Bbc how many people have ever lived




















Added to this educated guess for the early period is much more accurate data from the modern era. From around , and even a little before that, is where the data becomes much better. This written record means that you can be pretty confident about the final figure for the number of people who have ever lived, she explains.

Population growth has mostly happened in the modern period, she says, when records were kept, so if estimates for the early period are slightly out, this will not drastically change the overall ratio of "ever lived" to "living". So what are the figures? There are currently seven billion people alive today and the Population Reference Bureau estimates that about billion people have ever lived. This means that we are nowhere near close to having more alive than dead.

In fact, there are 15 dead people for every person living. We surpassed seven billion dead way back between BC and AD1. Fans of science fiction may be reaching for their copies of Arthur C Clarke's classic, A Space Odyssey, at this point. Web Stories. Morning Brief Podcast. Economy Agriculture. Foreign Trade. Company Corporate Trends. Defence National International Industry. International UAE. Saudi Arabia. US Elections World News. Rate Story. Font Size Abc Small.

Abc Medium. Abc Large. Over 5, readers voted in the poll. Find out more here. This blog is the fourth in his series on propaganda during the Coronavirus pandemic. During the earlier s it had been known as the British Broadcasting Company but its incorporation in led the way for the organisation to become a mainstay in British public and cultural life. Its legacy continues to this day.

The BBC has always been scrutinised, often more rigorously than other public institutions, with central questions being raised time and again about the extent to which it fulfils the mandates laid down in its Royal Charter.

Specifically, whether it serves public interests or those of elites. In this blog I examine the relationship between the BBC and the British government during the Coronavirus crisis during and I argue that, far from holding the government to account as it ought to be doing through asking critical and searching questions at the daily briefings and by undertaking pointed investigative journalism into all manner of questionable activities that have occurred during the period, the BBC has essentially been a lapdog rather than a watchdog of the powerful.

By so doing, its public service mandate has once again been found wanting. Democracies require strong and critically-minded PSB in recognition that commercial media organisations are vulnerable to the whims and priorities of their wealthy owners, shareholders and the corporations that pay big money to advertise on their platforms. Whereas state broadcasters are unlikely to hold the government to account because they are a part of the institutions of governance.

At a conceptual level then, PSBs are meant to fill the informational shortfall by providing, as much as possible, an impartial service to the people of a country or territory so that they can make the informed decisions that are an important part of participation in democratic life. This is also why, as was the case during the military coup in Thailand in , when countries have experienced democratic backsliding, PSB is one of the first victims of the incoming authoritarian regime.



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