For more than a decade, the Explaining History Podcast has helped listeners around the world make sense of modern history. What began in 2012 as a simple experiment—short, accessible episodes explaining major historical events—has grown into a long-running library of carefully researched, thoughtful explorations of the 20th and 21st centuries.

This page introduces new listeners to the podcast, explains what makes it different from other history shows, and offers curated paths into more than a thousand episodes.

If you’re searching for a history podcast that goes deeper than anecdotes or trivia, this is where to begin.

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  • It has become common in the UK to talk about austerity as if it is a thing of the past – something that happened between 2010 and 2024, now supposedly over. This is completely wide of the mark. The Labour government has made some token inroads into rolling back austerity. The vote to end the two‑child benefit cap – a policy that punished poor families for having more than two children – is one example. And as the Green Party has surged on the left, Labour has suddenly realised that doing some vaguely socially democratic things might be an idea…

  • The September 2008 meeting at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was a turning point as leaders decided against bailing out Lehman Brothers, setting off a chain reaction in the financial crisis.

  • Warren Buffett’s 2003 warning about derivatives as ‘financial weapons of mass destruction’ was ignored as they fueled a complex and lucrative financial system. By 2007, the $596 trillion OTC derivatives market was dominated by CDS, with AIG’s risky $527 billion exposure leading to a 2008 collapse.

  • In the latest episode of the Explaining History Podcast, Douglas Brunt shares the neglected story of Emmanuel Nobel, who built a vast oil empire only to be erased from history by StalinStalin Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet politician, dictator and revolutionary who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. Read More. Despite his significant contributions and treatment of workers, his legacy was systematically obliterated, reflecting how individuals can be lost in historical narratives.

  • Great Britain is experiencing a significant political shift, marking the decline of both the Conservative and Labour parties. This change, rooted in decades of neoliberalismSupply Side Economics Full Description:Supply-Side Economics posits that production (supply) is the key to economic prosperity. Proponents argue that by reducing the “burden” of taxes on the wealthy and removing regulatory barriers for corporations, investment will increase, creating jobs and expanding the economy. Key Policies: Tax Cuts: Specifically for high-income earners and corporations, under the premise that this releases capital for investment. Deregulation: Removing environmental, labor, and safety protections to lower the cost of doing business. Critical Perspective:Historical analysis suggests that supply-side policies rarely lead to the promised broad-based prosperity. Instead, they often result in massive budget deficits (starving the state of revenue) and a dramatic concentration of wealth at the top. Critics argue the “trickle-down” effect is a myth used to justify the upward redistribution of wealth. and economic turmoil, suggests a potential future dominated by Reform UK and the Green Party, as traditional political structures fail to address contemporary issues.

  • The shadow banking system emerged in the early 2000s, offering a parallel financial universe to traditional banking. Investment banks and non-bank entities took center stage, performing functions akin to banks but with little oversight. Securitization, once a tool for liquidity, ballooned into complexity, masking risks with exotic structures that ultimately triggered a global financial panic when the housing bubble burst.

  • A perfect storm of deregulationDeregulation Full Description:The systematic removal or simplification of government rules and regulations that constrain business activity. Framed as “cutting red tape” to unleash innovation, it involves stripping away protections for workers, consumers, and the environment. Deregulation is a primary tool of neoliberal policy. It targets everything from financial oversight (allowing banks to take bigger risks) to safety standards and environmental laws. The argument is that regulations increase costs and stifle competition. Critical Perspective:History has shown that deregulation often leads to corporate excess, monopoly power, and systemic instability. The removal of financial guardrails directly contributed to major economic collapses. Furthermore, it represents a transfer of power from the democratic state (which creates regulations) to private corporations (who are freed from accountability).
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    and loose monetary policy triggered the subprime mortgage crisis, reshaping modern finance.

  • The podcast episode analyzes the shift from George H.W. Bush’s 1991 speech on a “new world order” during the Gulf War to Donald Trump’s chaotic foreign policy. It highlights the decline of American power, evidenced by strategic failures in Iran and the fragility of the petrodollar, signaling a dangerous global landscape ahead.

  • The Sicilian Separatist Movement: The Forgotten Attempt to Break Away from Italy (1943–1951)

    In the aftermath of the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943, a unique rebellion emerged as a coalition of Sicilians sought independence from Italy. Despite controlling significant portions of the island and gaining substantial regional support, this movement faced defeat through military force and political strategies. Its legacy endures, highlighting deep-seated grievances against foreign domination and organized crime.

  • The Years of Lead: How Post-War Tensions Erupted into Political Violence (1969–1980s)

    In 1969, Italy was rocked by violence during the Years of Lead, a period marked by bombings and assassinations that deeply impacted the nation. The political turmoil, driven by far-left groups and neofascists, set Italy apart from Western Europe. This era saw failed coup attempts and widespread fear, highlighting the intense social and political conflict of the time.

  • The Italian Economic Miracle: From War Ruins to La Dolce Vita (1950s–1960s)

    Italy’s economic miracle from 1951 to 1963 transformed it from an agricultural country into a consumer powerhouse, driven by the Marshall Plan, industrial growth, and European integration. By 1963, Italy was a modern metropolis, with Milan gleaming in steel and glass, and families enjoying new comforts. This remarkable shift reshaped Italy’s economy and society, leaving a legacy of both progress and uneven development.

  • The Christian Democracy Era: How One Party Dominated Italian Politics for 50 Years

    For nearly half a century, from the birth of the Italian Republic in 1946 to its dramatic collapse in the early 1990s, Italian politics was defined by a single party: Christian Democracy (Democrazia Cristiana, or DC). The DC was not a party in the conventional sense. It was a coalition of factions, a political machine, a patronage network, and a cultural movement all rolled into one. It drew support from the Catholic Church, from the business class, from peasants, from housewives, from civil servants, and from millions of Italians who feared the alternative: the Italian Communist Party (PCI). The DC…

  • The 1948 Italian Election: The CIA, the Vatican, and the Scramble to Stop Communism

    The 1948 Italian election marked a pivotal moment when Italy chose the Christian Democracy led by Alcide De Gasperi over the communist coalition of Palmiro Togliatti. This decision firmly anchored Italy in the Western bloc, setting the stage for decades of political dominance by the Christian Democrats.

  • The Marshall Plan in Italy: Aid, Modernization, and the Battle Against Communism

    Italy’s participation in the Marshall Plan averted famine, stabilized the currency, and spurred the ‘economic miracle’ of the 1950s and 1960s.

  • Rosie the Riveter Revisited

    The image now known as “Rosie the Riveter” emerged from a Westinghouse plant in Pennsylvania during World War II, but was never intended for women or as a wartime recruitment poster. Initially designed for an internal campaign, its forgotten status contrasts sharply with the feminist icon it became decades later.

  • The 1946 Italian Referendum: How Italians Abolished the Monarchy and Became a Republic

    In 1946, Italy made a historic choice: women joined men in voting for the first time, deciding between monarchy and republic. The republic won by a narrow margin, but the aftermath was tumultuous. Riots erupted, and the exiled king accused the government of fraud, reflecting Italy’s deep political divisions.

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