384 episodes

Brilliant solutions to the world’s problems. We meet people with ideas to make the world a better place and investigate whether they work.

People Fixing the World BBC World Service

    • Helse og trening
    • 4.9 • 7 Ratings

Brilliant solutions to the world’s problems. We meet people with ideas to make the world a better place and investigate whether they work.

    Living with climate change

    Living with climate change

    Poorer countries are likely to bear the brunt of the impacts of climate change, with rising temperatures and more unsettled weather leading to greater stresses on natural resources and often inadequate infrastructure. But whilst there’s a lot of focus on global attempts to limit temperature rises by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, there are many smaller scale projects aimed at both tackling and living with climate change.
    On this edition of People Fixing The World, reporter Jane Chambers travels to the small Central American nation of El Salvador. She meets communities working to preserve highly endangered mangrove forests, crucial in protecting coastlines against flooding and valuable carbon sinks. She also visits a “shade coffee” plantation – where coffee is grown beneath a canopy of plants and trees – to hear how the method can help preserve rainforest and protect against soil erosion and water loss. And she visits a project on the Pacific coast that has made huge strides in protecting the critically endangered hawksbill sea turtle.
    Presenter: Myra Anubi
    Reporter: Jane Chambers
    Series Producer: Jon Bithrey
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound mix: Annie Gardiner
    (Image: Aldo Sanchez and Boanergues Sanchez holding a hawksbill sea turtle, photo by Magali Portillo)

    • 23 min
    The school run by kids

    The school run by kids

    If you could invent a new kind of school what would it look like? What skills would you teach children, and how would the school be run?
    On this edition of People Fixing The World we visit the Mechai Pattana School in Thailand which was founded by the campaigner Mechai Viravaidya in 2008, on principals of charity and leadership. Children are responsible for every aspect of running the school, from buying food for the kitchens to disciplining fellow students and even recruiting new staff.
    The children also run their own businesses, and perform several hours of community service every week. Many of the students come from underprivileged backgrounds, but their school fees are “paid” by planting 800 trees a year, together with their families.
    The idea is for the school to produce “change-makers” – could it be a model for others to follow?
    Presenter: Myra Anubi
    Producer/reporter: William Kremer
    Series Producer: Jon Bithrey
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound mix: Annie Gardiner

    • 22 min
    Fighting sexism in society

    Fighting sexism in society

    Across the world millions of women and girls face discrimination and worse because of their gender. On this edition of People Fixing The World we look at projects designed to change attitudes. In India we visit workshops aimed at recruiting younger men as allies in the fight against sexism and gender inequality. And we speak to the founder of Chalk Back, a street art initiative that encourages women to write sexist remarks they’ve been the target of onto pavements in chalk to highlight the problem of street harassment.
    Presenter: Myra Anubi
    Reporter: Chhavi Sachdev
    Series Producer: Jon Bithrey
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound mix: Hal Haines

    • 22 min
    Restoring California's underwater forests

    Restoring California's underwater forests

    Often described as underwater rainforests and the “lungs of the ocean”, kelp forests line as much as 25% of the world’s coastlines. They provide important shelter and food for fish and other marine life, and are vital for our oceans’ ecosystems. However kelp is under severe threat because of climate change, warming seas and overfishing. We look at projects in California aimed at stemming the decline of kelp including how scientists are growing it in a laboratory to be planted at sea as well as tackling a key cause of kelp degradation - sea urchins.
    Presenter: Myra Anubi
    Producer/reporter: Craig Langran
    Series Producer: Jon Bithrey
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound mix: Frank McWeeny

    • 23 min
    Kangaroo care for premature babies

    Kangaroo care for premature babies

    Premature babies often need a lot of expensive specialised care - but that isn’t always available. So, doctors in Colombia are teaching mothers to look after their babies in a similar way that kangaroos look after their own young.
    It’s called "kangaroo mother care" and instead of being in an incubator, babies are wrapped tightly against their mother’s skin.
    The technique was developed in Bogota in the late 1970s as a response to overcrowding in hospital maternity units. There weren't enough incubators and around 70% of premature babies didn’t survive.
    Doctors started using this simple skin-to-skin method. They found it wasn't only saving babies but was also helping them to thrive. Now, kangaroo care has spread around the world.
    Presenter: Myra Anubi
    Reporter: Zoe Gelber
    Series producer: Tom Colls
    Sound mix: Hal Haines
    Editor: Richard Vadon
    Email: peoplefixingtheworld@bbc.co.uk
    Image: A baby in the kangaroo position

    • 23 min
    Redefining luxury fashion

    Redefining luxury fashion

    The fashion industry is the third largest manufacturing industry in the world consuming huge amounts of the world’s resources and contributing to greenhouse gas emissions. But some innovators are trying to make the industry more sustainable. We discover how old fire hoses in the UK have been diverted from landfill and turned into fashionable bags and accessories. Plus we visit Mongolia to find out about a new luxury material made from yak hair. It's an eco-friendly replacement for cashmere which comes from goats who are causing desertification. Presenter: Myra Anubi Producer/reporter: Claire Bowes Executive Producer: Richard Kenny Series Producer: Jon Bithrey Editor: Tom Bigwood Sound Mix: Andrew Mills

    • 22 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
7 Ratings

7 Ratings

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