DiscoverThe 2020 NetworkOpen to Debate: Where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?
Open to Debate: Where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?

Open to Debate: Where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?

Update: 2024-12-10
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Toxic political polarization is on the rise around the world – and it’s making a mess of things. Ordinary people who might otherwise disagree, even strongly, and yet get on with one another, are at each other’s throats over just about everything. 


Too many political and economic elites reap short-term benefits from this divide, but the long term consequences for democracy – and society – are devastating. So, where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?


On this episode of Open to Debate, David Moscrop talks with Kurt Gray, University of North Carolina psychologist and neuroscientist and author of Outrage: Why We Fight About Morality and Politics and How to Find Common Ground.


This is the final episode of Open to Debate. We’re winding down after five years and 112 conversations. We’ve run our course. And we’ve run it well. Thanks so much for listening.

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Open to Debate: Where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?

Open to Debate: Where does toxic political polarization come from and what can we do about it?

Canada 2020