Tag: Mary Hockaday

  • BBC World Service teams up with IGP to build ‘My Perfect Country’

    BBC World Service teams up with IGP to build ‘My Perfect Country’

    MUMBAI:  BBC World Service will be launching a compelling new six-part series titled My Perfect Country teaming up with the UCL Institute for Global Prosperity (IGP) to build the perfect country.

     

    The series is presented by the broadcaster and writer Fi Glover and will air from 4 February.

     

    My Perfect Country will track down ideas, which have helped solve common problems in countries around the world and look at whether they can be adopted elsewhere. As the series develops, it will build up a blueprint of what the perfect country might be.

     

    Digital evangelist and business leader Martha Lane Fox and UCL Institute for Global Prosperity director Professor Henrietta Moore will join Glover and use their expertise to bring the people and ideas behind successful policies to the BBC World Service audience.

     

    BBC World Service English controller Mary Hockaday said, “The news agenda is full of trials and tribulations but all over the world people are tackling challenges with energy and creativity and coming up with imaginative ideas to solve problems. My Perfect Country brings a fresh outlook focused on sharing solutions. This series will harness the global reach of BBC World Service journalism and engage our audiences in how to make the world a better place.”

     

    With the help of data analysis and research from the IGP, each week the series will focus on a political, economic or social problem and work through it by finding somewhere on the globe where it has been addressed successfully.

     

    In collaboration with reporters, academics and analysts, the trio will break policies apart and ask how and why they worked, and crucially whether they could be applied elsewhere.

     

    Featuring in this series are Estonia’s digital state, Costa Rica’s clean energy policy, a grassroots approach to law and order in Uganda, a ‘zero-suicide model’ in America, innovative sanitation solutions for women in India and Portugal’s radical drug reform.

     

    Glover said, “My Perfect Country is a bit of a journalist’s dream – the one that you are usually shaken awake from in order to report on the daily diet of things that have gone wrong in the world. In this series we get a chance to meet just some of the people who have made their bits of the world go right – I cannot wait to get started.”

     

    Lane Fox added, “Sometimes I lie awake wondering what it would be like to start a country from scratch, it’s a once in a lifetime chance to have a go!”

     

    Professor Moore asserted, “It is wonderful to be working with the World Service on this forward-thinking project that celebrates innovations from around the world. As we work to achieve sustainable and inclusive prosperity, this series gives us a chance to examine what works for prosperity, and why.”

     

    To run alongside the series, BBC World Service will also produce online resources, also informed by data provided by IGP, which will allow audiences to work out their own perfect country, based on their own needs and preferences.

  • Mary Hockaday is BBC Radio News deputy head

    Mary Hockaday is BBC Radio News deputy head

    MUMBAI: Mary Hockaday has been announced as the BBC’s Deputy Head of Radio News, a new post working across the whole department in the UK. At present she is BBC Radio’s Editor of World Service News and Current Affairs.

    The move follows the appointment of Ceri Thomas as Editor of Radio 4’s Today programme. Ceri and Mary both deputised for Radio News head Stephen Mitchell, will be covering domestic and world affairs respectively.

    Mitchell said, “Mary has significant editorial experience both in the field and on programmes on World Service and Radio 4. I am very confident that she will now help us to transform the way we deliver our journalism across the board in the light of the major changes that are affecting our audiences and the wider BBC. Mary has been an outstanding part of the radio news family for several years and I am delighted to be able to appoint her to this important new post.”

    Part of Mary’s new role will be to further enhance coverage of foreign affairs across the department. She said, “I am really looking forward to working with colleagues right across BBC Radio News, to help deliver traditional and modern news services to big and varied audiences and to help bring closer together the editorial strength and creativity of staff from across domestic and World Service news departments.”

    Hockaday begins her new role at the end of the month. BBC Radio News will now seek to appoint a new editor of World Service News and Current Affairs, as well as a Radio newsgathering editor, to replace Ceri Thomas.