
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
The New Statesman
The New Statesman is the UK's leading politics and culture magazine. Here you can listen to a selection of our very best reported features and essays read aloud. Get immersed in powerful storytelling and narrative journalism from some of the world's best writers. Have your mind opened by influential thinkers on the forces shaping our lives today.
Ease into the weekend with new episodes published every Saturday morning.
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Top 10 Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman Episodes
Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Inside the migrant revival of British Christianity
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
04/08/23 • 19 min
According to the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, the face of British Christianity is changing rapidly. London is now home to the greatest concentration of African churches outside Africa – many of them in bingo halls and warehouses, schools and community centres, where they also serve as social and charitable hubs. Outside the capital, the prospects of a religious revival are relatively bleak: weekly Church of England attendance is below 2 per cent of England’s population, and 20 Anglican churches are closed for worship every year. Is secularisation “almost entirely a white British phenomenon”, as the Birkbeck political scientist Eric Kaufmann puts it?
In this week’s long read Tomiwa Owolade, a New Statesman contributing writer, explores this divide and looks at the migrant roots of London’s Christian revival. He finds that, largely because of its religious population, the capital has become the most socially conservative city in the country, with a higher percentage of Londoners disapproving of sex outside marriage and homosexuality.
“This is awkward for conservative thinkers,” Owolade writes, “who complain about the decline of Christianity, and about large-scale immigration to Britain. Without immigration, the decline of Christianity would be even more profound. But it is also tricky for progressives: many of these immigrant communities espouse values on gender and sexuality that are far from liberal.”
Will the African Christian revival be dampened by a wider secular culture – or will it expand?
Written and read by Tomiwa Owolade.
This article originally appeared in the 31 March-13 April New Statesman spring special. You can read the text version here.
If you enjoyed this episode, you might like the battle for the soul of English cricket
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Xi, Putin and the new world order
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
04/22/23 • 25 min
In the postwar world, Stalin and the Soviet Union wielded greater power over Mao Zedong's new communist China. Today, following China’s rise as an economic superpower and Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, it is Beijing that has the upper hand – and on whom Russia’s future depends. When Xi Jinping arrived in Moscow for a three-day visit in March 2023, he was greeted with elaborate ceremony and deference. With Russia cut off from the West, China now supplies 40 per cent of its imports, a proportion that will only grow. The leaders are united, too, in their fight against the US for global dominance – but there are tensions and limits within that alliance.
In this magazine cover story, the New Statesman’s global affairs editor Katie Stallard looks at the parallels with the Sino-Soviet alliance of the 1950s, and the two countries’ shared and sometimes violent history, from the first official Russian expedition to Beijing in 1618 to today’s alignment. She hears from others on why their explicitly anti-US world-view has an appeal in the Global South, particularly in Africa. Will the relationship survive China’s growing economic and diplomatic supremacy? And how dangerous is it for the rest of the world?
Written and read by Katie Stallard.
This article was originally published on newstatesman.com on 19 April 2023. You can read the text version here.
If you enjoyed this episode, you may also enjoy The strange death of moderate conservatism.
Subscribers can get an ad free version of the NS Podcast on the New Statesman app
Podcast listeners can subscribe to the New Statesman for just £1 a week for 12 weeks using our special offer. Just visit newstatesman.com/podcastoffer.
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How the British university degree lost its value
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
08/13/22 • 35 min
Three years ago the New Statesman published a cover story showing how successive British governments have emaciated standards in UK university degrees, creating a generation of graduates with devalued qualifications, while costing the taxpayer billions. Since then, the “great university con” has continued unabated. Grade inflation has only increased, despite various declarations from ministers that something should be done to counter it.
In this deeply researched and wide-ranging article, the New Statesman’s senior politics correspondent, Harry Lambert, wrote that the number of Firsts awarded at British universities has quadrupled since 1994. Now, three years on, that number has quintupled.
In this Audio Long Reads episode, Lambert argues that the forces driving this disintegration of academic standards remain in place. That is no surprise. The current system is useful for too many of those involved for the sector to agitate for change. But Britain is being sold short by this “university miracle” – of ever more students going into higher education, and more and more of them emerging with higher grades.
How did we reach this point? Why has the value of a British university degree become so diminished? This piece offers answers to the questions that successive waves of students and their parents have been asking for years.
This article was first published on newstatesman.com on 21 August 2019. You can read the text version here.
Written and read by Harry Lambert.
You might also enjoy listening to “Operation Warm Welcome: the hotel that became home to 100 refugees” by Sophie McBain.
Podcast listeners can get a subscription to the New Statesman for just £1 per week, for 12 weeks. Visit www.newstatesman.com/podcastoffer
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Are 'Substackademics' the new public intellectuals?
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
11/26/22 • 17 min
Roy Jenkins, while serving as president of the European Commission, used to spend his mornings writing. The heads of state who visited him were often keener to speak about his biographies of Asquith or Gladstone than about new legislation. This integration of politics, scholarship and the media was once a feature of British intellectual life, from AJP Taylor to CP Snow, but today the space to think and work has become ever more constrained. It is difficult to imagine Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, blocking out chunks of her diary for an unfinished novel.
As our universities and political institutions bow to the pressures of specialisation and professionalisation, where do today’s public intellectuals reside? The answer, often, is on Substack – a platform that allows its authors to monetise content and easily engage with its users. But it is a cut-throat world, and one that requires continual self-promotion. Reliant on crowdfunding, and on relatively closed conversations with like-minded individuals, how healthy is it really for intellectual life?
In this essay, originally published on newstatesman.com on 20 October 2022, the Cambridge history professor Chris Bickerton examines the decline of the public intellectual. You can read the original text here.
Read by Adrian Bradley.
If you liked listening to this you might also enjoy How does a music writer grieve? With playlists, of course
Podcast listeners can get a subscription to the New Statesman for just £1 per week, for 12 weeks. Visit www.newstatesman.com/podcastoffer
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‘It’s a state of terror’: inside Haiti’s descent into chaos
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
05/20/23 • 26 min
In May 2023, the UN reported that 600 people had been killed in Haiti’s capital Port-au-Prince in the previous month alone – victims of gang violence and the near total collapse of law and order. In April the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, warned that insecurity in the country had “reached levels comparable to countries in armed conflict” and called for the deployment of an international force.
In this powerful reported piece, freelance writer and former Haiti resident Pooja Bhatia talks to contacts on the ground, as well as historians and US State Department officials. She traces the origins of the current crisis through successive governments – from Papa and Baby Doc to Jovenel Moise - and through waves of US intervention. Between 2004 and 2017, UN peacekeeping forces brought cholera and 10,000 deaths to the country. Today cholera is back, with 40,000 suspected cases since October 2022. Against a backdrop of escalating violence and political corruption, many Haitians have come to see escape to the US (under Joe Biden’s “humanitarian parole programme”) or foreign intervention as the only way forward. But will any nation step up?
This article was originally published in the 12-18 May issue of the New Statesman magazine. You can read the text version here.
Written by Pooja Bhatia and read by the New Statesman’s global affairs editor Katie Stallard.
If you liked listening to this episode, you might also enjoy A journey through Ukraine at war.
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The long and stupid decline of the British university
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
03/11/23 • 22 min
Once the envy of the world, British universities are being hollowed out by a managerial class, argues Adrian Pabst, a New Statesman contributing writer and professor of politics at the University of Kent. Instead of intellectual excellence and civic responsibility, the emphasis is increasingly on “churning out graduates who will serve the interests of City firms and the non-governmental organisation industry”.
Where did the rot set in, and can it be cured? Pabst traces the university’s decline from the advent of the student loan and a 1990s proliferation of “Mickey Mouse” degrees, via New Labour and the Cameron-Clegg coalition’s embrace of marketisation and bureaucracy. As degrees have become more expensive, the work that goes into them has become more mediocre – with tutors and students assessed against arbitrary metrics. The universities' "corporate capture... is a profound cultural loss," he writes.
In this excoriating essay, originally published as the New Statesman’s 10 March 2023 cover story, Pabst diagnoses the causes, examines the costs – and proposes solutions to the current crisis. You can read the text version here.
Written by Adrian Pabst and read by Emma Haslett.
If you enjoyed this episode, you might also like The great housing con: why the coming crash will rewrite the UK economy.
Subscribers can get an ad free version of the NS Podcast on the New Statesman app
Podcast listeners can subscribe to the New Statesman for just £1 a week for 12 weeks using our special offer. Just visit newstatesman.com/podcastoffer.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

From the archive: Trotsky in Mexico; Angela Carter on the maternity ward
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
01/07/23 • 18 min
In a second archive edition of the audio long read, we bring you two classic magazine articles. In the first, the then editor of the New Statesman, Kingsley Martin, visits Leon Trotsky in Mexico in 1937, where the Russian communist revolutionary was the guest of the artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo (here referred to only as “Rivera’s wife”, though she was also Trotsky’s lover, or about to be). Martin wanted to ask the exile about the show trials then being held in Moscow, in which Stalin extracted confessions of sedition from Trotskyists. Why, he asked, had his supporters not been bolder and stood their ground? He came away from the encounter, beside a “bright blue patio where the bougainvillea blazes in the sunshine”, with more questions than he brought.
In the second article, the ground-breaking novelist Angela Carter writes about her experiences on a London maternity ward in 1983, shortly after becoming a mother for the first time at the age of 42. As in her fiction, she captures a strange mix of emotions and characters – the insulting doctor, the bossy nurse, the struggling NHS hospital, the bliss of breastfeeding her son, “who is doomed to love us, because we are his parents”, she writes. “The same goes for us. That is life. That’s the hell of it.”
Read by Adrian Bradley and Melissa Denes. You can read text versions of Martin’s article here, and of Carter’s here.
For more about Carter’s life and work, read A Card From Angela Carter by Susannah Clapp (her friend and literary executor) and The Invention of Angela Carter: A Biography by Edmund Gordon.
If you enjoyed this episode, listen to From the New Statesman archive: when HG Wells met Josef Stalin.
Podcast listeners can subscribe to the New Statesman for just £1 a week for 12 weeks using our special offer. Just visit newstatesman.com/podcastoffer.
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The prime minister and the AI that solved the climate crisis
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
09/09/23 • 22 min
After the extreme heat of summer 2024, which saw children stretchered out of their exams, Britain’s prime minister calls a press conference in Westminster Hall. He has one eye on life after office (skiing in Aspen, a big gig in Silicon Valley), but before he leaves, he wants to unveil something truly ground-breaking: a large language model that has been trained by the best minds to solve the climate crisis.
In this satirical work of speculative fiction, the New Statesman’s business editor Will Dunn explores the government’s love affair with Big Tech, fast-forwarding to the dying days of a Conservative government. Climate protestors have been cleared from the roads - but the tarmac is melting and people want answers. Could an advanced AI called Tom provide the prime minister’s moonshot moment?
Written and read by Will Dunn. You can read the text version at newstatesman.com
If you enjoyed this episode, you might also enjoy Edward Docx reading Boris Johnson: the death of a clown.
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A year inside GB News: "what the hell have we done?"
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
05/07/22 • 47 min
It launched with a promise to shake up the staid world of television news – to challenge broadcasting’s perceived liberal, left-wing bias. One year on, and faced with a new rival in TalkTV, how is GB News’s revolution going?
Freelance writer Stuart McGurk spent several months reporting the inside story, as told by staffers past and present: those who were there for a chaotic June 2021 launch, those who quit, and those who stayed.
In this deeply researched and often very funny long read, McGurk charts the highs and lows of Britain’s first new rolling news channel in 30 years. Whose idea was it to interview a Winston Churchill impersonator? Why did producers start booking their own parents as guests? And who thought driving a former Soviet police car into Ukraine’s front line was a good idea? All this, and much more, is revealed.
This article was first published on newstatesman.com on 29 April, and in the magazine on 5 May. You can read the text version here.
Read by Chris Stone.
Podcast listeners can subscribe to the New Statesman for just £1 a week for 12 weeks using our special offer. Just visit newstatesman.com/podcastoffer.
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What does a doctor do?
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman
04/23/22 • 28 min
Stretched to breaking point by the pandemic, health services around the world are in crisis – with staff exhausted and demoralised, many of them quitting as a result. England alone is at least 6,000 GPs short of the government’s stated 2024 target – a recruitment pledge of the last election which it has already abandoned.
The New Statesman’s medical editor, Phil Whitaker, a practising doctor, reflects on the ordinary pressures he and his colleagues face – in this case, through the gradually unfolding story of one family’s complex needs. Is a young girl’s abdominal pain appendicitis or a reaction to stress at home? Are her mother’s heart palpitations a sign of everyday strain or an underlying cardiovascular problem? Whitaker argues that knowing his patients well can be life-saving – but that many family GPs like him fear their days are numbered.
In this moving insider’s account of life in the consulting room, Whitaker makes the case for continuity of care and a patient-centred, less transactional kind of medicine.
Written by Phil Whitaker and read by Chris Stone.
Read the text version here. It was first published on the New Statesman website on 8 December 2021, and in the magazine on 10 December 2021.
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FAQ
How many episodes does Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman have?
Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman currently has 88 episodes available.
What topics does Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman cover?
The podcast is about Society & Culture, Story, Journalism, Storytelling, Podcasts and Philosophy.
What is the most popular episode on Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman?
The episode title 'Would there have been climate change under socialism?' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman?
The average episode length on Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman is 27 minutes.
How often are episodes of Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman released?
Episodes of Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman are typically released every 7 days.
When was the first episode of Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman?
The first episode of Audio Long Reads, from the New Statesman was released on Apr 1, 2022.
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