Ranga Yogeshwar

Journalist

Ranga Yogeshwar was born in Luxembourg in 1959, the son of an Indian engineer and a Luxembourgish artist. He spent most of his early childhood in India. After graduating from high school in Luxembourg, he studied experimental elementary particle physics and astrophysics and worked at the Swiss Institute for Nuclear Research (SIN), CERN in Geneva and the Jülich Research Center. Ranga Yogeshwar began his career as a journalist in 1983, initially at various publishing houses, then in radio and television. In 1987, he became an editor at Westdeutscher Rundfunk Cologne and later became head of the science department. Ranga Yogeshwar has been working as an independent journalist and author since 2008.
Ranga Yogeshwar began his career as a journalist in 1983, initially at various publishing houses, then in radio and television. In 1987, he became an editor at Westdeutscher Rundfunk Cologne and later headed the science department. Ranga Yogeshwar has been working as an independent journalist and author since 2008. He is one of Germany’s leading science journalists and has developed and presented numerous TV programs, including “Kopfball” (ARD), “Quarks&Co” (WDR) and “Die große Show der Naturwunder” (ARD). Yogeshwar regularly writes articles in leading newspapers and is a welcome expert on numerous talk shows. His books “Sonst noch Fragen?”, “Ach so!” and “Nächste Ausfahrt Zukunft” quickly became bestsellers and have been translated into numerous languages. Yogeshwar has received over 60 professional awards and has been honored many times, including an honorary doctorate from the University of Wuppertal, the Federal Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Order of Merit of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia and the Ordre de Mérite du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg. Ranga Yogeshwar is the father of 4 children and lives with his family near Cologne.

Ranga Yogeshwar, how can we use AI technologies to shape a better future for the younger generation?

Ranga Yogeshwar explains what impact the growing influence of AI could have on young people and what parents should bear ...