Elephant politics

Loading player...
Botswana is home to about a third of Africa’s remaining savanna elephants, over 130,000. But it is a burden as well as a blessing. It puts pressure on local communities, and the cost of conservation is huge. Climate change means elephants are moving into new areas in their search for water and in some parts of this sparsely populated country there are more elephants than people. Jo Dwyer travels to northern Botswana, where safari-based tourism helps drive the economy. Elephants bring in the tourists, but conservation is a balancing act.
17 Dec 8PM English United Kingdom Education

Other recent episodes

In the Studio: Michael Symmons Roberts' Christmas Card Poem

There’s a tradition among poets to write a poem to put inside the Christmas cards they send. So, the BBC World Service has commissioned one specially from the poet, dramatist and novelist, Michael Symmons Roberts whose Christian faith is important to his identity and work. But his art is not…
21 Dec 8PM 27 min

United In Space – How we built the ISS

Personal tales of bravery, tragedy, daring and triumph, United in Space unveils the remarkable story of one of humanity’s greatest ever feats – building a home among the stars – the International Space Station. Celebrating 25 unbroken years of humans living in space, former international director of the UK Space…
20 Dec 8PM 51 min

Living in fear on South Africa's farms

In February, American President Donald Trump signed an executive order which said that South African Afrikaners - descendants of mainly Dutch settlers who arrived in the 17th Century - could be admitted as refugees in the USA as they were "victims of unjust racial discrimination". President Trump’s move to prioritise…
20 Dec 8AM 26 min

Close encounters with an avalanche

It is peak season for avalanches in the northern hemisphere and three survivors share their experiences of being cuaght up in one in the US and Pakistan while skiing and climbing.
19 Dec 8PM 25 min

BBC OS Conversations: Jewish Australians on the Bondi Beach attacks

The Australian government says it will crack down on hate speech following the deadly shooting that targeted a Jewish festival at Bondi Beach. People had come together to celebrate Hanukkah when two gunmen opened fire, killing fifteen people. Australia’s new laws aim to target those who spread “hate, division and…
19 Dec 8PM 24 min