4.2 • 2.9K Ratings
🗓️ 27 November 2024
⏱️ 56 minutes
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Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter Joan Armatrading joins Nuala McGovern to discuss her 23rd studio album, How Did This Happen and What Does it Now Mean?
Losing a baby in the early stages of pregnancy can be an extremely painful experience. Having to think about what you're going to tell your employer about why you're not able to come to work can compound the difficulty. In the UK you are not entitled to any time off work if you experience miscarriage in the first six months of pregnancy. But today, the Women and Equalities Select Committee is hearing evidence for the case of extending your right to bereavement leave to the first 24 weeks of pregnancy. Sarah Owen MP, Chair of that Committee is in the Woman's Hour studio.
Baroness Lola Young of Hornsey has spent the last 20 years as an independent crossbench peer in the House of Lords, championing social justice causes such as the fight against modern slavery and promoting ethical fashion. She was also one of the first black women to enter the Lords. In her memoir Eight Weeks, she reflects on her childhood in the care system during the 1950s and 60s and the challenges she faced moving between foster care and children’s homes, and what she learnt from accessing her care records some fifty years later.
After writing her Spinal Column for the Times newspaper since 2010 – the first just two weeks after breaking her neck and back in a riding accident - columnist and author Melanie Reid has decided it’s time to stop and has published the final one. She joins Nuala to discuss why she has made that decision and what her plans are now.
Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Kirsty Starkey
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0:00.0 | You are about to listen to a BBC podcast and I'd like to tell you a bit about what goes into making one. |
0:06.5 | I'm Sadata Sese, an assistant commissioner of podcasts for BBC Sounds. |
0:11.2 | I pull a lot of levers to support a diverse range of podcasts on all sorts of subjects, |
0:16.0 | relationships, identity, comedy, even one that mixes poetry, music and inner city life. |
0:22.4 | So one day I'll be helping host develop their ideas, the next fact-checking, a feature, |
0:28.3 | and the next looking at how a podcast connects with its audience, and maybe that's you. |
0:33.6 | So if you like this podcast, check out some others on BBC Sounds. |
0:39.5 | BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts. |
0:43.2 | Hello, I'm Neula McGovern and welcome to Woman's Hour from BBC Radio 4. |
0:47.8 | Just to say that for rights reasons, the music in the original radio broadcast has been removed for this podcast. |
0:54.3 | Hello and welcome to Woman's Hour. |
0:57.2 | Now get ready for pioneering women. |
1:00.0 | Joan Arma Trading will be with us. |
1:02.0 | She has a new album. |
1:03.1 | Her 23rd is called How Did This Happen? |
1:06.1 | And what does it now mean? |
1:07.4 | She wrote, produced, programmed and engineered it herself. |
1:11.7 | She's going to be in studio. Also, I have been reading eight weeks. That is the moving memoir of the life of |
1:17.2 | Baroness Lola Young of Hornsey, who became one of the first black women members of the |
1:22.6 | House of Lords back in 2004, Baroness Young, also in the Woman's Hour studio today. |
1:28.4 | And we will have the columnist and author Melanie Reid, who wrote her first spinal column in |
1:32.9 | the Times back in 2010. I so remember reading that first article. Little did Melanie realise back |
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