18 May 2010

Humphrey Hawksley and Michael Portillo examine democracy

The BBC's senior foreign correspondent, Humphrey Hawksley, will speak to the Graham Greene International Festival after the dinner at 8.00pm on Saturday 2nd October 2010 in Old Hall, Berkhamsted School (Hertfordshire, UK). His title will be “Journey Without Maps”, and he may refer to his investigative reporting in West Africa on the footsteps of Graham Greene over seventy years after our author travelled in Liberia.

Mr. Hawksley’s most recent book titled Democracy Kills: What's So Good About Having the Vote? (Macmillan, 2009) carries the following text on its cover: “The mantra in our Western society is that democracy equals freedom and prosperity. But are we in fact imposing our free-market democracy with the same arrogance that colonial missionaries claimed they were civilizing poor natives a century ago? Is perhaps democracy a fig-leaf to protect strategic interests and access economic markets? Or is it simply that no one has yet had a better idea?

“In his urgent, powerful and engaging new book, acclaimed BBC foreign correspondent Humphrey Hawksley argues that, in some cases, attempts to introduce democracy lead to bloodshed, poverty and disease. He questions whether democracy, far from setting us free, might actually kill us, and, if that’s the case, [he asks] what should we do about it.”

In addition to Humphrey Hawksley’s thoughts on the subject, you can enjoy a series of three forty-five minute discussions being broadcast on BBC Radio 4 under the title “Democracy on Trial” and presented by Michael Portillo, who discusses the development of democracy over 2,500 years. This morning the BBC broadcast the second programme in the series, which you can hear again if you click here. The facility to listen online to this episode will be available for seven days until 25th May 2010.

Humphrey Hawksley’s recent films for television include "Bitter Sweet" and "Old Man Atom". He also wrote Security Breach (2008), The Third World War (2003), Red Spirit (2001), Dragon Fire (2000), Ceremony of Innocence (1999), Absolute Measures (1999) and other texts.