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Big Ideas

Big Ideas

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Feed your mind. Be provoked. One big idea at a time. Your brain will love you for it. Grab your front row seat to the best live forums and festivals with Natasha Mitchell.

2451 - Deaf defying: disability leadership as an act of resistance — with Dr Scott Avery
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  • 2451 - Deaf defying: disability leadership as an act of resistance — with Dr Scott Avery

    In outback New South Wales, on the dried up, ancient clay shores of Lake Mungo, is a story that has become emblematic for profoundly deaf Worimi man Dr Scott Avery: what can it teach us about disability inclusion, leadership, and excellence? The 2024 Disability Leadership Oration was recorded at the National Archives of Australia on 26 November 2024. Speakers Dr Scott Avery Professor of Indigenous Disability and Wellbeing at the University of Technology Sydney Christina Ryan (host) Founder and chief executive, Disability Leadership Institute Further information Disability Leadership Institute ABC News page on people with a disability Australians with disability tell their stories for International Day of People with Disability 2024 ABC Press release United Nations 2024 International Day Of Persons With Disabilities (IDPD)

    Tue, 03 Dec 2024 - 53min
  • 2450 - Trees, seeds, and ecotourism — the hidden histories Nature reveals about us

    Can a single seed tell the story of a civilisation? What do the scars on the skins of 200-year old whales tell about our ancestors? Can ancient trees reveal hidden histories of human frailty and fabulousness? Can Nature be a timekeeper?  Joining Big Ideas host Natasha Mitchell are Dave Witty (author of What the Trees See: A Wander through Millennia of Natural History), Fiona McMillan-Webster (author of The Age of Seeds: How Plants Hacked Time and Why Our Future Depends on It) and Satyajit Das (author of Wild Quests: Journeys into Ecotourism and the Future of Animals). This event was hosted by the Brisbane Writers Festival. Speakers Satyajit Das Author, former banker, consultant Dr Fiona McMillan-Webster Science writer and scientist Dave Witty Author

    Mon, 02 Dec 2024 - 54min
  • 2449 - The right to discriminate? Religious schools and Australian human rights law

    Human rights are meant to be universal, but what happens when those rights conflict with one another? For example, a religious school's right to practice its faith, versus the right of others to be free from discrimination? The 2024 Higinbotham Lecture was recorded at RMIT University on 21 October 2024. Speaker  Justice Mordy Bromberg, President, Australian Law Reform Commission Further information Read the full report Religious Educational Institutions and Anti-Discrimination Laws from the Australian Law Reform Commission

    Thu, 28 Nov 2024 - 51min
  • 2448 - Is it still possible for empathy to trump hate? Here's how. Rhonda Magee and Mariam Tokhi with Natasha Mitchell

    Rhonda Magee grew up in segregated North Carolina in an abusive household. She knows firsthand the deep divides that define America right now.  She draws on her life, and her work as a law professor and leading mindfulness meditation teacher in her book The inner work of racial justice: Healing ourselves and transforming our communities through mindfulness. Mariam Tokhi is a writer and GP in a refugee and asylum seeker health service in Melbourne. She has created a trailblazing narrative medicine course to help doctors use the power of storytelling to fully see the humanity of their patients and themselves. This event was organised by the Contemplative Studies Centre, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne. Speakers: Rhonda Magee Author, The inner work of racial justice: Healing ourselves and transforming our communities through mindfulness (Tarcher, 2019) Professor Emerita of Law Mindfulness meditation educator Founding director, Center for Contemplative Law and Ethics University of San Francisco. Dr Mariam Tokhi GP and writer  Utopia refugee and asylum seeker health service Narrative medicine lecturer,  University of Melbourne Medical School

    Wed, 27 Nov 2024 - 1h 00min
  • 2447 - Busting the myths around menstruation and menopause, with Dr Jennifer Gunter

    Is menstruation linked to the moon? Do women's periods sync up when they live together? Are girls getting their first period younger? Why don't we talk about menstruation and menopause more? Popular US-based physician and bestselling author Dr Jen Gunter is on a mission to change the conversation about women's health. This event was recorded as part of National Science Week at the University of NSW's Centre for Ideas on 15 August 2024. Speakers Dr Jen Gunter Obstetrician and gynaecologist Author, Blood: The Science, Medicine, and Mythology of Menstruation The Menopause Manifesto: Own Your Health with Facts and Feminism and more Professor Caroline Ford Lead, Gynaecological Cancer Research Group, University of NSW

    Tue, 26 Nov 2024 - 52min
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