
Women
Nov 28, 2013 - 14:00
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Andrew Dilnot, chair of the UK Statistics Authority, tells the story of a transformation in personal life in Britain, through the numbers that capture change on the grand scale. He delves into the data for the big patter...
Living is an episode from A History of Britain in Numbers by BBC. Andrew Dilnot, chair of the UK Statistics Authority, tells the story of a transformation in personal life in Britain, through the numbers that capture change on the grand sca...
This episode belongs to A History of Britain in Numbers.
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Published Nov 29, 2013, 13:53 long, audio available.
Andrew Dilnot, chair of the UK Statistics Authority, tells the story of a transformation in personal life in Britain, through the numbers that capture change on the grand scale. He delves into the data for the big patterns and trends in history, finding new ways of thinking about the whole shape of the population - the balance between adults and children, for example, or the shifting shape of what we do with our lives, from infancy to retirement and death. He seeks answers in history to some of the problems that perplex us now, such as how badly austerity has bitten or the paradox of why no-one seems able to afford a house but so many people own one. And he tells these stories not just with data, but through people and the real experiences that bring the numbers to life. In the search for data to measure how we've changed, the programme counts rotten teeth and adds up what people ate, what they own and throw away. What did we earn through the centuries, how do we know, and what could we do with it? What was our health like, or our homes, our jobs or education? What was the status and experience of women? And how has it all changed? Each of these ten programmes takes one theme, to explore how far we have made progress, and why it might continue, or falter. 10. Living Is the history of the economic struggle for survival over, as Keynes once said it would be? If so, has it been replaced with what he said would be a much harder problem - not working out how to survive, but working out how to live? Some think we will only do this when we balance our expectations with the sustainability of the planet; others that it has become a moral problem, not an economic one. Producer: Michael Blastland A Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4.
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Living is an episode from A History of Britain in Numbers by BBC.
This episode is 13:53 long.
This episode was published on Nov 29, 2013.
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Living is from A History of Britain in Numbers by BBC.
Published Nov 29, 2013 and 13:53 long