Mark Carney reflects on the meaning of value, how the ways we assess it shape our values and constrain our choices, and how market valuations affect our society's values. Show more
HARDtalk
Evan McMullin - Executive Director, Stand Up Republic
30 minutes on BBC Parliament
Available for years
Stephen Sackur interviews Evan McMullin, one of the Republican party's key organisers and strategists. What should Republican anti-Trumpers do now? Show more
Former prime minister Tony Blair speaking at the Institute for Government on the last twelve months of the Covid-19 pandemic, from Friday 26 February. Show more
David Cornock tells the story of how Toynbee Hall and London's East End shaped the politics of Labour prime minister Clement Attlee.
Live coverage of the Science and Technology select committee session on Tuesday 9 March on UK science, research and technology capability and influence in global disease outbreaks. Show more
Questions in the Scottish Parliament to first minister Nicola Sturgeon from Thursday 25 March.
Coverage of the Science and Technology select committee session on a new UK research funding agency from Thursday 17 March. Show more
HARDtalk
Timothy Snyder - Professor of History, Yale University
30 minutes on BBC Parliament
Available for years
Stephen Sackur speaks to Timothy Snyder, one of America's leading historians. Were there initial signs of fascism in the Trump era or is that pushing historical parallels too far? Show more
Coverage of the debate in the House of Lords on the 2021 Budget Statement, from Friday 12 March.
BBC Parliament's Selina Seth presents a short guide to the history of diversity in the House of Commons.
Former chancellors Lord Lamont, Lord Darling and George Osborne in conversation about tax policy at the Institute for Government, from Tuesday 9 March.
Questions in the Welsh Parliament to first minister Mark Drakeford on Tuesday 23 March.
Dr Mark Carney takes us back to the high drama of the global financial crash of 2008. More than a decade on, how much have the bankers changed their ways? Show more
Joint Lords and Commons committee session examining the UK government's review of the Human Rights Act 1998. Show more
HARDtalk
Laurie Santos - Cognitive Scientist, Professor of Psychology at Yale University
30 minutes on BBC Parliament
Stephen Sackur speaks to American psychologist Professor Laurie Santos, whose work on the science of happiness has won her an audience of millions far beyond the lecture theatre. Show more
BBC Parliament's Faye Kidd presents a brief history of the Northern Ireland legislature from parliament to power-sharing.
BBC Parliament's programme looking back at the week in Westminster with Alicia McCarthy.
Coverage of the International Women's Day debate in the House of Commons, from Thursday 11 March.
Douglas Chapman introduces his Bill to the House of Commons, covering the automated purchase and resale of gaming hardware to tackle the problem of online 'scalping'. Show more
Professor Margaret MacMillan delivers a Gresham College lecture looking back at the Treaty of Versailles a hundred years later. From 4 June 2019.
Conservative party historian Lord Lexden charts the career of Andrew Bonar Law from his birth in Canada to Downing Street, via Pembroke Lodge in Kensington.
Commons Home Affairs Committee session on the work of the UK government's Home Office, with evidence from home secretary Priti Patel and officials, from Wednesday 24 February.
Stephen Sackur speaks to the Booker Prize-winning author Douglas Stuart. How does he extract so much love from hardship in his novels? Show more
Statement in the Assembly on updates to the Covid-19 response and social restrictions in Northern Ireland, with first minister Arlene Foster, from Tuesday 16 March.
The Treasury select committee session taking evidence on the 2021 Budget from Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak, from earlier today.