4.7 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 24 October 2018
⏱️ 33 minutes
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CORRECT EPISODE NOW POSTED. Today's episode is on the alarming new report out from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and how it is that William Nordhaus — an economist whose work is dedicated to arguing that that it would be too inefficient to address the ecological crisis aggressively and urgently — recently won the discipline's equivalent of the Nobel Prize. Dan speaks to Alyssa Battisoni, a PhD candidate in political science and member of Jacobin's editorial board.
Thanks to Verso Books. Check out their huge selection of left-wing books at www.versobooks.com.
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0:00.0 | This episode of The Dig is brought to you by our listeners who support us at patreon.com and by Verso Books, which has loads of great left-wing titles perfect for dig listeners like you. One that you might like is Lights in the Distance, |
0:16.0 | Exile in Refuge at the Borders of Europe by Daniel Trilling. |
0:20.0 | A mother puts her children into a refrigerator truck and asks, |
0:24.6 | what else could I do? A runaway teenager comes of age on the streets, |
0:29.5 | sleeping in abandoned buildings. A student leaves his war-ravaged country behind because he |
0:35.7 | doesn't want to kill. Everyone among the thousands of people who come to Europe in |
0:40.9 | search of asylum each year possesses a unique story. |
0:44.9 | But those stories don't end as they cross into the west. |
0:49.1 | In lights in the distance, acclaimed journalist Daniel Trilling, draws on years of reporting to build a portrait of the refugee |
0:56.3 | crisis as seen through the eyes of the people who experienced it firsthand. |
1:01.9 | As the European Union has grown, so has a tangled and often violent system designed to filter |
1:07.2 | out unwanted migrants. |
1:10.2 | Visiting camps and hostels, sneaking into detention centers, |
1:13.9 | and delving into his own family's history of displacement. |
1:17.6 | Trilling weaves together the stories of people he met |
1:20.0 | and followed from country to country. In doing so, he shows that the terms |
1:24.7 | commonly used to define them, refugee or economic migrant, legal or illegal, |
1:31.1 | deserving or undeserving, fall woefully short of capturing the complex realities. |
1:37.8 | The founding story of the EU is that it exists to ensure the horrors of the 20th century are |
1:42.4 | never repeated. |
1:44.2 | Now, as it comes to terms with the worst refugee crisis |
1:47.6 | since the Second World War, its declared values of freedom, |
... |
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