The EI Podcast

Engelsberg Ideas
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Apr 9, 2026 • 56min

Washington’s return to Latin America

Joseph Ledford, Hoover Institution fellow and U.S.-Latin America strategist, outlines a renewed American push into the hemisphere. He discusses treating cartels as terrorist groups, a Pentagon-led homeland defense concept, links between Venezuela and Cuba, and plans like Operation Absolute Resolve. He also unpacks drivers such as drugs, migration and China, and why Cuba poses a tougher challenge.
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12 snips
Apr 3, 2026 • 50min

The Houthis’ forever war

Elisabeth Kendall, leading academic on Yemen and jihadist movements and Mistress of Girton College, Cambridge, unpacks who the Houthis are and what drives them. Short takes cover their strategic timing, control of Bab al-Mandeb and Red Sea chokepoints, missile and drone tactics, Tehran ties without full proxy status, media savvy, and how Palestinian solidarity shapes their moves.
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Mar 30, 2026 • 15min

Can epic poetry revive History?

Michael Auslin, historian and writer, reads an audio essay arguing for a revival of epic poetry as a way to approach the past. He explores how epic verse captures war, pathos and cultural myths from Homer to Dante. He traces the rise of prose history, diagnoses why poetic history faded, and proposes ways poets and historians might reconnect to restore public imagination.
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Mar 26, 2026 • 50min

The need for muscular liberalism

Adrian Wooldridge, global business columnist at Bloomberg and former long-time Economist writer, argues for reviving liberalism’s core: individualism, tolerance and limits on power. He traces liberal roots from Hobbes to Mill. He calls for a more muscular, centrist politics, tougher tech regulation, stronger education and cultural renewal to defend liberal democracy.
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Mar 23, 2026 • 8min

The first butterfly collectors

A deep dive into Britain’s early butterfly enthusiasts and the dramatic 1748 Swan Tavern fire. Exploration of Georgian illustrated books, aristocratic patrons, and barriers faced by women collectors. Traces the shift from elite taste to mass Victorian collecting and ends with the move from rampant collecting toward modern conservation.
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12 snips
Mar 19, 2026 • 31min

Trump’s imperial worldview

Brendan Simms, Professor of the History of International Relations at Cambridge, links Trump’s worldview to formative 1980s convictions. He traces fixation on allies’ burden‑sharing, the tanker‑war moment that shaped oil and security thinking, the shift toward hemispheric focus, and a push for a new hierarchical economic‑defense order. He also explores risks of coercion driving allies toward China.
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8 snips
Mar 16, 2026 • 17min

The strange death of private life

A historical audio essay tracing how the idea of being left alone faded in the 1970s. It covers public uproar over proposed databanks, fears about centralized data collection, and cultural touchstones like early reality TV that blurred home privacy. The piece explores shifting concepts from Victorian seclusion to modern informational privacy and generational changes in valuing self-exposure.
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Mar 12, 2026 • 48min

The Gulf’s Iran dilemma

Shiraz Maher, Reader in non-state actors at King’s College London and Middle East analyst, unpacks Gulf anxiety over US‑Iran fallout. He compares the Gulf city‑states, traces post‑1979 regional shifts, and examines Iran’s proxies, the China‑brokered Saudi–Iran thaw, and how crises threaten investment and reform plans.
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7 snips
Mar 5, 2026 • 7min

The rise of the mega-influencer

A dive into how mega-influencers shape public imagination and replace institutions as arbiters of truth. Discussion of charisma, aesthetics, and tribal loyalty overtaking evidence. Exploration of AI’s role in amplifying narrative-driven misinformation. Consideration of the spiritual and cultural costs of losing discerning habits.
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17 snips
Feb 26, 2026 • 17min

Putin, the once and future Chekist

An exploration of Chekism and the historical roots of Russia’s security culture. A look at how early Soviet terror doctrine shaped the Chekist worldview. Stories about Vasili Mitrokhin’s archive and what it revealed. Tracing Vladimir Putin’s attraction to and rise through the KGB, and how state symbolism restored Chekist prestige.

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