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Woman's Hour

Weekend Woman’s Hour: Ecofeminist Vandana Shiva, how to quit well, Shekeila Scarlett

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 7 January 2023

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The author and environmental activist Vandana Shiva has released a new book, Terra Viva to coincide with her 70th birthday. She discusses her life campaigning for climate justice and equality, as well as what she thinks of the current climate situation. According to reports in the Telegraph this week, Rishi Sunak has shelved plans to reform childcare services put forward by his predecessor, Liz Truss. The plans were looking at increasing free childcare support and changing the staff-child ratio. What will this mean for parents who need childcare and for those working in the industry? We hear the CEO of the Early Years Alliance Neil Leitch and the Deputy Director of UK Onward, Adam Hawksbee. New year, new job? If you’re thinking of leaving a job we discuss the art of quitting well. Sometimes leaving is the right thing to do, but how do you do that without destroying everything you’ve worked hard for? We hear from Mandy Dennison Director of Engagement from the International Federation of Coaching UK, and Karen Danker from Women Returners, which helps women returning to the work place after an extended break. In our series Finding My Voice we’re talking to women about the moment they realised they had something to say or stand up for. Shekeila Scarlett was excluded from school when she was 12 years old. Although she was reinstated at the school just 2 months later, the experience made her realised how distant young pupils were from the governors who made decisions about their school. At 26, she’s now the Chair of Governors at Stoke Newington High School in Hackney, making her one of the youngest chairs of a school governing board in the UK. This year in the UK children conceived by sperm, egg or embryo donation who turn 18 will be able to request information that identifies their donor. This includes the donor’s name, birth name, date of birth and address, as long as the information is on the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority’s register. It’s a result of a change in the law in April 2005 meaning tha the first of those children conceived after the law changed will have their eighteenth birthdays this year. To discuss the implications for donors, children conceived by donor as well as their families are Clare Ettinghausen, Director of Strategy & Corporate Affairs at the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, the UK’s Fertility Regulator. And Nina Barnsley Director of the Donor Conception Network which is a UK based charity supporting donor conception families. You might have spent this first week of January planning where you want to go, what you want to do and who you want to be in 2023, but have you made any financial new year’s resolutions? Statistics show that more than a third of us (35%) will make a financial new year’s resolution this year. We hear from the consumer editor of the Financial Times and presenter of the FT's Money Clinic podcast, Claer Barrett as well as the budget savvy mum, Gemma Bird also known as @MoneyMumOfficial on what we can all do when it comes to financial planning. Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Rabeka Nurmahomed Photo credit: Kartikey Shiva

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts.

0:05.1

Good afternoon and welcome to Weekend Woman's Hour.

0:08.2

Put the kettle on, grab the biscuits and settle in.

0:11.0

Coming up on the program today.

0:12.7

As we begin another year and think about doing things differently,

0:15.8

including possibly changing jobs,

0:18.1

we ask if there's an art to quitting well

0:20.8

without destroying everything you've worked so hard for

0:23.7

and burning all your bridges.

0:25.6

Also, all week we've been hearing from inspiring women

0:28.5

about finding their voice.

0:30.0

Today we're here from Shakela Scarlett,

0:32.0

who became the youngest chair of governors at the age of 26.

0:35.6

It's just about understanding that you know what,

0:38.0

you are at the table for a reason,

0:40.6

and if you want to make some change,

0:42.3

you've got to sit at certain tables or certain spaces

0:45.1

in order to make that change.

0:46.5

You deserve to be here, you want to be the change

0:48.6

you've got to see in the world.

0:49.7

So sit at this table and own it.

0:51.9

We'll also discuss how a change in the law this year

...

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