Épisodes

  • 28. Truth-telling : Facing Australia's Colonial History on the Path to Reconciliation
    Sep 25 2025

    What happens when we break the silence around colonial history? How does acknowledging the past help us heal and connect across communities? And who carries the responsibility for truth-telling—First Nations peoples or non-Indigenous Australians?

    Through deeply personal reflections and bold insights, Lorena Allam, Kate Grenville, Lindon Coombes, Mariko Smith, and moderator Robynne Quiggin unpack the emotional, political, and cultural dimensions of truth-telling. If you’ve ever wondered “Where do we begin?” or “Why does truth-telling matter now more than ever?”—this conversation is essential listening.

    In this special panel hosted at UTS, moderator Robynne Quiggin is joined by:

    Lorena Allam

    A multiple Walkley Award–winning journalist descended from the Yuwaalaraay and Gamilaraay peoples of northwest NSW. Lorena has had a distinguished career at the ABC and The Guardian, where she was the first Indigenous Affairs Editor. She is now a Professor at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research at UTS. Her work has focused on truth-telling in media, Indigenous rights, and the legacy of colonialism in Australia 

    Kate Grenville

    One of Australia’s most acclaimed authors, Kate Grenville AO is best known for her historical novels including The Secret River, which explores the colonial frontier and its impact on First Nations peoples. Her work has won numerous awards including the Orange Prize and the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. She has also written extensively on the writing process and Australia's colonial legacy 

    Professor Lindon Coombes

    A descendant of the Yuwaalaraay people, Lindon is the Director of the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research at UTS. He has over 20 years of experience in Aboriginal affairs, including leadership roles in government and community organisations. His work focuses on Indigenous policy, justice, and self-determination

    Dr Mariko Smith

    A Yuin woman with Japanese heritage, Dr Smith is the Strategic Lead, First Nations at the Australian Museum. She is a curator, academic, and interdisciplinary researcher whose work centres on Indigenous cultural resurgence, museology, and incorporating Indigenous ways of knowing into creative and academic practice. She holds a PhD from the University of Sydney

    Together, they share insights into how truth-telling can foster deeper understanding, connection, and a more just future for all Australians.

    Recorded during National Reconciliation Week at UTS 4th June, 2025

    Keywords: Reconciliation, Truth-telling, Aboriginal History, Indigenous Voices, Australia, UTS, Colonialism, First Nations, National Reconciliation Week

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    1 h et 15 min
  • 27. Envisioning trans futures
    Sep 10 2025

    How can we envision trans futures? What does trans flourishing look like?

    What are the radical challenges to trans and gender diverse rights?

    And what are the joys, curiosities and possibilities of social justice focused research and truly inclusive futures?

    After some decades of progress, western governments are now reversing or threatening to reverse the legal rights and recognition of trans and gender diverse people.

    In this context, trans and gender diverse people are often called upon to debate their rights and access to care.

    This event refocuses the lens, and brings together scholars and community members working on empowering trans communities to talk about:

    • trans identities and decolonial solidarities
    • queer futures in the Asia Pacific
    • trans futures in the classroom, and
    • the expansion of trans legal rights and medical care.

    Host

    Woody (Louis Walker), drag artist and UTS staff member (Education Portfolio)

    Panellists
    • Dr Madi Day, Lecturer, Centre for Critical Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University
    • Sidhi Vhisatya, Masters candidate, artist and curator, School of Communication UTS
    • Professor Anna Cody, Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Australian Human Rights Commission
    • Dr Archie Thomas, UTS Chancellors Research Fellow, Social and Political Sciences
    • Dr Sasha Bailey, Trans Health Research Group, University of Melbourne

    This event is the Andrew Jakubowicz annual lecture.

    Andrew Jakubowicz is an emeritus professor at UTS, and is one of Australia’s pre-eminent scholars of cultural diversity, multicultural communities, and racism. For over 30 years Andrew was Professor of Sociology at UTS. The UTS Andrew Jakubowicz lecture was established in 2018 in his honour. A major theme of each event is the responsibility academic researchers have in shaping public discussion of major societal issues of wide relevance.

    This is a collaborative event hosted by:

    • UTS Discipline of Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Design & Society
    • UTS Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion
    • UTS Trans and Gender Diverse Staff Reference Group

    Please note: Madi Day's speech is not included, and you can hear them in the panel discussion. For further reading on Indigenous futures, read Everywhen: against 'the power of now' by Mykaela Saunders.

    Host bio

    Woody (he/him) is the self-proclaimed rootinest tootinest cowboy in the Inner West! Woody is a strong advocate for Drag King visibility and inclusion, and is passionate about sharing trans joy and making space for play and whimsy alongside our fight for trans rights. He made his debut at The Underground in 2019 as a UTS student, and has been trotting on his hobby horse around NSW ever since.

    Speaker bios

    Dr Archie Thomas is a non-Indigenous scholar and transgender man who has published widely on Indigenous and LGBTIQA+ movements, histories and policy issues in Australia, with a focus on educative institutions such as the schools and media. He is a Chancellor’s Research Fellow in Social and Political Sciences at

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    1 h et 5 min
  • 26. A future without patriarchal violence, with Jess Hill, Ashlee Donohue and Anne Summers
    Aug 28 2025

    How did Australia's first family violence refuge come about?

    How has the depoliticisation of the domestic violence movement affected outcomes for women and children?

    While we now understand that domestic and family violence is more than physical violence, how do we continue to recognise and not turn away from the very real physical violence that Aboriginal women experience?

    What would take to build services that both prevent and respond, that are not just nonviolent in the way that we construct them, but anti-patriarchal?

    What are the opportunities right now to make change?

    Speakers

    Ashlee Donohue: CEO of Mudgin-Gal Aboriginal Corporation, author, educator, and advocate for Domestic and Family Violence awareness

    Jess Hill: Award-winning journalist, author of See What You Made Me Do, and Industry Professor, UTS Business School

    Dr Anne Summers AO Professor of Domestic and Family Violence, UTS Business School

    Credits

    This episode has been lightly edited. Impact Talks at UTS is produced by UTS Impact Studios.

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    1 h et 7 min
  • 25. The right to housing
    Aug 12 2025

    What if your right to a secure home was protected by law?

    Why is Australia one of the only liberal democracies without housing rights protection?

    Could a Human Rights Act help fix Australia’s housing crisis?

    Everyone should have a safe, secure and healthy place to call home, regardless of your postcode or bank balance. But this is not the reality for far too many people in the community.

    A new report on the right to housing commissioned by the Human Rights Law Centre and authored by Professor Jessie Hohmann from the UTS Faculty of Law, helps shifts the focus of discussion to people.

    Speakers

    Cassandra Goldie: CEO of Australian Council of Social Service and Adjunct Professor with UNSW Sydney.

    Professor Jessie Hohmann: is an Associate Professor at the UTS Faculty and Law, and an internationally recognised expert on the right to housing in international law.

    Tania Thompson: is the founder of Golden Oldies and a housing advocate with lived experience.

    Caitlin Reiger: is CEO of the Human Rights Law Centre and a human rights lawyer.

    Moderator

    Amy Persson: Pro Vice-Chancellor (Social Justice and Inclusion) for the University of Technology Sydney (UTS)

    This event in February 2025 was hosted by the UTS Faculty of Law, Centre for Social Justice & Inclusion and the Human Rights Law Centre.

    Credits

    This episode has been lightly edited.

    Impact Talks at UTS is produced by UTS Impact Studios, with sound engineering by Alison Zhuang.

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    53 min
  • 24. The AI Con with Emily M. Bender
    Jul 29 2025

    How will AI really shape our everyday lives?

    Is AI just a cover for data theft and surveillance capitalism?

    Are we on the brink of machines outsmarting us at everything?

    Keynote speaker

    Professor Emily M. Bender is the co-author of The AI Con: How To Fight Big Tech’s Hype and Create the Future We Want. She was featured in TIME100's inaugural list of most influential people in AI in 2023, and is a Professor of Linguistics at the University of Washington, USA.

    Emily is in conversation with Professor Carl Rhodes, Professor of Business and Society at UTS Business School and author of Stinking Rich: The Four Myths of the Good Billionaire and Woke Capitalism, with opening remarks from Professor Sally Cripps, Co-Director of the Human Technology Institute at UTS.

    Credits

    This episode has been lightly edited.

    Impact Talks at UTS is produced by UTS Impact Studios, with sound engineering by Alison Zhuang.

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    51 min
  • 23. Building Sustainable Finance Capability
    Jul 15 2025

    Is the finance sector equipped for the transition to net zero?

    What are the origins of ESG (environmental, social and corporate governance) and what is its role today?

    What is 'responsible investment' in a rapidly changing world?

    How can building skills across the sector drive change?

    Keynote speaker

    Paul Clements-Hunt is the former head of the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, and coined the term ESG.

    Panellists

    Professor Martina Linnenluecke is Director at UTS Centre for Climate Risk and Resilience.

    Gordon Noble is Research Director at the UTS Institute for Sustainable Futures.

    Rachel Alembakis is Stewardship Manager at U Ethical Investors.

    Nayanisha Samarakoon is Head of Policy and Advocacy at the Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA).

    This event was presented by UTS Business School on 27 May 2025, in collaboration with the Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) and the UTS Institute for Sustainable Futures.

    Credits

    This episode has been lightly edited, and the audience Q&A has been left out.

    Impact Talks at UTS is produced by UTS Impact Studios, with sound engineering by Alison Zhuang.

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    1 h
  • 22. The Stories America Tells Itself
    Jul 1 2025

    What stories does America tell itself - and who do they serve? In this episode of Impact Talks, we launch the 2025 Vice-Chancellor’s Democracy Forum with acclaimed historian, author and cultural critic Sarah Churchwell. In her thought-provoking lecture, Sarah explores the national myths that have shaped the United States. She examines how narratives of freedom and opportunity often conceal histories of exclusion, inequality, and disinformation.

    Following her address, Sarah is joined in conversation by celebrated author Anna Funder and economist Roy Green. Together, they reflect on the fragile state of democracy around the world and the urgent need to reimagine civic discourse, media and education in an age of misinformation.

    Guests:

    Sarah Churchwell

    Professor of American Literature and Public Understanding of the Humanities, University of London. A leading voice on American cultural and political identity, Sarah Churchwell is the author of Behold, America and The Wrath to Come. Her work examines the myths that shape national consciousness, particularly around democracy, freedom and populism.

    Anna Funder

    Author of Stasiland and Wifedom. Anna Funder is an award-winning writer known for her powerful investigations into truth, memory, and authoritarianism. Her latest book, Wifedom, reframes the story of George Orwell through the lens of his first wife, Eileen O’Shaughnessy, shining new light on women’s erasure from political and cultural history.

    Roy Green

    Emeritus Professor, UTS; Chair, Port of Newcastle. An economist and innovation expert, Roy Green has advised governments, businesses, and universities on productivity, industry policy, and economic transformation. He is a passionate advocate for inclusive, sustainable growth and the role of knowledge institutions in democratic renewal.

    Presented as part of the Vice-Chancellor’s Democracy Forum at the University of Technology Sydney.


    Credits

    This episode has been lightly edited.

    Impact Talks at UTS is produced by UTS Impact Studios, with sound engineering by Alison Zhuang.

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    1 h et 8 min
  • 21. Say Our Names: Identity, Respect, and Belonging
    Jun 13 2025

    What’s in a name? In a vibrant, multicultural society like Australia, names hold deep personal, cultural, and historical meaning.

    Yet too often, non-Anglo names are mispronounced, altered, or avoided—reflecting lingering colonial legacies and contributing to the marginalisation of diverse identities in workplaces, schools, and community life.

    In this panel discussion, community voices, academics, and thought leaders explore how respectful name recognition can foster deeper inclusion.

    Panel facilitators

    The event was MCed by Susana Ng, City of Sydney Multicultural Development Officer, Sand the panel was facilitated by Dr Elaine Laforteza and Dr Zozan Balci from UTS

    Dr Elaine Laforteza has a PhD in Cultural Studies. She is the Equity and Diversity Project Officer (Cultural Diversity) at the UTS Centre for Social Justice & Inclusion. She has held academic positions at Macquarie University, Charles Sturt University, and most recently in the School of Communication at UTS. Her work has been published in peer-reviewed academic journals and community media, and her book ‘The Somatechnics of Whiteness and Race’ is available through Routledge.

    Elaine hosts SBS’s award-winning podcast, ‘My Bilingual Family’, and is also an emerging playwright, producing plays for various festivals in Sydney.

    Dr Zozan Balci is an academic and sociolinguist in the School of Communications. An expert in life history interviewing, she excels at transforming research into powerful storytelling that resonates with a broad range of audiences.

    As a passionate social justice advocate, she connects researchers and students with real-world issues for social change, earning multiple awards for her work with not-for-profits and community organisations through the Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion. Her new book, ‘Erased Voices and Unspoken Heritage’ is available through Routledge.

    Speakers

    Jie Pittman is a proud First Nations cultural educator, entrepreneur, and storyteller from the Gadigal-Darug, Murramurang/Budawang Dhurga-Yuin, Kooma, Wiradjuri, and Ngemba nations. As CEO of Jie Pittman Pty Ltd, he leads nationally recognised programs such as the 10 Elements Cultural Exchange and the Liven Deadly Program, which embed Aboriginal cultural identity and healing into education, government, and corporate spaces.

    Jie brings lived experience and a deep understanding of the power of names as anchors of belonging, resilience, and intergenerational strength. His contribution to Say Our Name offers a decolonised lens on how name recognition can restore dignity, strengthen community identity, and create culturally safe spaces across schools, workplaces, and society.

    Koon Lai is an executive coach and leadership facilitator with over two decades of experience with PwC. A seasoned executive, she brings deep lived...

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    55 min