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Woman's Hour Power List

Eve Pollard, chair of the judging panel, reveals the Woman's Hour Power List in a special programme with an audience at the Ö÷²¥´óÐã Radio Theatre, presented by Jenni Murray and Jane Garvey. What does the list tell us and what might a future list look like?
Producer Ruth Watts.

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58 minutes

Chapters

  • Introduction and Power List Top 20

    Run down of the Top 20 on the Woman's Hour Power List.

    Duration: 02:53

  • Eve Pollard

    Eve Pollard, chair of the panel of judges, on how they chose the list.

    Duration: 10:25

  • What do we know about women on the Power List?

    Analysis of how the list is broken down by age/ethnicity/education/marital status.

    Duration: 03:46

  • Heather Rabbatts

    Heather Rabbatts, director of the Football Association, on her place on the power list.

    Duration: 07:38

  • What does the list tell us? Where are the gaps?

    Jenni discusses with Alexandra Shulman, Baroness Oona King & Julia Hobsbawm.

    Duration: 09:50

  • What does a future list look like?

    Discussion with Dawn O’Porter, Alexandra Shulman, Julia Hobsawm & Baroness Oona King.

    Duration: 06:29

Get Involved

On Tuesday 12th February Eve Pollard, chair of the , reveals the in a special programme from the Ö÷²¥´óÐã Radio Theatre presented by Jenni Murray and Jane Garvey.

You can get involved
  • Twitter: using the hashtag
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Follow the for updates leading up to Tuesday 12th February 2013 as the Woman's Hour Power List is revealed.

Eve Pollard

Eve Pollard is the woman who was responsible for delivering our first Power List. She is a journalist, author and former Fleet Street editor and was only the second woman to edit a national newspaper, the Sunday Mirror before she moved on to edit the Sunday Express.  She chaired our panel of judges, which included Priti Patel MP, Dawn O’Porter, Val McDermid, Baroness Oona King and former Woman’s Hour editor Jill Burridge.  Guided by the public nominations and expert witness, sifting through 1,578 suggestions from listeners alone, they chose the women who feature on the list of the 100 most powerful women today.

What do we know about women on the Power List?

Jane analyses how the women who have the Power List are broken down by age, ethnicity, education and marital status.

Heather Rabbats

Heather Rabbatts, the first woman director of the Football Association, joins Jane to talk about her place on the Woman’s Hour power list.

What does the list tell us?

Where are the gaps – of the areas and industries – where we don’t find women? And what can be done to increase the numbers of women from more diverse backgrounds reaching the top jobs? At a time when more women than men are going to university and entering professions such as law and medicine, how do we go about getting women from every background better represented at the top table? Joining Jenni to discuss what the list says about where we are now and how we tackle the gaps are: Alexandra Shulman, editor of British Vogue and one of the 100 women who made the Power List; another of the judges, Labour peer Baroness Oona King' and Julia Hobsbawm who runs the media networking company Editorial Intelligence and is Professor of Networking at Cass Business School in London. 

What does a future list look like?

One of the strong themes that emerged during deliberations was how to weigh hard power – money, hire and fire, political power against soft power, culture and influence and especially the soft power represented by social media and Twitter. So is power changing and will that change the women we might see on a Woman’s Hour Power List when we hope to revisit it? Dawn O’Porter joins the panel to discuss, along with Alexandra Shulman, editor of British Vogue; Julia Hobsawm, Editorial intelligence; and Baroness Oona King, Labour Peer.

Broadcast

  • Tue 12 Feb 2013 10:00

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