Menu Main menu
TED
  • Watch
    • TED Talks
      Browse the library of TED talks and speakers
    • TED Recommends
      Get TED Talks picked just for you
    • Playlists
      100+ collections of TED Talks, for curious minds
    • TED Series
      Go deeper into fascinating topics with original video series from TED.
    • TED-Ed videos
      Watch, share and create lessons with TED-Ed
    • TEDx Talks
      Talks from independently organized local events
  • Discover
    • Topics
      Explore TED offerings by topic
    • Podcasts
      TED's original podcast initiatives
    • TED Books
      Short books to feed your craving for ideas
    • Ideas Blog
      Our daily coverage of the world of ideas
    • Newsletter
      Inspiration delivered straight to your inbox
  • Attend
    • Conferences
      Take part in our events: TED, TEDGlobal and more
    • TEDx events
      Find and attend local, independently organized events
    • TED on screen
      Experience TED from home
  • Participate
    • Nominate
      Recommend speakers, Audacious Projects, Fellows and more
    • Organize a local TEDx event
      Rules and resources to help you plan a local TEDx event
    • Translate
      Bring TED to the non-English speaking world
    • TED Fellows
      Join or support innovators from around the globe
  • About
    • Our organization
      Our mission, history, team, and more
    • Conferences
      TED Conferences, past, present, and future
    • Programs & Initiatives
      Details about TED's world-changing initiatives
    • Partner with TED
      Learn how you can partner with us
    • TED Blog
      Updates from TED and highlights from our global community
  • Membership
Sign in
Search
Cancel search

Search menu

  • All
  • Talks 101
  • People 50
  • Playlists 0
  • Blog posts 94
  • Pages 2
  • TEDx events 325
All results
541 - 570 of 572 results

Fred Swaniker: The leaders who ruined Africa, and the generation who can fix it

Before he hit eighteen, Fred Swaniker had lived in Ghana, Gambia, Botswana and Zimbabwe. What he learned from a childhood across Africa was that while good leaders can't make much of a difference in societies with strong institutions, in countries with weak structures, leaders could make or break a country. In a passionate talk the entrepreneur ...
https://www.ted.com/talks/fred_swaniker_the_leaders_who_ruined_africa_and_the_generation_who_can_fix_it

Sebastian Junger: Our lonely society makes it hard to come home from war

Sebastian Junger has seen war up close, and he knows the impact that battlefield trauma has on soldiers. But he suggests there's another major cause of pain for veterans when they come home: the experience of leaving the tribal closeness of the military and returning to an alienating and bitterly divided modern society. "Sometimes, we ask oursel...
https://www.ted.com/talks/sebastian_junger_our_lonely_society_makes_it_hard_to_come_home_from_war

Charles Robertson: Africa's next boom

The past decade has seen slow and steady economic growth across the continent of Africa. But economist Charles Robertson has a bold thesis: Africa's about to boom. He talks through a few of the indicators -- from rising education levels to expanded global investment (and not just from China) -- that lead him to predict rapid growth for a billion...
https://www.ted.com/talks/charles_robertson_africa_s_next_boom

Gerard Ryle: How the Panama Papers journalists broke the biggest leak in history

Gerard Ryle led the international team that divulged the Panama Papers, the 11.5 million leaked documents from 40 years of activity of the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca that have offered an unprecedented glimpse into the scope and methods of the secretive world of offshore finance. Hear the story behind the biggest collaborative journalism...
https://www.ted.com/talks/gerard_ryle_how_the_panama_papers_journalists_broke_the_biggest_leak_in_history

Andrew Blum: Discover the physical side of the internet

When a squirrel chewed through a cable and knocked him offline, journalist Andrew Blum started wondering what the Internet was really made of. So he set out to go see it -- the underwater cables, secret switches and other physical bits that make up the net.
https://www.ted.com/talks/andrew_blum_discover_the_physical_side_of_the_internet

Jude Kelly: Why women should tell the stories of humanity

For many centuries (and for many reasons) critically acclaimed creative genius has generally come from a male perspective. As theater director Jude Kelly points out in this passionately reasoned talk, that skew affects how we interpret even non-fictional women's stories and rights. She thinks there's a more useful, more inclusive way to look at ...
https://www.ted.com/talks/jude_kelly_why_women_should_tell_the_stories_of_humanity

Iqbal Quadir: How mobile phones can fight poverty

Iqbal Quadir tells how his experiences as a kid in poor Bangladesh, and later as a banker in New York, led him to start a mobile phone operator connecting 80 million rural Bangladeshi -- and to become a champion of bottom-up development.
https://www.ted.com/talks/iqbal_quadir_how_mobile_phones_can_fight_poverty

Dilip Ratha: The hidden force in global economics: sending money home

In 2013, international migrants sent $413 billion home to families and friends — three times more than the total of global foreign aid (about $135 billion). This money, known as remittances, makes a significant difference in the lives of those receiving it and plays a major role in the economies of many countries. Economist Dilip Ratha describes...
https://www.ted.com/talks/dilip_ratha_the_hidden_force_in_global_economics_sending_money_home

Anant Agarwal: Why massive open online courses (still) matter

2013 was a year of hype for MOOCs (massive open online courses). Great big numbers and great big hopes were followed by some disappointing first results. But the head of edX, Anant Agarwal, makes the case that MOOCs still matter -- as a way to share high-level learning widely and supplement (but perhaps not replace) traditional classrooms. Agarw...
https://www.ted.com/talks/anant_agarwal_why_massive_open_online_courses_still_matter

Rory Bremner: A one-man world summit

Scottish funnyman Rory Bremner convenes a historic council on the TEDGlobal stage -- as he lampoons Gordon Brown, Barack Obama, George W. Bush and a cast of other world leaders with his hilarious impressions and biting commentary. See if you can catch a few sharp TED in-jokes.
https://www.ted.com/talks/rory_bremner_a_one_man_world_summit

Misha Glenny: Hire the hackers!

Despite multibillion-dollar investments in cybersecurity, one of its root problems has been largely ignored: who are the people who write malicious code? Underworld investigator Misha Glenny profiles several convicted coders from around the world and reaches a startling conclusion.
https://www.ted.com/talks/misha_glenny_hire_the_hackers

Baratunde Thurston: How to deconstruct racism, one headline at a time

Baratunde Thurston explores the phenomenon of white Americans calling the police on black Americans who have committed the crimes of ... eating, walking or generally "living while black." In this profound, thought-provoking and often hilarious talk, he reveals the power of language to change stories of trauma into stories of healing -- while cha...
https://www.ted.com/talks/baratunde_thurston_how_to_deconstruct_racism_one_headline_at_a_time

Genevieve Bell: 6 big ethical questions about the future of AI

Artificial intelligence is all around us ... and the future will only bring more of it. How can we ensure the AI systems we build are responsible, safe and sustainable? Ethical AI expert Genevieve Bell shares six framing questions to broaden our understanding of future technology -- and create the next generation of critical thinkers and doers.
https://www.ted.com/talks/genevieve_bell_6_big_ethical_questions_about_the_future_of_ai

David Miliband: The refugee crisis is a test of our character

Sixty-five million people were displaced from their homes by conflict and disaster in 2016. It's not just a crisis; it's a test of who we are and what we stand for, says David Miliband -- and each of us has a personal responsibility to help solve it. In this must-watch talk, Miliband gives us specific, tangible ways to help refugees and turn emp...
https://www.ted.com/talks/david_miliband_the_refugee_crisis_is_a_test_of_our_character

Iain Hutchison: Saving faces: A facial surgeon's craft

Maxillofacial surgeon Iain Hutchison works with people whose faces have been severely disfigured. By pushing to improve surgical techniques, he helps to improve their lives; and by commissioning their portraits, he celebrates their humanity. NOTE: This talk contains images of disfigured and badly injured faces that may be disturbing -- and Hutch...
https://www.ted.com/talks/iain_hutchison_saving_faces_a_facial_surgeon_s_craft

Nicholas Negroponte: One Laptop per Child

Nicholas Negroponte, founder of the MIT Media Laboratory, describes how the One Laptop Per Child project will build and distribute the "$100 laptop."
https://www.ted.com/talks/nicholas_negroponte_one_laptop_per_child

Andrew Solomon: How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are

Writer Andrew Solomon has spent his career telling stories of the hardships of others. Now he turns inward, bringing us into a childhood of adversity, while also spinning tales of the courageous people he's met in the years since. In a moving, heartfelt and at times downright funny talk, Solomon gives a powerful call to action to forge meaning f...
https://www.ted.com/talks/andrew_solomon_how_the_worst_moments_in_our_lives_make_us_who_we_are

Elif Shafak: The revolutionary power of diverse thought

"From populist demagogues, we will learn the indispensability of democracy," says novelist Elif Shafak. "From isolationists, we will learn the need for global solidarity. And from tribalists, we will learn the beauty of cosmopolitanism." A native of Turkey, Shafak has experienced firsthand the devastation that a loss of diversity can bring -- an...
https://www.ted.com/talks/elif_shafak_the_revolutionary_power_of_diverse_thought

Robert Muggah: The biggest risks facing cities -- and some solutions

With fantastic new maps that show interactive, visual representations of urban fragility, Robert Muggah articulates an ancient but resurging idea: cities shouldn't just be the center of economics -- they should also be the foundation of our political lives. Looking around the world, from Syria to Singapore to Seoul and beyond, Muggah submits six...
https://www.ted.com/talks/robert_muggah_the_biggest_risks_facing_cities_and_some_solutions

Charles Leadbeater: Education innovation in the slums

Charles Leadbeater went looking for radical new forms of education -- and found them in the slums of Rio and Kibera, where some of the world's poorest kids are finding transformative new ways to learn. And this informal, disruptive new kind of school, he says, is what all schools need to become.
https://www.ted.com/talks/charles_leadbeater_education_innovation_in_the_slums

Elif Shafak: The politics of fiction

Listening to stories widens the imagination; telling them lets us leap over cultural walls, embrace different experiences, feel what others feel. Elif Shafak builds on this simple idea to argue that fiction can overcome identity politics.
https://www.ted.com/talks/elif_shafak_the_politics_of_fiction

Karima Bennoune: When people of Muslim heritage challenge fundamentalism

Karima Bennoune shares four powerful stories of real people fighting against fundamentalism in their own communities — refusing to allow the faith they love to become a tool for crime, attacks and murder. These personal stories humanize one of the most overlooked human-rights struggles in the world.
https://www.ted.com/talks/karima_bennoune_when_people_of_muslim_heritage_challenge_fundamentalism

Neil Turok: My wish: Find the next Einstein in Africa

Accepting his 2008 TED Prize, physicist Neil Turok speaks out for talented young Africans starved of opportunity: by unlocking and nurturing the continent's creative potential, we can create a change in Africa's future.
https://www.ted.com/talks/neil_turok_my_wish_find_the_next_einstein_in_africa

Martine Rothblatt: My daughter, my wife, our robot, and the quest for immortality

The founder of Sirius XM satellite radio, Martine Rothblatt now heads up a drug company that makes life-saving medicines for rare diseases (including one drug that saved her own daughter's life). Meanwhile she is working to preserve the consciousness of the woman she loves in a digital file ... and a companion robot. In an onstage conversation w...
https://www.ted.com/talks/martine_rothblatt_my_daughter_my_wife_our_robot_and_the_quest_for_immortality

Jane Goodall: How humans and animals can live together

The legendary chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall talks about TACARE and her other community projects, which help people in booming African towns live side-by-side with threatened animals.
https://www.ted.com/talks/jane_goodall_how_humans_and_animals_can_live_together

Paul Ewald: Can we domesticate germs?

Evolutionary biologist Paul Ewald drags us into the sewer to discuss germs. Why are some more harmful than others? How could we make the harmful ones benign? Searching for answers, he examines a disgusting, fascinating case: diarrhea.
https://www.ted.com/talks/paul_ewald_can_we_domesticate_germs

Melinda Gates: Let's put birth control back on the agenda

Contraception. The topic has become controversial in recent years. But should it be? Melinda Gates believes that many of the world's social change issues depend on ensuring that women are able to control their rate of having kids. In this significant talk at TEDxChange, she makes the case for the world to re-examine an issue she intends to lend ...
https://www.ted.com/talks/melinda_gates_let_s_put_birth_control_back_on_the_agenda

Cameron Sinclair: My wish: A call for open-source architecture

Accepting his 2006 TED Prize, Cameron Sinclair demonstrates how passionate designers and architects can respond to world housing crises. He unveils his TED Prize wish for a network to improve global living standards through collaborative design.
https://www.ted.com/talks/cameron_sinclair_my_wish_a_call_for_open_source_architecture

Paul Sereno: Digging up dinosaurs

Strange landscapes, scorching heat and (sometimes) mad crocodiles await scientists seeking clues to evolution's genius. Paleontologist Paul Sereno talks about his surprising encounters with prehistory -- and a new way to help students join the adventure.
https://www.ted.com/talks/paul_sereno_digging_up_dinosaurs

Ibram X. Kendi: The difference between being "not racist" and antiracist

There is no such thing as being "not racist," says author and historian Ibram X. Kendi. In this vital conversation, he defines the transformative concept of antiracism to help us more clearly recognize, take responsibility for and reject prejudices in our public policies, workplaces and personal beliefs. Learn how you can actively use this aware...
https://www.ted.com/talks/ibram_x_kendi_the_difference_between_being_not_racist_and_antiracist
Previous|1…16|17|18|19|20|Next
TED

Programs & initiatives

  • TEDx
  • TED Fellows
  • TED Ed
  • TED Translators
  • TED Books
  • TED Institute
  • The Audacious Project

Ways to get TED

  • Podcasts
  • More ways to get TED

Follow TED

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • TED Blog

Our community

  • TED Speakers
  • TED Fellows
  • TED Translators
  • TEDx Organizers
  • TED Community

Want personalized recommendations?

Join TED Recommends and get the perfect ideas selected just for you.
Get started

Language Selector

TED.com translations are made possible by volunteer translators. Learn more about the Open Translation Project.

  • TED Talks Usage Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertising / Partnership
  • TED.com Terms of Use
  • Jobs
  • Press
  • Help
  • Membership

© TED Conferences, LLC. All rights reserved.