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Small Changes

Small Changes is a podcast series of one-on-one interviews with people who've seen a problem in the world and set out to change it – often in small and unexpected ways

  • Weekend banner by Luis Mendo

    Weekend: episode two of a new podcast

    In this episode, Marina Hyde looks at the new additions to Downing Street, Hadley Freeman interviews Hollywood actor Will Arnett, Sirin Kale tries her hand at quiz show Mastermind, and David Robson examines why we’re so stressed about stress
  • Artwork by Luis Mendo

    Weekend: episode one of a new podcast

    In our first episode, Marina Hyde reflects on another less than stellar week for Boris Johnson, Edward Helmore charts the rise of Joe Rogan, Laura Snapes goes deep with singer George Ezra, and Alex Moshakis asks, “Are you a jerk at work?”
  • Grace Dent bathes in pasta

    Comfort Eating with Grace Dent: episode one of a new podcast

    In the first episode of our new podcast, screenwriter Russell T Davies tells Grace Dent about his childhood in Swansea, the delights of Woolworth’s pork and egg pies, and how his husband’s death informed his TV series It’s a Sin
  • Podcast Reverberate ApplePodcasts PromotionalArt 3

    Reverberate: episode 1 of our new series – podcast

    In the first episode of our new series, Reverberate, we hear from Kashy Keegan – the unlikely voice of Hong Kong’s nascent pro-democracy movement
  • Innermost graphic

    Innermost: another episode of our new series – podcast

    Two callers tell Leah Green how their relationships sent them down unexpected paths, one with criminal consequences
  • Innermost graphic

    Innermost: episode 1 of a new series - podcast

    In our first episode, we hear how an uncle’s funeral and meals with an emotionally distant brother help James and Jess think about their families in new and unexpected ways.
  • LifeBank CEO Temie Giwa-Tubosun on one of the company's bikes

    'The blood lady': the medical start-up founder saving lives in Nigeria – podcast

    When Temie Giwa-Tubosun realised that Nigerians lacked safe access to vital health care products like blood she decided to do something about it. That decision changed her life and saved those of many others
  • Members of the Mukwege Foundation at the Hague. Vasfije Krasniqi-Goodman (2nd from left, 2nd row) with other survivors and policy makers, who discussed how the international community can give recognition and support to victims of wartime sexual violence.
Vasfije Krasniqi-Goodman podcast

    'What happened to me will not happen to my daughters': sexual violence in war – podcast

    Kosovan-born Vasfije Krasniqi-Goodman explains how a survivors’ network has empowered her and others to speak out against rape as a weapon of conflict
  • Suraya Pakzad, who founded the NGO Voice of Women in 1998. It began by teaching girls to read and now provides women with shelter, counselling, and job training across Afghanistan.

    Defying the Taliban: Afghanistan's secret schools for girls – podcast

    Suraya Pakzad talks to Lucy Lamble about her work championing girls’ education – and living on red alert for the next Taliban raid
  • Kholoud Al-Faqih (left), the first female judge in the Middle East's religious courts, with Erika Cohn, director of the Judge

    'I live in the 21st century, not the 10th': the first female judge in a sharia court – podcast

    Erika Cohn’s new film tells of how Kholoud Al-Faqih realised her dream of representing women in the Middle East’s all-male religious courts
  • Hajooj Kuka

    'Suddenly you have to run for your life': a film-maker's take on life in Sudan – podcast

    Award-winning director Hajooj Kuka on the realities of life in a wartorn country, and the inspiration for aKasha, his first feature film
  • Mexican journalist Anabel Hernández, author of A Massacre in Mexico:
The True Story Behind the Missing 43 Students, published by Verso Books

    ‘My father's murderers are still free’: taking on Mexico's violent underworld – podcast

    Investigative journalist Anabel Hernández has risked her life to expose corruption. She tells Lucy Lamble why staying silent is not an option
  • Christophe Oulé outside the school his organisation runs supporting blind and visually impaired children in Ouagadougou.

    'Disability is not the end of the world': reinventing yourself after becoming blind – podcast

    Activist Christophe Oulé had a glittering career in engineering when he lost his sight. Now he campaigns tirelessly to improve the lives of other blind people
  • A chicken walks on debris in Bento Rodrigues district after a dam, owned by Vale SA and BHP Billiton Ltd burst, in Mariana, Brazil, November 9, 2015. Mud and waste water from burst dams at a Brazilian iron ore mine cut off drinking water and raised health and environmental concerns in cities more than 300 km (186 miles) downstream on Monday, amid increasingly dire search efforts in a village devastated by the mudslides. One of Brazil's worst mining disasters in recent memory left 25 people missing. Officials have confirmed two deaths since Thursday's tragedy and are working to identify two more corpses recovered on Sunday. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes

    'It's a long fight': the communities devastated by Brazil's dam collapse – podcast

    Three years after the country’s worst environmental catastrophe, Letícia Oliveira is still campaigning for justice for the people affected
  • View of Bogota

    Capital offence: tackling harassment on public transport in Bogotá – podcast

    In Colombia’s capital, many women are reliant on buses. Ángela Anzola and the city’s mayor want transport designed by men to be safer for women
  • Shahin Ashraf campaigns for Muslim women’s rights.

    'Inequality is a poison': campaigning for Muslim women's rights – podcast

    Shahin Ashraf’s experience growing up as a British Muslim has led to a life campaigning for gender equality around the world
  • Malaysia LGBT activist  Thilaga Sulathireh

    Fighting for LGBT rights in a country where lesbians are caned – podcast

    Malaysia’s LGBT community faces rampant persecution. Thi Laga, a co-founder of rights group Justice for Sisters, is a leading figure in the fightback
  • Tony Rinaudo

    Fighting the advance of the desert: the forest maker of the Sahel – podcast

    The Australian agronomist Tony Rinaudo reveals the secrets that brought about extraordinary results in dozens of countries, from Senegal to Ethiopia
  • Omar Mohammed, a historian from Mosul, Iraq, known until recently only as the anonymous blogger Mosul Eye

    The Mosul historian who risked his life to blog about life under Isis – podcast

    When his beloved city was occupied by Islamic State, Iraqi Omar Mohammed was determined to document every atrocity – as anonymous blogger Mosul Eye
  • Eddie Ndopu: 'I don’t want us to just have the ramp, I want us to have the whole building.'

    'I'm a living manifestation of possibility': South Africa's emissary on disability – podcast

    Eddie Ndopu defied expectations as the first African with a disability to graduate from Oxford. Now he wants to be the first wheelchair user in space
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