linking:debate

linking:debate

Embodying the spirit of constructive discussion,linking:debate is sharing perspectives that shape progress. As a new podcast series we are dedicated to hosting vital conversations across disciplines, sectors and perspectives. It brings together voices from academia, activism, policy, science, technology, health and the arts to debate pressing global questions in a structured and moderated format. Each episode brings two speakers into deliberate juxtaposition, not to resolve differences but to examine them. Distinct viewpoints, shaped by different assumptions and experiences, are placed in dialogue so tensions, overlaps and uncertainties can surface. The focus is on how ideas shift when tested against an alternative framing, leaving listeners with clearer questions rather than fixed conclusions. Rooted in the legacy of a live debate series, linking:debate has evolved into an audio platform to continue fostering public discourse without the constraints of physical events. Episodes remain shaped by a commitment to rigorous moderation, respectful dialogue and thoughtful framing. Participants are selected based on their authority, relevance to the topic and capacity to engage in constructive conflict. The series explores issues through seven intersecting themes: Activism: examining diverse expressions of advocacy and protest as forces for societal changeCitizenship: exploring rights, duties and civic responsibility in a globalised worldClimate: addressing the planetary implications of environmental change across species and systemsHealth: confronting global disparities in access, infrastructure and careHuman Rights: defending dignity, autonomy and voice for all people in all placesScholarship: valuing lifelong learning, plural epistemologies and the evolution of knowledgeTechnology: interrogating the role of digital systems in shaping power, equity and possibilitylinking:debate seeks to provide a platform for transdisciplinary exchange at a time when public dialogue is too often polarised or siloed. It champions the idea that disagreement, when handled with care and structure, can be generative. In a world of accelerating complexity, the ability to engage across differences is not just desirable, it is essential. more info: www.linkingdebate.com

Episodes

  1. How linking:debate Works

    Season 1 Trailer

    How linking:debate Works

    How We Structure linking:debate Discussions In discussions and debates, structure matters. It helps maintain engagement, gives value to listeners and keeps the conversation focused without making it feel scripted. This information session looks at how linking:debate creates a dynamic conversation between specialists while preserving a natural flow. The Foundation of Effective Discussions linking:debate begins with a clear prompt, but the preparation before recording is deliberately light. Before the session starts, participants agree on three essential elements: the debate title, the shared problem or need that makes the discussion worth having and the broad arc of the conversation. This gives the discussion shape without turning it into a script. Guests are encouraged to prepare questions they are genuinely curious to ask each other, rather than fixed points they want to deliver. The Role of the Host in Facilitating Clarity Unlike a standard panel interview, where the host may guide the conversation through a list of questions, the host in linking:debate plays a lighter role. Their responsibility is to protect the clarity of the topic, keep the discussion moving and step in only when the structure starts to slip. This allows the exchange to sit primarily between the guests. The host supports the conversation without dominating it. Exploring Challenges and Tensions A key part of linking:debate is the exploration of challenges, tensions and disagreements around a topic. This is where the value of the discussion emerges. Participants bring their expertise and experience into contact, showing where assumptions differ, where trade-offs appear and where the issue becomes difficult to resolve. The discussion is not about forcing agreement. It is about making the complexity of the topic easier to hear. Concluding with Reflection As the discussion closes, linking:debate returns to what remains unresolved, what success could look like and what might be needed next. The aim is not to produce a definitive answer, but to give listeners a clearer sense of the debate and the questions that still matter. This ending creates a natural point of reflection and helps prevent the conversation from simply fading out. Key Takeaways from the linking:debate Structure Preparation is focused: Agreeing the title, shared problem and broad arc gives the discussion shape without overplanning it.Facilitation supports flow: The host protects clarity rather than controlling every question.Complexity is part of the value: Tensions, trade-offs and disagreement give the discussion depth.Reflection matters: The ending should clarify what has been opened up, what remains unresolved and what might need further debate.By using this structure, linking:debate creates conversations that are focused but not rigid, thoughtful but not overproduced. The goal is to support a meaningful exchange of perspectives that continues beyond the recording itself.

    3 min
  2. About linking:debate

    Season 1 Trailer

    About linking:debate

    linking:debate - Exploring Intersections Public questions rarely sit within one field, one discipline or one point of view. linking:debate explores the intersections between issues such as climate change, health, technology, citizenship, human rights, scholarship and activism, showing how these themes overlap and shape wider civic debate. Understanding linking:debate linking:debate is a podcast dedicated to exploring intersecting ideas that serve as the driving force behind systemic change and societal transformation. It is organised around seven recurring themes: activism, citizenship, climate change, health, human rights, scholarship and technology. Each theme acts as an entry point into broader civic questions. The podcast is not designed to provide final answers. It creates space for different perspectives to meet, so listeners can think more critically about the tensions, trade-offs and assumptions behind each debate. Activism linking:debate does not approach activism only from an activist’s perspective. It asks how change happens, who drives it and what forms of resistance or participation become possible. This opens discussion around belonging, responsibility and public life, connecting activism with questions of citizenship and power. Climate Change Climate change is not treated only as a scientific issue. linking:debate explores its human, social and political implications, including how it intersects with health, justice and collective responsibility. This allows climate debates to move beyond technical explanation and into the wider choices societies face. Health Health is more than a medical concern. It connects to inequality, access to care, dignity and human rights. linking:debate uses health as a way to explore the systems, responsibilities and disparities that shape wellbeing across societies. Technology Technology is treated as both a tool and a source of tension. linking:debate examines how technology intersects with activism, citizenship, health and human rights, asking what is being built, who benefits and what consequences follow. The Transdisciplinary Approach of linking:debate A defining feature of linking:debate is its transdisciplinary structure. Each episode brings together two specialists whose fields intersect through a shared prompt. The format is not a standard interview or a competitive debate. It is a discussion designed to surface assumptions, open new lines of thought and highlight the tensions within a topic. Episodes are also tagged under recurring series: Cities Under Pressure, Data for Good, Economy Transitions, Factfulness, Fixing the Tech Footprint, Generational Voices, Just Transitions in Practice, Land in Balance, Resilient Lives and Rules of the Digital Commons. These series help organise the podcast without closing the discussion down. The same question can be revisited by different guests, from different fields or experiences, creating a different debate each time. Embracing Complexity in Public Discourse linking:debate is not about providing definitive answers. It is about making public questions sharper, richer and more worth discussing. By bringing different perspectives into contact, the podcast supports listeners in coming to their own conclusions.

    3 min
  3. The Green Illusion: who is counting technology's footprint honestly

    Feb 17

    The Green Illusion: who is counting technology's footprint honestly

    In this episode,from the Series: Fixing the Tech Footprint the speakers argue AI & cloud computing have shifted from immaterial service into heavy industry. AI differs from earlier platforms as each use needs computation, energy & water, ending near zero marginal cost & driving expansion of data centres & chips. AI & data centres now use several percent of global energy. The discussion examines GPU & semiconductor production, from fabrication plants to extraction & chemical use. Short lifecycles & weak recycling raise e waste & further extraction. Then to data centre construction, noting the carbon intensity of concrete, steel and copper and impacts on grids & communities. They argue neutrality claims, offsets & purchase agreements present growth as sustainable while shifting emissions & slowing grid decarbonisation. Claims that AI will solve climate change are challenged: efficiency gains & modelling help but remain limited & futures such as fusion energy stay distant. ⁠Alistair Alexander ⁠is a researcher on the social and ecological impact of technology. Recent projects include researching regenerative futures for AI and digital infrastructures with Bath Spa University, teaching a seminar on Ecologies of technology at the University of Europe for Applied Sciences and creating the Connection Matters display banners for the exhibition Invisible Networks in Berlin. He engages diverse groups with work on the Doughnut Economic Model for Tech and how social networks could be more like funghi networks. ⁠https://reclaimedsystems.substack.com⁠ ⁠Benjamin Johnson⁠ finished his PhD in physics in 2010 at the Technische Universität Berlin with a thesis on thin layer solar cells. He later worked on catalytic materials for alternative fuels. In 2015 he began research in science history, studying technological progress, which led to his book Making Ammonia (Springer, 2022). He now works to increase public understanding of the energy transition by combining natural sciences with history, policy and civil society perspectives. ⁠https://substack.com/@benthephysicist⁠ -- Music 'Good Balance' by ⁠AO Intro by Deborah Causton

    39 min

Trailers

About

Embodying the spirit of constructive discussion,linking:debate is sharing perspectives that shape progress. As a new podcast series we are dedicated to hosting vital conversations across disciplines, sectors and perspectives. It brings together voices from academia, activism, policy, science, technology, health and the arts to debate pressing global questions in a structured and moderated format. Each episode brings two speakers into deliberate juxtaposition, not to resolve differences but to examine them. Distinct viewpoints, shaped by different assumptions and experiences, are placed in dialogue so tensions, overlaps and uncertainties can surface. The focus is on how ideas shift when tested against an alternative framing, leaving listeners with clearer questions rather than fixed conclusions. Rooted in the legacy of a live debate series, linking:debate has evolved into an audio platform to continue fostering public discourse without the constraints of physical events. Episodes remain shaped by a commitment to rigorous moderation, respectful dialogue and thoughtful framing. Participants are selected based on their authority, relevance to the topic and capacity to engage in constructive conflict. The series explores issues through seven intersecting themes: Activism: examining diverse expressions of advocacy and protest as forces for societal changeCitizenship: exploring rights, duties and civic responsibility in a globalised worldClimate: addressing the planetary implications of environmental change across species and systemsHealth: confronting global disparities in access, infrastructure and careHuman Rights: defending dignity, autonomy and voice for all people in all placesScholarship: valuing lifelong learning, plural epistemologies and the evolution of knowledgeTechnology: interrogating the role of digital systems in shaping power, equity and possibilitylinking:debate seeks to provide a platform for transdisciplinary exchange at a time when public dialogue is too often polarised or siloed. It champions the idea that disagreement, when handled with care and structure, can be generative. In a world of accelerating complexity, the ability to engage across differences is not just desirable, it is essential. more info: www.linkingdebate.com