
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Matthew Sweet examines our current and past attitudes to childhood and asks whether nurturing children is something that we should deregulate or attempt to reform. He’s joined by Jay Griffiths, author of Kith - in which she argues that children in Brazilian rain forests are happier than those in Western cities, Hugh Cunningham, historian and author of the Invention of Childhood, sociologist Frank Furedi, who coined the phrase paranoid parenting, Gabriel Gbadamosi, Irish-Nigerian poet, playwright and Carnegie medal winner Meg Rosoff who writes fiction for children and young adults.
By BBC Radio 44.3
286286 ratings
Matthew Sweet examines our current and past attitudes to childhood and asks whether nurturing children is something that we should deregulate or attempt to reform. He’s joined by Jay Griffiths, author of Kith - in which she argues that children in Brazilian rain forests are happier than those in Western cities, Hugh Cunningham, historian and author of the Invention of Childhood, sociologist Frank Furedi, who coined the phrase paranoid parenting, Gabriel Gbadamosi, Irish-Nigerian poet, playwright and Carnegie medal winner Meg Rosoff who writes fiction for children and young adults.

7,938 Listeners

314 Listeners

1,086 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

5,583 Listeners

1,809 Listeners

620 Listeners

1,737 Listeners

1,011 Listeners

1,955 Listeners

487 Listeners

585 Listeners

130 Listeners

129 Listeners

160 Listeners

243 Listeners

181 Listeners

219 Listeners

3,244 Listeners

1,009 Listeners

147 Listeners

101 Listeners

93 Listeners

349 Listeners