...

Betting on Disaster 10.05.2026

Huge sums are being wagered on current events, from the weather to world wars, with fortunes being made - and lost. Mike Wendling investigates the rise of prediction markets. While gambling is a long-standing, if somewhat morally dubious, British pastime, there's a new crop of American companies which are supercharging the industry. They're called prediction markets. Who will win the World Cup? Wi...

About the Girls: The Puberty Puzzle 20.04.2026

This week, as BBC Radio 4 explores what it means to grow up as a girl in 2026, health presenter Laura Foster is examining a striking scientific reality: that girls today are hitting puberty earlier than their parents and grandparents did. Question is why is this happening — and what does it mean for the adults they will become? With the trend showing no sign of slowing down, Laura speaks to leadin...

Licence to Hate - Racism on the Front Line 05.04.2026

New data from the 2025 NHS Staff Survey, one of the largest workforce surveys in the world, shows that 1 in 5 minority ethnic staff report facing discrimination from patients or the public, compared with 1 in 20 of their white colleagues. The Royal College of Nursing reports that calls to their advice line about racism at work have increased by 55% in three years. This documentary listens closely...

Power to The People: Rewiring Britain 30.03.2026

Britain is turning electric, but the shift to renewable energy will require a major rewire. Business and Economy editor Douglas Fraser follows the journey of power generated on the north coast of Scotland to the socket in your living room, to discover the scale and the challenges of re-hauling the near century-old national grid. From windfarms in Caithness, pylons in the Highlands and huge underse...

How Not to Kill a Politician 29.03.2026

What is it that drives ordinary people to condone political violence, and some to commit it? As democracies increasingly exist in conditions where violence can flourish, Stanford University polarisation expert Alison Goldsworthy will scrutinise the latest research showing it is dogmatism, not just authoritarian tendencies that enable it. This means we are all susceptible - including, uncomfortably...

Britain by Bodycam 25.03.2026

Every month brings a new headline about shoplifting, confrontations with retail staff and disorder on our high streets. As a result, more and more security guards have taken to wearing bodyworn cameras, now visible in every part of our lives, from supermarkets to coffee shops, railway stations to hospitals. For some they are a welcome deterrent and bring peace of mind. For others, they are a sign...

Sophia v AI Slop 08.03.2026

While browsing online, the journalist and author Sophia Smith Galer was surprised to find a biography of herself on Amazon. She discovered that it was full of inaccuracies - and most likely written using generative AI. It's part of a new phenomenon in publishing and flooding all parts of our information landscape: AI slop, low quality content made quickly using artificial intelligence. While we mi...

A Place in Politics for British Muslims 03.03.2026

Alongside rising levels of hate faced by British Muslims, are renewed questions about how well Muslims have integrated in British society. The BBC's Religion Editor Aleem Maqbool hears stories of anti-Muslim hatred, including that of London entrepreneur Usman Shah, pictured as part of the Heathrow Welcome campaign. Mr Shah describes how he made a bold decision to forgive and reach out to his abuse...

Someone Else's Problem: Exporting the Housing Crisis 22.02.2026

In cities across the country, councils are grappling with unprecedented numbers of people presenting as homeless. In London, mounting pressure on temporary accommodation has led some boroughs to place families far beyond the capital — in some cases more than 250 miles away, in County Durham. Charlotte McDonald travels to the North East to uncover why these long‑distance relocations are happening,...

Trump and Greenland: How MAGA went Arctic 08.02.2026

Why does President Trump really want to takeover Greenland? The Arctic territory is rich in vital minerals and oil, and it hosts an important American military base as the race for dominance in the wider Arctic heats up between China, Russia and the USA. While the issue has become suddenly urgent, it's a proposal that has been years in the making - and drill down beneath Trump's recent stated reas...

RAAC and Ruin 01.02.2026

Between the 1950s and 1990s the material known as RAAC, Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete, was used mostly in flat roofing, but also in floors and walls. It offered a cheaper alternative to standard concrete, but the discovery of its short lifespan has meant serious problems. It made the headlines when it was found in schools and hospitals, but it has been used in housing as well. A political...

The Price of Meat 25.01.2026

Buy a pack of beef in the supermarket and you’ll find it’s increased in price by 52% in five years. Try and trade down to some chicken and you’ll find it’s nearly doubled in just two years. Make a product unaffordable- whether that’s cigarettes, brandy or steak- and you inevitably open up the door to smugglers. Evidence isn’t hard to find with Dover Port Authority offering up just one snapshot. In...

Inside ARIA 18.01.2026

ARIA is the UK government’s bold new bet on science and technology. Its mission? To chase breakthroughs so radical they could spawn trillion-pound industries and reshape everyday life. The Advanced Research and Invention Agency was created to be fast-moving - exempt from the usual public sector bureaucracy. No slow funding rounds. No rigid procurement rules. Just speed, agility, and a mandate to t...

Highways to Hell 04.01.2026

Alex Forsyth emerges from traffic jam Britain to ask why roadworks take so long and cause so much disruption to our daily lives. Are there better ways to manage the necessary maintenance of our roads and associated infrastructure? And why do Britons spend so many hours stuck in jams or creeping along the highways every year? Presenter: Alex Forsyth Producer: Jonathan Brunert

Left Out: the political radicalisation of young women - and the silence surrounding it 21.12.2025

At the 2024 general election, something remarkable happened: young voters broke away from the political mainstream, but in opposite directions. Young men moved to the right, while young women swung just as strongly (if not, more) to the left. While the shift among young men dominated headlines and airwaves, sparking endless commentary and think pieces, the shift among young women was largely ignor...

Are You Ready? 07.12.2025

We face an increasing range of threats as a nation – from climate change to pandemics and artificial intelligence – and yet, emergency preparedness is seen as a thing of the past that belonged to an era of civil defence and nuclear war. But as the frequency and severity of extreme events begins to test the ability of emergency services and the government, what is the role of individuals in respond...

Four Months in Gaza 30.11.2025

A raw and intimate perspective on the terror, anger, and hope of living through war. As bombs hit ever closer to her home in central Gaza, Hanya Aljamal spots her elderly neighbour tending to his garden. “He's been raking the earth,” she says, “prepping the soil for new seeds. Given everything that's already happening, it's quite interesting seeing him do that right now. I mean, if grandpa thinks...

Playing Spies 30.11.2025

The words "spy ring" conjure up images straight from the enigmatic literary worlds of John le Carre and Graham Greene. But the recent prosecutions of a group of Bulgarians and the arsonists who set fire to a warehouse containing communications equipment for Ukraine, suggest a new, less glamorous front in the hidden world of espionage. Necessity is the mother of invention and the expulsion of Russi...

If at First You Don’t Secede 24.11.2025

A lot has happened since the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. The Conservatives have been deposed at Westminster. Labour — the political force that once dominated Scottish politics — is back in power. Reform is eating into both parties' votes. The SNP has been in government in Scotland for 18 years and is expected to win next year’s Holyrood election. But the last decade has been a trying on...

I Fought in Ukraine 16.11.2025

Its thought over 2000 Brits have fought in the Ukraine war. May of them are seasoned soldiers, veterans of Afghanistan, Syria and Northern Ireland who are just taking on another call of duty. There are others who have never picked up a gun before but gave up their day jobs to join the fight against Russia Nick Garnett meets the soldiers to find out why they have given up jobs, said a goodbye to fa...

Słuchaj podcastu Currently w Replaio

Radio i podcasty w jednej aplikacji - za darmo, bez zakładania konta. Zainstaluj już dziś i nie przegap premiery

Pobierz z Google Play

Replaio nie jest wydawcą podcastów; nazwy audycji, okładki i audio należą do ich autorów i są rozpowszechniane przez publiczne kanały RSS