Listen "Tim Harford: The Power of Maps"
Episode Synopsis
Tim Harford returns with a new series of Pop Up Ideas. This time Tim and his guests tell intriguing stories inspired by maps.In the first talk, Tim argues that maps - for all their beauty - can be dangerous. In the hands of powerful people, the map begins to shape the world in its image.He tells the story of th Johann Gottlieb Beckmann, who mapped German forests. He developed the idea of the "normalbaum", a kind of platonic ideal of what a tree should be, which could be planted in neat rows to make mapping and harvesting them easier.It appeared to be a brilliant idea and produced unprecedented growth in the forestry business. But the forests came to resemble the map - with all its uniformity - and eventually the resulting lack of diversity led to the destruction of the forests themselves.Tim then looks at the taxpayer-funded Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) which operated in Depression-era America and refused "to grant credit to people, not because of their credit history, not because of their ability to repay, not even because of their need. But just because of where they lived on the map." Producer: Adele Armstrong.
More episodes of the podcast Pop-Up Ideas
Simon Garfield: Maps and Mistakes
01/01/2014
Jared Diamond: How Geography Creates History
25/12/2013
Jerry Brotton: Mapping History
18/12/2013
Common Tragedy
30/07/2013
David Kilcullen: Feral Cities
23/07/2013
Gillian Tett: The Anthropology of Finance
16/07/2013
Malcolm Gladwell: Listening in Vietnam
09/07/2013
Tim Harford: The Indiana Jones of Economics
06/02/2013
Tim Harford: War Games and Armageddon
30/01/2013
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