
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Meritocracy, then and now. Laurie Taylor talks to Peter Hennessy, Attlee professor of contemporary British history at Queen Mary, University of London. How did meritocracy arise as a concept and has it ever been realised in practice given the persistence of notions of a British Establishment with control over access to the centres of power? They are joined by Danny Dorling, professor of Geography at the University of Oxford. Also, doctors' choice of desert island discs - what do they tell us about the possession of cultural capital? Ruth McDonald, professor of health science research at Manchester University, discusses the meaning of elite musical tastes.
Producer: Jayne Egerton.
4.5
294294 ratings
Meritocracy, then and now. Laurie Taylor talks to Peter Hennessy, Attlee professor of contemporary British history at Queen Mary, University of London. How did meritocracy arise as a concept and has it ever been realised in practice given the persistence of notions of a British Establishment with control over access to the centres of power? They are joined by Danny Dorling, professor of Geography at the University of Oxford. Also, doctors' choice of desert island discs - what do they tell us about the possession of cultural capital? Ruth McDonald, professor of health science research at Manchester University, discusses the meaning of elite musical tastes.
Producer: Jayne Egerton.
5,402 Listeners
1,836 Listeners
160 Listeners
126 Listeners
7,754 Listeners
296 Listeners
506 Listeners
1,838 Listeners
1,067 Listeners
891 Listeners
1,920 Listeners
1,072 Listeners
1,897 Listeners
596 Listeners
714 Listeners
857 Listeners
247 Listeners
61 Listeners
292 Listeners
829 Listeners
76 Listeners
819 Listeners
739 Listeners
2,963 Listeners