

Everyday Ethics
BBC Radio Ulster
Provocative weekly debate on moral, religious and ethical issues. From BBC Radio Ulster
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 30, 2025 • 57min
Ethical Budgets, RE in Schools, The Pope’s Astronomer
As we digest this week’s budget, we discuss the ethics of what and who governments choose to spend our money on. Audrey talks to journalist Anne McElvoy, Dr Ciara Fitzpatrick from Ulster University and Agnes Lunny the CEO of Positive Futures.The uncertainty around what the Supreme Court decision on Religious Education will mean continues. Audrey talks to Naomi Green and Edwin Graham about their perspectives as Muslim and Bahai parents of children in the NI education system.And we talk to Brother Guy Consalmagno about his ten years as Director of the Vatican Observatory.

Nov 23, 2025 • 57min
Supreme Court and Religion, PCI Safeguarding, Sustainability
Christian religious education (RE) taught in schools in Northern Ireland is unlawful, the UK Supreme Court has ruled.
Audrey is joined by Dr James Nelson from Queens University, Bishop Donal McKeown and Boyd Sleator from the Northern Ireland Humanists to discuss the implications for schools.As the Presbyterian Church safeguarding scandal continues, we talk to church members about their reaction to the news and what they want to see happen.And as the COP 30 meeting in Brazil ends, we look at steps we can all take locally towards sustainability.

Nov 16, 2025 • 57min
Presbyterian Moderator Resigns, COP30 Update, German Remembrance Day
The Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland has stepped down after "serious and significant failings" in safeguarding.
The Rev Trevor Gribben said "people have been placed at risk" due to the failings in its processes between 2009 and 2022.
We look at the wider implications of the story and ask whether an outside body needs to lead the denominations safeguarding process.The COP 30 meetings in Brazil are at the end of the first week. Sinead Loughran from Trocaire updates us on how things are going.Closer to home what can we do to encourage sustainability in our food system. Audrey talks to Beth Bell from Belfast Sustainability Partnership and Louise Ferguson from The Larder Community Foodbank about small changes we can all make.And this Sunday is German Remembrance Day but commemoration of the war dead is much more complex because of its 20th Century history. Audrey talks to Hamburg based journalist Jenny Witt.

Nov 9, 2025 • 53min
Muslim Mayor, Silence as a Religious Act, The Book of Kells
Zohran Mamadani made history this week when he was elected Mayor of New York City. The 34 year old is the first mayor born outside the US and the first Muslim.So how central was faith in the campaign and how important is it to him personally? Audrey talks to Professor Najam Haider from Columbia University.On Remembrance Sunday we look at the religious practice of silence with Jim Deeds, Rabbi Nicole Auerbach and Buddhist Prajnaketu.At a Mass in Rome last week Pope Leo XIV proclaimed Saint John Henry Newman a Doctor of the Church. Andrew Meszaros from the Pontifical University of St Thomas Aquinas in Rome tells us about his life and legacy. And the Book of Kells has traditionally been thought to have been written on the Island of Iona but new research suggests it was on the East Coast of Scotland or as it was known then Pictland. Author Victoria Whitworth is challenging the accepted wisdom.

Nov 2, 2025 • 55min
Oliver Plunkett, Relics, Sudan, Digital Resurrection
Archbishop Eamon Martin reflects on the life and death of his predecessor Oliver Plunkett. Born 400 years ago this weekend, the saint's head is preserved in St Peter’s Church in Drogheda. Mark Devenport is joined by Dr Niamh Wycherley and John Thavis to discuss the role of relics in the 21st century.The Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times Africa correspondent Declan Walsh explains the background to violence and killings in south west Sudan.And on All Souls Day, grief bots and avatars promise to preserve our loved ones from beyond the grave. Dr Elaine Storkey, Dr Nathan Mladin and Professor Victoria Haneman discuss the ethical concerns to what some see as compassionate technology and others dismiss as a sinister intrusion into the painful process of bereavement.

Oct 26, 2025 • 56min
Gaza Priest, King and Pope Prayers, Sporting Ethics
Father Carlos Ferrero, a parish priest in Gaza City, shares the realities of life under a fragile ceasefire and the humanitarian challenges his community faces. Madeline Davies analyzes tensions in the Anglican Communion, highlighting GAFCON's disputes and its implications for church leadership. Jonathan Pugh and Katie Kirk discuss the ethical dilemmas surrounding performance enhancement in sports, debating if the Enhanced Games can be considered fair competition or merely spectacle. Connie Marshner uncovers Eastern Christian influences in early Irish Christianity, linking ancient practices to present beliefs.

Oct 19, 2025 • 55min
UN at 80, China Christian Crackdown
In this discussion, guests include Jane Kinnanmont, a UN expert, Professor Catherine McNeely, an international rights authority, Mark Devonport, a former BBC UN correspondent, Conor Bowman, a barrister and author, and Martin Palmer, a religious advisor. They explore the UN's relevance as it turns 80, highlighting crises linked to great power politics and suggesting a focus on peace and climate. Conor shares his personal journey about adoption, while Martin addresses China's crackdown on religious groups and the implications of state control on faith.

Oct 12, 2025 • 24min
Gaza Ceasefire Agreement
Israel and Hamas have agreed to the first phase of Donald Trump's peace plan for Gaza.

Oct 5, 2025 • 16min
Gaza to Dublin - A doctor working in a war zone
Dr Mohammed Mughaisib has spent the nearly two years working in hospitals in Gaza, in the midst of bombs, death and destruction. His family fled to Egypt in February of last year- he hasn't seen them since. He himself escaped to Dublin around three weeks ago.

Sep 28, 2025 • 36min
Social Contract Crisis
Is the Social Contract dying?


