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BBCNEWS HARDtalk April 27, 2017

The Refugee Crisis is one of the worlds most intractable problems. 60 Million People have fled their homes, a third of them also fleeing their own country. But my guest today says the problem is fixable and we can do it easily. Hes The Economist professor sir paul collier. The solution, he argues, is to give refugeesjobs and in doing so, he suggests everyone will benefit. But if the answer is so simple, why hasnt it been done before . Paul collier, welcome to hardtalk. Thanks for inviting me on. Now, you have said of the syrian Refugee Crisis that it is entirely manageable, it is fixable, we can do it easily, and yet we are talking about millions of desperate people on the move why do you say it is so fixable . Because it is. The reason weve got a mess is two things. One is weve got an International System which is hopelessly broken. Weve got a system built in 1950 that is completely unfit for 21st century problems. And weve never changed it. So weve got a broken system which was then

BBCNEWS HARDtalk April 27, 2017

The Refugee Crisis is one of the worlds most intractable problems. 60 Million People have fled their homes, a third of them also fleeing their own country. But my guest today says the problem is fixable and we can do it easily. Hes The Economist professor sir paul collier. The solution, he argues, is to give refugeesjobs and in doing so, he suggests everyone will benefit. But if the answer is so simple, why hasnt it been done before . Paul collier, welcome to hardtalk. Thanks for inviting me on. Now, you have said of the syrian Refugee Crisis that it is entirely manageable, it is fixable, we can do it easily, and yet we are talking about millions of desperate people on the move why do you say it is so fixable . Because it is. The reason weve got a mess is two things. One is weve got an International System which is hopelessly broken. Weve got a system built in 1950 that is completely unfit for 21st century problems. And weve never changed it. So weve got a broken system which was then

BBCNEWS Victoria Derbyshire May 3, 2017

Plus portuguese Detectives Have told the bbc they never believed Madeleine Mccann was taken during a burglary which went wrong. Its ten years since the three year old disappeared. And claims that rules which limit the amount of time people can spend on bail wont actually make any difference. You feel like youve had a crime done to you by the state and there is no one to done to you by the state and there is no one to answer done to you by the state and there is no one to answer for it. And no apology. That full exclusive report before 10am. Hello and welcome to the programme. Were live until 11am. Throughout the morning, the latest Breaking News and developing stories. A little later, well speak to some of the men in this photo. The m men all students at Cambridge University have got together to prove that young black men can go to cambridge. They were admitted in 2015 and they say it was hard, but if we did it, you can too. Do get in touch on all the stories were talking about this mo

BBCNEWS Sportsday May 10, 2017

The story of how pink floyd helped turn rock music into a visual spectacle. We would have the maddest ideas and wed follow them through a long way. Obviously some of them were just too mad and got discarded, but we put a lot of time and energy and effort into the strangest ideas. There was no one to tell us you cant do it that way, because we just would do it whatever way. And we were young and arrogantand. They were some brilliant times. It was an era of massive experimentation and there was a whole generation of designers and architects creating things that they thought no one would ever built. And then along came pink floyd. The elaborate stage designs, the giant inflatable pig, the album covers. The visuals were vital for a band that was increasingly becoming almost anonymous. I do remember that when we went on the road there was a big resistance to publicity and to. I think we were a bit po faced and snotty. It is in many ways a record of an era that has now passed. When albums ru

BBCNEWS Sportsday May 10, 2017

The story of how pink floyd helped turn rock music into a visual spectacle. We would have the maddest ideas and wed follow them through a long way. Obviously some of them were just too mad and got discarded, but we put a lot of time and energy and effort into the strangest ideas. There was no one to tell us you cant do it that way, because we just would do it whatever way. And we were young and arrogantand. They were some brilliant times. It was an era of massive experimentation and there was a whole generation of designers and architects creating things that they thought no one would ever built. And then along came pink floyd. The elaborate stage designs, the giant inflatable pig, the album covers. The visuals were vital for a band that was increasingly becoming almost anonymous. I do remember that when we went on the road there was a big resistance to publicity and to. I think we were a bit po faced and snotty. It is in many ways a record of an era that has now passed. When albums ru

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