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  • In 24 hours
    2026/04/08

    In this week's episode of Speaking of Social Justice, host Dr Julie Macken reflects on the past 24 hours and what this means for Australia.

    The past few months, weeks, days, the past few hours, we have witnessed a world of chaos, a world of despair, a world of conflict. In Australia, 24 hours ago we were going to bed wondering if we will awaken to a nuclear strike, to Australian troops on the ground, the loss of a civilisation following the threat of a genocide. We were left wondering what do we even do in Australia? What can we do in Australia?

    The good news is we have a defence against this and it's a little thing called the law. We are indeed a small country but there are things we can call on our leaders to do. Our leaders in politics, our leaders of unions, our leaders in business, our leaders in churches and synagogues and temples and mosques. We can stand up and articulate a demand for international human rights. We can demand that those who have committed war crimes are arrested, that some form of justice is served,

    This week's episode is timely and it is a push that we actually do have the power to demand accountability, enforceability, and the end to violence.

    Read the JPO's full statement here: https://justiceandpeace.org.au/war-crimes-and-australias-obligations/

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    4 分
  • In a Time of Monsters, Our Shared Humanity Is Our Power
    2026/03/25

    In a week marked by deep global uncertainty, Dr Julie Macken reflects on what it means to speak about social justice when democracy itself feels under strain.

    Drawing on recent global reports, this episode explores the erosion of democratic values, the decline of freedoms, and the devastating realities unfolding across regions including Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Iran, and beyond. In what some have described as “a time of monsters,” it’s easy to feel overwhelmed, powerless, and disconnected.

    Julie reminds us that human rights are not conditional, they are inherent. In a world increasingly shaped by division, violence, and political manipulation, our responsibility remains the same: to stand firm in our humanity, to support one another, and to demand more from our leaders.

    This is a call to resist apathy, reject division, and hold onto the simple but powerful truth that our dignity is bound together, because in times like these, holding onto our humanity is not just an act of hope, it’s an act of resistance.

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    4 分
  • AUKUS and the Risk of Becoming a Target
    2026/03/12

    In this episode of Speaking of Social Justice, Dr Julie Macken explores the growing geopolitical tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran, and what they reveal about the risks of military alliances. As conflict escalates in the Middle East, Julie asks a difficult question: what happens to smaller countries that host military bases or align themselves closely with global powers?

    Drawing on recent events in the Gulf states, she explains how countries that host U.S. military facilities can quickly become targets during conflict — even when they were not consulted about the decision to go to war.

    This raises serious questions for Australia.

    Through the AUKUS agreement, Australia is committing $368 billion in defence spending and allowing expanded U.S. military presence on Australian soil. But does this arrangement actually make Australia safer, or could it place the country on the front line of conflicts that are not our own?

    At a moment of rising global tension, this episode calls for public scrutiny, democratic debate, and greater transparency about one of the largest defence decisions in Australian history.

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    6 分
  • SPECIAL EDITION: International Women's Day
    2026/03/05

    Ahead of International Women’s Day, we gathered five influential women from diverse backgrounds for a powerful conversation about leadership, justice, and the ways power shapes our world.

    Too often, the models of power we inherit are hierarchical, extractive, and patriarchal. But what if power could look different?

    In Reimagining Power, our panelists drew on lived experience, leadership, and critical insight to explore how power can be rooted in justice, care, solidarity, and shared responsibility. Together, they challenge traditional assumptions and reflect on how power can be exercised collectively, in ways that strengthen women, communities, and movements rather than dominate them.

    This episode captures the heart of that conversation: an invitation to question the systems we have inherited and to imagine new ways of leading, collaborating, and creating change.

    For a better listening experience, we recommend wearing headphones.

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    1 時間 30 分
  • Reimagining Power
    2026/02/25

    In this episode of Speaking of Social Justice, host Dr Julie Macken turns her attention to International Women’s Day and to a deeper, more uncomfortable question: how do we exercise power?

    Ahead of a special panel discussion, Julie reflects on the state of the world for women today. From persistent gender pay gaps to gender-based violence in Australia, and from global scandals of abuse to political leadership that simply replicates old models of dominance, it’s clear that putting women into positions of power hasn’t automatically transformed how power is used.

    This conversation asks something more radical: is it possible to exercise power differently? Can leadership move beyond command-and-control, bullying, and exploitation, and toward models that are collaborative, creative, accountable, and life-giving?

    Drawing on feminist critique, lived experience, and the wisdom of older cultures that organised differently, this episode invites listeners to imagine forms of power that don’t just change who is in charge, but change how leadership itself works.

    If you’re interested in justice, gender equality, and rethinking leadership for a fractured world, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.

    Register here: https://events.humanitix.com/iwd-2026-reimagining-power

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    3 分
  • Housing, the Common Good and the Capital Gains Tax discount
    2026/02/18

    Dr Michael Walker steps into the host’s chair to unpack why capital gains tax has surged back into national debate and why it matters for every Australian feeling the pressure of the cost-of-living crisis.

    At the centre of the discussion is the 50% capital gains tax discount, introduced in 1999, and how it has fuelled property speculation, inflated house prices, and pushed home ownership further out of reach. As house prices have soared far beyond wage growth, average earners are increasingly locked into lifelong renting, while rising mortgages and rents drive widespread housing stress.

    Drawing on recent polling and research from groups including the Everybody’s Home Coalition, Dr Walker highlights the stark trade-offs households are making just to stay housed—skipping meals, avoiding medical care, and cutting basic utilities. With housing now the single biggest driver of cost-of-living stress, the stakes could not be higher.

    The episode also grounds the debate in Catholic Social Teaching, referencing the Australian Bishops’ affirmation that housing is a basic human right and a cornerstone of the common good. Winding back the capital gains tax discount, Dr Walker argues, would not solve the crisis overnight, but it would be a crucial step toward a fairer, more just housing system.

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    5 分
  • Social Cohesion Sounds Like Velcro
    2026/02/11

    This week on Speaking of Social Justice, Dr Julie Macken takes on one of the most overused — and often misunderstood — phrases in our public conversation: “social cohesion.”

    What does it really mean to “hold together” as a society when people are hurting, divided, and afraid? And is cohesion even the right word, or does it risk glossing over pain, inequality, and real difference?

    Julie reflects on how fragile we all remain, no matter how old we get. From playground cruelty to political provocation, from rising Islamophobia and antisemitism to collective grief in places like Bondi and Gaza, this episode asks a deeper question: What would it look like to meet our differences with care rather than cruelty?

    This is not a call for slogans, silence, or “Velcro-style” unity. It’s a plea for lowering the temperature, recognising shared humanity, and treating one another gently, because the stakes are high, and hurt people really do hurt people.

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    5 分
  • I’ve never worried about Australia tearing apart — until now
    2026/01/29

    Dr Julie Macken looks ahead at the major social justice issues shaping Australia, from offshore detention inquiries and national security investigations to rising political division and community strain.

    But beyond the headlines, this is a deeper reflection on something more personal and urgent: our shared humanity.

    Julie explores what happens when public debate turns into social fracture, why so many people are emotionally exhausted by the state of the nation, and why caring for one another is not optional work, it’s civic work. Drawing on moments of solidarity seen during past crises, she asks whether we can relearn how to disagree without dehumanising, and reconnect as a community.

    Stay engaged and keep showing up for one another.

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    6 分