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People With Disability: Turning Paper Rights Into Realities

In 2012, 4.2 million Australians (18.5% of the population) were estimated as having a disability. However, as Vik Finkelstein, an English self-advocate has commented, the rest of the population could be labelled as ‘not yet disabled’, for disability is something that can affect each of us at some point in our life course

By |2022-05-10T09:57:13+10:00December 14th, 2021|Human Rights|Comments Off on People With Disability: Turning Paper Rights Into Realities

New Media, Political Infantilisation and the Creativity Paradox

When Sleepers, Wake!: Technology and the Future of Work was published in 1982, my predictions about the potential impact of the ICT (Information and Communications Technology) Revolution were regarded as wildly exaggerated and hence not taken seriously. Thirty years later they read like a statement of the blindingly obvious and could now be dismissed as, ‘Well, it was always inevitable, wasn’t it?’

By |2022-05-10T09:57:27+10:00December 14th, 2021|Arts, Culture & Society, Governance|Comments Off on New Media, Political Infantilisation and the Creativity Paradox

Liberty, Fraternity and – what was the other word? How equality fell off the political agenda in Australia

‘Equality’ dropped off Australia’s political agenda in the 21st century. Both sides of politics recognise that winning elections depends on winning votes from ‘aspirationals’. So progressive taxation was dropped, education is more stratified in Australia than the UK or US, and governments and political parties have abandoned ‘needs based’ policies

By |2022-05-10T10:41:32+10:00December 14th, 2021|Governance|Comments Off on Liberty, Fraternity and – what was the other word? How equality fell off the political agenda in Australia

Re-Framing Australia

The Australian colonies began very unpromisingly as a convict society built on Aboriginal dispossession. Nevertheless, robust elected institutions soon developed. There was responsible government by the 1850s, full manhood suffrage by the 1860s, the secret ballot (a local invention) and payment of members

By |2022-01-28T11:45:21+11:00December 14th, 2021|Arts, Culture & Society, Governance|Comments Off on Re-Framing Australia

Influenza

The term ‘influenza’ is often used loosely to describe respiratory illness caused by a wide range of viruses, including respiratory syncytical virus, parainfluenza viruses, rhinoviruses and adenoviruses as well as influenza viruses themselves. Although all of these viruses can cause significant disease, true influenza has a special place in the world of communicable diseases for two reasons

By |2022-01-31T10:31:45+11:00December 14th, 2021|Health|Comments Off on Influenza

eSocial Networking and eSports

On a physical level Homo sapiens (Latin: ‘wise man’) have changed little over the last 20,000 years. Nonetheless, there has been a tremendous evolution in our lifestyle (at least for the majority), and this has been the consequence of a multitude of significant discoveries, inventions and revelations that plaster the mosaic of human history

By |2022-01-31T10:31:52+11:00December 14th, 2021|Arts, Culture & Society|Comments Off on eSocial Networking and eSports

Otitis Media

Otitis media (OM) refers to middle ear infection, and is a highly prevalent condition in the Australian Aboriginal population. While OM occurs with different degrees of severity, it invariably presents a serious healthcare problem, with significant medical, psychological and social impacts

By |2022-01-31T10:31:58+11:00December 14th, 2021|Health|Comments Off on Otitis Media

Homosexuality and Love

I received my first inkling of my own sexuality at about age 9. I was always precocious. In those days, it was not a very good discovery to find that one was homosexual. The afternoon tabloids were full of stories of entrapment and arrests of gay men in Sydney. They included some famous visiting artists, like Claudio Arrau, the great concert pianist

By |2022-01-31T10:32:08+11:00December 14th, 2021|Arts, Culture & Society, Human Rights|Comments Off on Homosexuality and Love

Human Rights, Gay Rights

The first school that I ever attended was a local kindergarten conducted by Mrs Church. I have no idea of her first name. Back in 1943, schoolchildren never became familiar with their teachers. Certainly not in kindergarten

By |2022-01-31T10:32:17+11:00December 14th, 2021|Human Rights|Comments Off on Human Rights, Gay Rights

Sexuality

Recently, I visited Kenya. A huge legal conference held in the Jomo Kenyatta Conference Centre in the middle of Nairobi. The meeting gathered lawyers from all parts of the Commonwealth of Nations. This is the club of nations all but one of which were once ruled by Britain. Queen Elizabeth II is the symbolic Head of the Commonwealth

By |2022-01-31T10:32:37+11:00December 14th, 2021|Arts, Culture & Society, Governance|Comments Off on Sexuality
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