

Woman's Hour
BBC Radio 4
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.Listen to our new series of conversations, The Woman's Hour Guide to Life, on BBC Sounds - your toolkit for the juggle, struggle and everything in between: www.bbc.co.uk/guidetolife
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 28, 2024 • 57min
Biba exhibition, Pupil behaviour, Australian politician Georgie Purcell, Breaking the cycle
Dr. Patrick Roach discusses teacher violence and gender disparity in classrooms. Biba exhibition details the brand's fashion impact. Georgie Purcell, an Australian politician, shares her struggles in politics. The podcast sheds light on challenges faced by women in various fields.

Mar 27, 2024 • 54min
Stoning of Women in Afghanistan, Jazz with Zara McFarlane, AI job losses & women
The leader of the Taliban has declared on state television that women who commit adultery will be stoned to death. Nuala McGovern speaks to the former deputy speaker of the Afghan Parliament, Fawzia Koofi.
We look at the legacy of children's TV executive Kay Benbow, hailed as “Queen of the Beebies”, who has died with historian Dr Emily Baughan and producer Anne Wood.Our reporter Jo Morris talks to the mum of a young man who got into serious trouble with drugs in the third in our series Breaking The Cycle about SHiFT a new approach to helping young people at risk of going off the rails. A new report by the Institute for Public Policy Research warns of an AI "jobs apocalypse" which will have the greatest impact on women and young people. We talk to Carsten Jung from the IPPR and to AI Expert Prof. Gina Neff.And live music from Zara McFarlane who's appearing at this year’s Cheltenham Jazz Festival. Presenter: Nuala McGovern
Producer: Lisa Jenkinson
Studio Manager: Steve Greenwood

Mar 26, 2024 • 57min
Killed Women campaign, Anti-ageing products and young girls, France birth rate
Julie Devey from Killed Women discusses campaigning for harsher sentences in domestic abuse cases. The podcast also covers the rise in young girls using anti-aging products and France's declining birth rate initiatives. Important topics include gendered violence, skincare regulations, and fertility factors.

Mar 25, 2024 • 57min
Anne Hathaway and Jessica Chastain, Breaking the cycle, Musih Tedji Xaviere
Described as a grim portrayal of human nature, Mothers’ Instinct is a film about the darker side of maternal love. Academy Award-winning actresses Jessica Chastain and Anne Hathaway play best friends raising sons of the same age in the same neighbourhood. The psychological thriller follows their apparently picture-perfect life in Sixties suburbia. The two friends in real life join Nuala McGovern to discuss.A new BBC study of elite British sportswomen shows that many are training and chasing medals for Great Britain while earning surprisingly low wages. The 143 female athletes who responded were above the age of 16, and were competing for their country in senior sport or at top club level. Some women had considered giving up sport, because of the cost of living now. Nuala is joined by Becky Grey, BBC Sport journalist who has been working on this study.In the first in a new series, Breaking The Cycle, following the work of the SHiFT team in Greater Manchester. Set up to help young people at risk of getting into serious trouble the approach is all about relationships. A 'Guide' works with a child and their family for at least 18 months and just keeps showing up. Our reporter Jo Morris went out and about with the team over the first year of the practice. Today, Sally Dicken from SHiFT paints a picture of the young people they are trying to help and explains the problems SHiFT has been set up to tackle.These Letters End In Tears follows the story of two girls, Bessem and Fatima, as we learn the price they pay for falling in love. In Cameroon, where the book is based, same-sex relationships are punishable by law. The author, Musih Tedji Xaviere, has made a huge personal sacrifice bringing this story to life, and joins Nuala in the studio.Reporter: Jo Morris

Mar 23, 2024 • 55min
Weekend Woman's Hour: Laura Kenny, Actor Vicky Knight, baby loss certificates
Dame Laura Kenny, Britain's most decorated female Olympian, talks to Emma Barnett about her sporting career, motherhood and her decision to quit cycling.Friday’s Woman’s Hour came live from Doncaster which came bottom of one league table for opportunities for women entrepreneurs in the UK last year, according to the website money.co.uk which analysed data from the Office for National Statistics. So we wanted to find out why. Anita was joined by BBC Radio Sheffield’s Paulette Edwards to speak to local entrepreneurs across the city. We hear from Rachel Stockey, Head of Entrepreneurial Skills at the Entrepreneurship Institute at King’s College, London as well as Amy Furniss who set up a business selling dried flowers in 2020 during the Covid lockdown.On 27 February, Emma Barnett spoke to Zoe Clark-Coates, who runs the baby loss and bereavement charity The Mariposa Trust, about her campaign for baby loss certificates. They were introduced in England in February for parents who’ve lost a baby before 24 weeks of pregnancy. Emma shares her own story and also speaks to a woman who’s decided it’s not for her, and another who applied straight away and has now received four baby loss certificates.The new film Silver Haze is based on recollections of real events in actor Vicky Knight’s childhood, including when she survived an arson attacked aged just eight. Vicky talks to Emma about blending her real childhood experiences with the narrative of the film, and why she wanted to tell her story.Have you ever had a nagging feeling that something wasn’t quite right? A gut reaction or a tingly spidey-like sense that tells you something is off? Author of Emotional Labour, Rose Hackman joins Emma to explain why we need to stop calling it 'women’s intuition'.John Lennon told them that ‘girls don’t play guitar’, but these four girls from 1960s Liverpool were determined to prove him wrong. Mary, Sylvia, Valerie and Pamela formed Britain's first female rock'n'roll band The Liverbirds, and went on to tour stadiums across Europe, record two hit albums and play with the Kinks, Rolling Stones and Chuck Berry – all in the space of five years. Emma talks to the two surviving members of the band about their incredible story.Presenter: Krupa Padhy
Producer: Hanna Ward
Studio Manager: Emma Harth

Mar 22, 2024 • 54min
Who wants to be a female entrepreneur?
A lively panel discusses the hurdles of female entrepreneurship, from funding to confidence. They share inspiring stories of women turning their ideas into successful businesses. The importance of role models, education, and support in empowering women to pursue entrepreneurial ventures is highlighted. Challenges and opportunities for women in business are explored, emphasizing the need for lasting change.

Mar 21, 2024 • 57min
Waspi women, Dr Jen Gunter, The Liverbirds, Child poverty
The podcast discusses the long-awaited report on pension age changes affecting women, advocates for compensation and Dr. Jen Gunter's debunking of health myths. The Liverbirds, Britain's first female rock'n'roll band, share their journey. Child poverty in the UK is highlighted, along with the need for boosting benefits to combat the crisis.

Mar 20, 2024 • 57min
Baby loss certificates, 'Women's intuition', Carolynne Hunter & energy bills
Topics include the introduction of baby loss certificates, challenging the concept of women's intuition, updates on Carolynne Hunter's life after Kate Winslet's support with energy bills, and the potential benefits of a breast cancer drug for women.

Mar 19, 2024 • 58min
Actor Vicky Knight, Conscription, Author Lesley Pearse
The Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves is today delivering a speech in which she’ll promise to ‘reform the Treasury’. If Labour were to win the next General Election, she would be the first female Chancellor the UK has seen. But what would her economic plans mean for women? And how do they compare to the current government’s? Economic Adviser Vicky Pryce and Journalist Lucy Fisher join Emma Barnett to discuss. Bestselling novelist Lesley Pearse has written 31 books and sold over 10 million copies worldwide. But she didn’t start writing until her mid-30s, and it would be another 13 years before her first novel was published. Now Lesley has written an autobiography of her extraordinary life – from a difficult childhood to making shepherd’s pie for David Bowie. She joins Emma to tell her story. Denmark is set to become the latest country to extend military conscription to women. This comes as Russia has warned the war there could spin out of control and expand geographically. What’s it like for women living in the Nordic countries, three of whom have now introduced female conscription? Emma speaks to The Guardian’s Nordic Correspondent Miranda Bryant and Nora Tangseth from the Organisation of Representatives of the Norwegian Conscripts who is in the Norwegian Army.The new film Silver Haze is based on recollections of real events in actor Vicky Knight’s childhood, including when she survived an arson attacked aged just eight. Vicky talks to Emma about blending her real childhood experiences with the narrative of the film, and why she wanted to tell her story. Presenter: Emma Barnett
Producer: Lottie Garton

Mar 18, 2024 • 57min
Olympian cyclist Dame Laura Kenny, Actor Imogen Poots, Pornography series
Olympian cyclist Dame Laura Kenny's retirement, Actor Imogen Poots portraying an IRA bomber, and a discussion on the impact of habitual porn use on relationships with experts


