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Hawke Centre Podcasts - Civil Society

Civil Society

  A Confident Australia: Inaugural Annual Hawke Lecture (1998)
  ADELAIDE in DOCUTOPIA: facing reality in a digital age
  An Australian Republic - A Guide for the Perplexed: 1999 Annual Hawke Lecture
  Australian Fusion: Imagining our Eurasian Future
  Beyond Tsunami
  Black Holes, Backhoes and Broadband - There's more to connecting South Australia than rolling out a cable!
  Blast Theory - The New Media Challenge
  Carbon Trading Exposed: The impact on the world's poor
  Changing headsets: the impact of museums on social thinking
  Changing the World through Film
  Consensus and Dissent in Australia: 2007 Annual Hawke Lecture
  Creating a life that works in the flexible job age?
  Cultural and scientific legacies and visions
  Delivering more effective public services
  Dying with Dignity: assisted dying principles and practices
  Ethical Globalization: A Vision of a World Where Benefits Accrue to All: Inaugural UniSA Nelson Mandela Lecture (2008)
  Famous People: Famous Collections
  Free and Fairer Trade
  Future of family business in South Australia
  Horizon SA Forum: South Australia: Gaining Ground by being Bold
  Horizon SA Forum: Journalism's crisis is everyone's crisis - Can quality journalism survive the internet revolution?
  Housing the homeless - whatever it takes
  Imagining Australia - what should our country look like in 2050?
  In Conversation with Professor Bryan Turner
  InConversation with Lemn Sissay
  In Conversation with Tariq Ali
  Is it Necessary to Love Your Neighbours? Living with Radical Diversities and the Right to be Oneself: 2010 UniSA Nelson Mandela Lecture
  It Pays to Deliver Smart Justice
  Just citizenship: reflections on citizenship and social justice
  Law and Social Justice - is it all rhetoric? 2010 Catherine Helen Spence Commemorative Oration
  Lest we forget - Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Amnesty International
  Lives de-filed and statues animated.... China, the passion of the political and the everyday
  Make nuclear weapons the target: Legal and humanitarian imperatives for banning the use of nuclear weapons
  Make Poverty History
  Manufacturing into the Future
  Old-New Lands: Ancient Spirits, Cutting-edge Modernity and Europe’s Complex Legacy in Israel and Australia: 2008 Australia-Israel Hawke Lecture
  Paths to a just peace for Palestine and Israel - a dialogue
  Playing God? Genetically Modified Organisms, Miracles and Monsters
  Regional Australia: Power & Politics
  Re-thinking Australian Politics: Engaging the Disenchanted 2010 Annual Hawke Lecture
  Relief in Sight? How well prepared is Australia to respond to a crisis in our area?
  Research & Innovation in Humanitarian Settlement: SA Refugee Week Forum 2010
  Short term pain for long term gain: managing work life balance in a recession
  Someone special: issues in the development of person specific libraries, archives and collections
  Thailand's and Australia's places in the ASEAN Community in 2015 and beyond
  The Arab Spring: What comes next?
  The Business of Aid - Creating Partnerships, combating corruption
  The changing face of Australia: Promises of a new generation
  The long betrayal of remote indigenous Australia: the record of successive governments
  The right to mobility
  Think Again! Time to recover or time to change?
  Time out with Beatrix Campbell
  Visions of a Nation: Centenary of Federation National Forum
  Waging War and Making Peace: 2003 Annual Hawke Lecture
  What matters in Australia today: Four perspectives
  Women and the Arab Spring - an IWD event with Jane Hutcheon


Events are listed under the following headings by title.

Events listed by author surname.


While the views presented by speakers within the Hawke Centre public program are their own and are not necessarily those of either the University of South Australia or The Hawke Centre, they are presented in the interest of open debate and discussion in the community and reflect our themes of: strengthening our democracy - valuing our diversity - and building our future.

The copying and reproduction of any transcripts within the Hawke Centre public program is strictly forbidden without prior arrangements.



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