Vegard Skirbekk: Why We Need to Bring Down Global Birth Dates and Have Fewer Children
On today's episode, Andrew is joined by Vegard Skirbekk, author of Decline and Prosper! Changing Global Birth Rates and the Advantages of Fewer Children.
Vegard Skirbekk is a professor at Columbia Aging Center, Columbia University and a senior researcher at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. His research focuses on understanding the links between aging, health and individuals productivity in countries undergoing demographic change around the world. He is currently interested in looking at differences across countries in terms of health and cognitive skills and relationships with investments in education and health. He is also interested in comparing variations in life trajectories in health across societies and countries. Skirbekk has published widely in academic journals (Demography, Science and Proceedings of the National Academy of Science) and his research has received attention in global media (e.g., BBC, the New York Times, The Economist, New Scientist). He has received research support from EU funding bodies (including the European Research Council), and research councils from several countries.
Can We Get To 2125? Humanity's Most Existential Threats Over the Next 100 Years
The Art of a Deal with the Devil: on Faustian Bargains from Shakespeare and Goethe to Thomas Mann and Donald Trump
When the United Nations Actually Mattered: Remembering the Burmese Schoolteacher who Ran the U.N. in its Glory Days
How Evil 'Big Car' Has Killed More People Than World War II
The Double Life of Robert McNamara: How America's 'Best and Brightest' Led the Nation into Vietnam While Knowing the War Was Unwinnable
The World's Worst Bet: How America Gambled Dumbly on Globalization and Lost
Demystify Science and Humanize Scientists: How to Rebuild Scientific Trust in our Angry MAHA Times
From Borges to Brain Scans: How our Minds Invent Reality
The Hypocrisy of Trump's War on Universities: How Wealthy Families Game the College Admission Process
Borders are Back, Baby: From Trump and Transylvania to Brexit and Bolivia's Navy
Beware of another Silicon Valley Win-Win-Win: Can users, publishers and tech companies really all benefit from the AI revolution?
Every Day, Computers are Making People Easier to Use: The Return of IN FORMATION
Is Roman Polanski really worth defending?