Laura Bates on extreme misogyny groups online. Getting into debt. Young women and rheumatoid arthritis

Published: Sept. 10, 2020, 12:06 p.m.

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Laura Bates is founder of the Everyday Sexism Project. In her latest book \\u2013 Men Who Hate Women - she traces the roots of extreme misogyny across a complex network of online groups - extending from Men's Rights Activists and Pick up Artists to Men Going their Own Way, Trolls and the Incel movement.\\nShe explains how they operate and how she hopes drawing parallels with other extremist movements around the world will help us to understand what makes them attractive to men and boys..

Women \\u2013 and specifically young women \\u2013 have always been hugely over-represented when it comes to debt. Since the pandemic, charities are hearing from more and more who find themselves in financial difficulty. Anna who\\u2019s now 22 shares how she's managed to clear considerable debt. Sue Anderson from debt charity Step Change talks bout the trends they\\u2019re seeing when it comes to women and money. Plus financial campaigner Alice Tapper on why she thinks the increasing use of \\u2018buy-now-pay-later\\u2019 methods need much more scrutiny,.\\n \\nThis week is Rheumatoid Arthritis Awareness Week. It's a disease that affects three times more women than men under the age of 65. Women tend to develop it younger than men, with symptoms typically appearing between the ages of 30 and 50 \\u2013 some can even start to develop it in their teens. So what\\u2019s it like to be a young woman living with the condition? Yulanda Sabrina is a singer and was diagnosed five years ago at the age of 28. She speaks to Jenni along with Clare Jacklin, Chief Executive of the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society.

Presenter Jenni Murray\\nProducer Beverley Purcell

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