Thursday 18 November , 6.00-7.00pm GMT

PAST EVENT: Can present generations be duty-bound because of considerations of justice to past and future people?

 


Sebastian Millbank, The Tablet’s Newman Intern talks to Angus Hanton (Co-founder of the Intergenerational Foundation) and Esme Partridge (interfaith coordinator and writer on religion in a secular, digital age) about intergenerational justice.

Thursday 18 November 2021 6.00 – 7.00pm BST

Ticket price:
£12.50 inclusive of VAT

This event has closed

Sixth Form Colleges qualify for a discount price of 5 tickets for £25 – please contact Stephen Bryan

 

Angus Hanton is an economist and entrepreneur, and Co-founder of the Intergenerational Foundation. A self-confessed baby boomer, he believes that successive governments have unwittingly overseen the transfer of assets, benefits and resources to older generations, whilst passing increasingly unsustainable liabilities to younger and future people.

Esmé Partridge is a researcher, writer and interfaith coordinator specialising in Islamic Studies, theology, mysticism and spirituality in a digital age. She wrote her dissertation on the phenomenon of witchcraft on the social media app TikTok and its relationship with secularity, and continues to research the ways in which the millennial and Gen-Z generations engage with the sacred.