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A Correction Podcast - Podcast

A Correction Podcast

A Correction is an economics podcast that seeks to demystify the economy and make economics accessible.

Business Business News Education K-12 News & Politics
Update frequency
every 11 days
Episodes
77
Years Active
2021 - 2025
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David and Jon Moscow on How Food Really Makes it Onto Your Plate

David and Jon Moscow on How Food Really Makes it Onto Your Plate

David Moscow is the creator, executive producer, and host of From Scratch. David made his feature film debut at age thirteen in Big, starring as the young Tom Hanks; soon after, he starred with Chris…

Thu 20 Oct 2022
Sean T. Byrnes on Bretton Woods, the Group of 77 and the Rise of the New American Right

Sean T. Byrnes on Bretton Woods, the Group of 77 and the Rise of the New American Right

Sean T. Byrnes is a writer, teacher, and historian. His work explores issues related to US politics, international relations, and global economic inequality. The author of Disunited Nations: US Forei…

Wed 28 Sep 2022
Anders Anderson on the Economics of E-Bikes

Anders Anderson on the Economics of E-Bikes

Anders Anderson is Associate Professor at the Stockholm School of Economics and a Research Fellow at the Swedish House of Finance. He obtained his doctoral degree in 2004 at the Stockholm School of E…

Wed 14 Sep 2022
Rosa Vasilaki on Migration Politics in Greece

Rosa Vasilaki on Migration Politics in Greece

Rosa Vasilaki is an Athens-based sociologist and historian. She holds a PhD in history from Paris’s Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and a PhD in sociology from the University of Bristol.

Tue 30 Aug 2022
Srishti Yadav on the Agrarian Question in India

Srishti Yadav on the Agrarian Question in India

Dr. Srishti Yadav is an Instructor for the Economics & Society stream in the Department of Economics at the University of Manitoba. She has a PhD in Economics from The New School in New York. Her dis…

Tue 09 Aug 2022
Gediminas Lesutis on The Politics of Precarity in Mozambique

Gediminas Lesutis on The Politics of Precarity in Mozambique

Gediminas Lesutis works at the intersection of global politics, human geography, and critical theory. In 2018, he completed a PhD in Politics at the University of Manchester, UK. This was followed by…

Thu 28 Jul 2022
Teddy Wayne on The Great Man Theory

Teddy Wayne on The Great Man Theory

Teddy Wayne is the author of the novels The Great Man Theory (July 12, 2022), Apartment, Loner, The Love Song of Jonny Valentine, and Kapitoil. He is the winner of a Whiting Writers’ Award and an NEA…

Tue 12 Jul 2022
Elle Hardy on How Pentecostalism Became the Fastest Growing Religion on Earth

Elle Hardy on How Pentecostalism Became the Fastest Growing Religion on Earth

Elle Hardy is an Australian-born journalist usually based between the UK and US. She has reported extensively on stories from the United States and the former Soviet Union, among other places. Credit…

Mon 27 Jun 2022
Timothy Frye on Understanding Russia Through Data (and not Putinology)

Timothy Frye on Understanding Russia Through Data (and not Putinology)

Timothy Frye is the Marshall D. Shulman Professor of Post-Soviet Foreign Policy at Columbia University. Professor Frye received a BA in Russian language and literature from Middlebury College, an MIA…

Tue 14 Jun 2022
Andrea Terzi on Central Banking and Inflation

Andrea Terzi on Central Banking and Inflation

Andrea Terzi is Professor of Economics at Franklin University Switzerland and Research Associate at the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, New York. He has taught at Rutgers University, the In…

Fri 03 Jun 2022
Paolo Tedesco on How Marx Understood the Middle Ages (and what he may have gotten wrong)

Paolo Tedesco on How Marx Understood the Middle Ages (and what he may have gotten wrong)

Paolo Tedesco teaches history at the University of Tübingen. His main research interests include the social and economic history of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, comparative agrarian hist…

Thu 26 May 2022
Fiori S. Berhane on the End of Asylum

Fiori S. Berhane on the End of Asylum

Fiori Berhane is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at USC. Fiori Berhane broadly researches the ways in which African refugees challenge discursive and legal-juridical frameworks that undergird the…

Mon 16 May 2022
Alex Ruch on why Democrats and Republicans Buy Different Brands of Jeans (or the Spread of Polarization and Lifestyle Politics)

Alex Ruch on why Democrats and Republicans Buy Different Brands of Jeans (or the Spread of Polarization and Lifestyle Politics)

Alex Ruch is a Machine Learning Engineer II at Spotify. Previously, he worked as a ML Research Engineer at Graphika, Inc. (featured on Built In!) and was a Sage Fellow PhD at Cornell University in th…

Mon 09 May 2022
Dr. Jonathan Pugh on Islands, the Anthropocene and Why There Will Still be Islands At the End of the World

Dr. Jonathan Pugh on Islands, the Anthropocene and Why There Will Still be Islands At the End of the World

Dr. Jonathan Pugh is Reader in Island Studies, Department of Geography, Newcastle University, UK. He has more than 70 publications and is particularly noted for his work on the ‘relational’ and ‘arch…

Fri 06 May 2022
Tamas Gerőcs on the War in Ukraine and The New

Tamas Gerőcs on the War in Ukraine and The New "Scramble For Africa"

Tamas Gerocs is a PhD candidate in sociology at Binghamton University. He is also a research fellow at the Institute of World Economics at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His research field is Eas…

Sat 30 Apr 2022
James Henderson on The Energy Transition

James Henderson on The Energy Transition

Dr James Henderson is Director the Energy Transition Research Initiative and is Chairman of the Gas Research Programme at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES) from 2016, he has been writing…

Thu 21 Apr 2022
Lucia Pradella on Imperialism and Unfree Labor in the Mediterranean

Lucia Pradella on Imperialism and Unfree Labor in the Mediterranean

Lucia Pradella studied Philosophy, Social Sciences and Migration Studies at the University of Venice Ca’ Foscari and the Humboldt University in Berlin. She collaborated with the project of historical…

Sun 17 Apr 2022
James K. Galbraith on the Euro Crisis, Greece and Central Bank Sanctions

James K. Galbraith on the Euro Crisis, Greece and Central Bank Sanctions

James K. Galbraith holds the Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs and a professorship in Government at The University of Texas…

Sun 03 Apr 2022
Amelia Winger-Bearskin on the Metaverse, DAOS, Gaming, NFTs and Indigenous Culture

Amelia Winger-Bearskin on the Metaverse, DAOS, Gaming, NFTs and Indigenous Culture

Amelia Winger-Bearskin is an artist of Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) origin who innovates with artificial intelligence in ways that make a positive impact on our communities and the environment. She is a …

Sun 27 Mar 2022
Samuel Hughes on Ugly Buildings, Beautiful Cities and How to Build Better Suburbs

Samuel Hughes on Ugly Buildings, Beautiful Cities and How to Build Better Suburbs

Samuel Hughes is a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford and Head of Research at the Office for Place within the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.

His education was primaril…

Mon 21 Mar 2022
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