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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  • In this expanded analysis, we trace the long arc of American intervention in the Middle East—from the calculated ambitions of the Project for a New American Century to the erratic, improvisational warfare of the Trump era. The assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei marks not a triumph of strategy, but the culmination of a decades-long decline in American statecraft. The Origins: Project for a New American Century The road to Tehran was always intended to run through Baghdad. As early as 1998, the neoconservative Project for the New American Century (PNAC) was calling for the invasion of Iraq . Its signatories—Dick Cheney,…

  • In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we dive into military history—a departure from our usual focus on social and diplomatic history—to explore Richard Overy’s magisterial work, The Bombing War, and the crucial role of Air Chief Marshal Hugh Dowding in Britain’s survival during the summer and autumn of 1940. I’ll be honest: I’ve often shied away from military history, partly because of how it’s been popularised. The “our lads what won it” approach has never appealed to me. But there are exceptions—Harper and Baylis’s Forgotten Armies and Forgotten Wars come to mind as social histories of war in…

  • Beyond the Act: What Did Emancipation Really Mean? We tend to think of historical moments like the abolition of slavery as a clean break—a line in the sand. But what if the day you were declared “free,” nothing actually changed? In the latest episode of the Explaining History Podcast, I sat down with novelist Karen Jennings to discuss her new book, The First of December. The title refers to the 1st of December 1838, the day of full emancipation for slaves in South Africa. Why the delay? Because the British government, in its wisdom, had decreed a four-year period of “apprenticeship” for the…

  • In 1973, the Whitlam government ushered in groundbreaking reforms, propelled by relentless advocacy from the women’s liberation movement. With policies like equal pay and women’s refuges, they reshaped the nation’s stance on gender equality.

  • In 1972, four Aboriginal men erected an umbrella in Canberra, igniting a protest that would challenge Australia’s foundations. Their demand: land rights now. This act was more than a protest; it was a bold assertion of sovereignty and a catalyst for Aboriginal political organizing.

  • Experience the transformation of Australian culture from a nation confined by British influence to one bold enough to define itself through iconic music like AC/DC. Discover how Nevil Shute’s ‘On the Beach’ foresaw a nation on the brink, while AC/DC’s debut roared to life, challenging the world to recognize Australia’s unique voice.

  • In 1968, Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s bold move accelerated Britain’s military exit from Southeast Asia, signaling the dawn of Australia’s independence. This pivotal shift marked a slow unraveling of the ties that bound the two nations, transforming Australia into a sovereign entity with its own unique identity.

  • The Snowy Mountains Scheme was more than a hydroelectric project; it was a nation-building endeavor that tested the limits of cultural integration and technological ambition.

  • From courtroom battles to grassroots activism, the women’s liberation movement permanently altered Australia’s perception of power and equality.

  • The Forgotten Architects of the Menzies Era – Migrant Labour and the Unmaking of Assimilation

    Australia’s post-war immigration policy, championed by Arthur Calwell, sought to ‘populate or perish,’ inviting over a million displaced persons and refugees. Despite assimilation promises, migrants were integral to shaping the nation, quietly defying assimilation and becoming architects of Menzies-era prosperity.

  • Beyond Borders: A Global History of 20th-Century Migration and Displacement

    In the 20th century, unprecedented human mobility reshaped nations and cultures. Driven by war and ideology, millions moved across borders, challenging state-imposed controls. Discover how this century’s migrations became a catalyst for global change.

  • Remittance Rails: The Hidden Economics of Global Migration

    Global migration fuels an economic powerhouse: remittances soar past $850 billion in 2024, reshaping economies and global power dynamics.

  • The Ilustrados’ Aftermath: Filipino Modernism and the Shadow of U.S. Empire

    The Philippines’ colonial shift from Spanish to American rule ignited a cultural revolution in the 1920s and 1930s, as Filipino intellectuals, inspired by Rizal, creatively engaged with a new colonial language and ideology. Through literature and art, they challenged and transformed American imperialism, crafting a modern Filipino identity that was both cosmopolitan and uniquely resilient.

  • Mapping Diaspora: How Communities Remade the World from Afar

    India’s diaspora transcends borders, wielding economic might and cultural influence. As a superpower of soft power and global capital, this vibrant community reshapes societies worldwide.

  • From Ellis Island to Airport Lounges: The Changing Face of Global Migration

    From steamship holds to digital visas, the evolution of global migration reshapes borders and governance. Discover how technology and ambition redefine the journey of today’s world travelers.

  • The Colonial Paradox: How Creating the “Civilized Native” Doomed the Empire

    The evolution of the ‘évolué’ and ‘assimilado’ was a calculated colonial strategy to quell resistance, promising European citizenship in exchange for cultural surrender.

  • Beyond the South: The Structural Roots of the Watts Uprising

    I’ve spent a lot of time recently reflecting on how we teach and learn the history of the Civil Rights movement. In the UK, and indeed in much of the US, the narrative is often sanitized into a series of Southern milestones: the bus boycotts in Montgomery, the dogs of Birmingham, the bridge at Selma, and the soaring rhetoric of Dr. King at the Lincoln Memorial. It is a story of legal triumphs—the dismantling of de jure segregation. But as I discussed in the latest episode of the Explaining History podcast, if we stop the clock in 1964 with the…

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