Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

Election Briefing: Donald Trump's victory

12th - Higher Ed
Donald Trump will be America's 45th president. Zanny Minton Beddoes, editor-in-chief of The Economist, discusses what his victory means for other populist movements and the international order
Instructional Video2:23
Curated Video

The dirty secret of clean energy

12th - Higher Ed
The road to a future with an unlimited supply of clean energy is a rocky one. Ed Carr, our deputy editor, explains why energy features on the cover of this week's The Economist.
Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

Cannabis capitalists: the business leaders hoping for a marijuana boom

12th - Higher Ed
Over half of all American states have taken some steps to legalise marijuana, a move The Economist has argued for since 1989. There is now a burgeoning industry being shaped by a new generation of cannabis capitalists
Instructional Video5:34
Curated Video

Olympics 2020: are the rules for trans athletes fair?

12th - Higher Ed
In 2020 transgender athletes may take part in the Olympic Games for the first time. But allowing transgender women to compete in women’s sport is provoking a heated debate about inclusion and fairness.
Instructional Video8:47
Curated Video

Why politicians have failed to tackle climate change

12th - Higher Ed
Climate change is now recognised as the defining threat facing the planet. So why has so little been done to tackle it?
Instructional Video1:46
Curated Video

Should gene-editing be embraced?

12th - Higher Ed
Gene-editing opens up a world of possibilities. But it also raises some difficult questions. We go behind this week’s cover story on the latest in reproductive science
Instructional Video17:36
Curated Video

Olympic champion Edwin Moses on covid-19, race and trans athletes | The Economist Podcast

12th - Higher Ed
The coronavirus pandemic has derailed the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, but that’s not the only problem facing world sport. The Economist Asks podcast spoke to Edwin Moses, former hurdling gold medalist, about doping, race relations and the...
Instructional Video7:41
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Economists Incentivize Conformity Over Quality

Higher Ed
Economists tend to incentivize conformity over quality, but could pressure from outside groups change that? INET sits down with Carlo D’Ippoliti, Associate Professor of Economics at Sapienza University of Rome, to talk about pluralism in...
Instructional Video12:57
Curated Video

Covid-19: how it will change the world

12th - Higher Ed
Even when covid-19 is under control, the long-term effects of the virus will be far-reaching. How will the coronavirus pandemic—and the way it has been handled—change the world?
Instructional Video2:41
Curated Video

China's influence in Europe

12th - Higher Ed
China's investment in Europe is growing. Our cover leader this week explains why the money is welcome, but not when it is used to buy political influence.
Instructional Video9:28
Curated Video

El Salvador's violent gang members are finding God in prison

12th - Higher Ed
18th Street and MS-13 gangs terrorise El Salvador, making it one of the most deadly places on earth. Leaving the gang is not easy—former gangsters face rejection from society and the threat of violence from other gang members and the...
Instructional Video1:20
Curated Video

The Economics Behind Music Festivals

12th - Higher Ed
Music festivals attract 32 million revellers annually around the world. That adds up to an industry worth nearly $10bn a year.
Instructional Video10:02
Curated Video

Cindy McCain: what next for the Republican Party? | The Economist Podcast

12th - Higher Ed
Cindy McCain shocked the Republican Party when she endorsed Joe Biden for president. Now, the widow of John McCain tells The Economist Asks podcast about her prediction that the Republican Party will split and her hopes for a new era of...
Instructional Video4:41
Curated Video

3D printing prosthetic limbs for refugees

12th - Higher Ed
3D-printed prosthetic limbs are being tested by Médecins Sans Frontières to help people who have lost limbs in the war in Syria. The new technology is cheaper and faster than conventional methods and could revolutionise treatment of...
Instructional Video5:21
Curated Video

Could a cure for cancer be hiding in your medicine cabinet?

12th - Higher Ed
A combination of drugs, including aspirin and statins, are being tested to treat cancer and other illnesses. There is mounting clinical evidence that the "repurposing" of existing drugs could offer effective new treatments.
Instructional Video10:19
Curated Video

Covid-19: what you need to know about the second wave

12th - Higher Ed
The world now faces the threat of a second wave of coronavirus outbreaks. Zanny Minton Beddoes, The Economist’s editor-in-chief, and Slavea Chankova, our health-care correspondent, answer your questions.
Instructional Video7:44
Curated Video

When thoughts control machines

12th - Higher Ed
Efforts to connect human brains to computers have taken big leaps forward in recent years. Melding our minds with machines could provide the biggest single upgrade to human intelligence since our species evolved. But are we ready?
Instructional Video10:00
Curated Video

Covid-19: what will happen to the global economy?

12th - Higher Ed
The covid-19 pandemic has caused economic chaos and uncertainty. Zanny Minton Beddoes, our editor-in-chief, and Edward Carr, our deputy editor, answer your questions about the global economy
Instructional Video2:13
Curated Video

The Changing Space Race

12th - Higher Ed
The space race has changed since the Soviet Union sent Sputnik 1, the first man-made satellite, into space in 1957. The fight for domination is now between private companies rather than governments.
Instructional Video4:00
Curated Video

Abortion at sea

12th - Higher Ed
Making abortions illegal does not stop them from happening, but it does stop them happening safely. Meet the charity taking women out to international waters where they can have safe abortions without fear of prosecution.
Instructional Video6:32
The Economist

Ireland: divided by abortion

12th - Higher Ed
Abortion is banned in Ireland in almost all circumstances, including rape and incest. On May 25th voters will have their say in a referendum that could repeal the ban.
Instructional Video2:43
Curated Video

The hunt for oceans in space

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists believe there are oceans buried under thick crusts of ice on the moons of Saturn and Jupiter. Sampling them would raise hope of life beyond Earth
Instructional Video2:45
Curated Video

What happens when we sleep?

12th - Higher Ed
Sleep is central to our physical and mental health, but people have far less shut-eye today than they did a century ago. What is the impact?
Instructional Video2:23
Curated Video

The CEO of Lloyd's of London discusses how to run a successful business through diverse thought

12th - Higher Ed
Dame Inga Beale is the first openly bisexual chief executive of Lloyd's of London. She's a champion of diversity in the boardroom because it can help companies connect to a wider market and bring greater financial returns