Creating Space Project
Do you ever feel like who you are on the inside is different to the way you perform for other people on the outside? You should listen to this episode. M did beautifully moving artwork for a journal article that I was part of, called Barometers of the City. Published in Human Arenas, it is qualitative research using poetry by psychologists as cultural data. M reflects on the process of producing art, which for her is about personal expression, for an audience. She describes being hyperaware of what’s expected of her in the world and feeling that she does not match the expectations of others,...
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What would you ask a feminist psychologist? Dave asks about confidence in decision-making, and the ways we can all fall into traps of gendered normative behaviour.
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Cathy McGowan, politician, talks about the opportunity right now for Australian citizens to ask the government what their plans are for the remaining asylum seekers on Papua New Guinea and what it would take to have them transferred to New Zealand.
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Sahra O'Doherty and Ruth Nelson talk about Tanya's question regarding how you weave feminism into counselling, about being a values-based therapist, and the embodiment of values.
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What would you ask a feminist psychologist? Ruth Nelson and Sahra O'Doherty respond to Jess's question about the effect of patriarchy on women's mental health, and how many problems stem from inequality?
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Psychologist Sahra O’Doherty talks about mental health, emotions and counselling. Society teaches us to fear failing. Shame and guilt feel painful. Vulnerability is frightening. So to come and talk to a psychologist can take a lot of courage.
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Elizabeth Biok, a legal monitor of the 1999 East Timorese Independence ballot, talks to the Creating Space Project about Witness K and his lawyer, who exposed Australia’s corrupt exploitation of Timor-Leste. Imprisoned, they face an unjust trial.
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The crisis of climate emergency faces us all and time is being wasted on fuelling hatred between religions. Cherie Heggie declared as a Bahá’í in 2015. What drew her to the faith is its belief that all the major religions of the world are from God.
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One in three women in Australia giving birth experience labour as a traumatic event. Grace Jeffery, student midwife, talks about the importance of continuity of care throughout pregnancy, and helping women feel safe and empowered in labour.
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One in three women in Australia giving birth experience labour as a traumatic event. Grace Jeffery, student midwife, talks about the importance of continuity of care throughout pregnancy, and helping women feel safe and empowered in labour.
info_outline“I find it very hard to accept that Australia’s national interest is about putting security listening devices of the walls of our poorest, nearest neighbour.”
This is an interview about espionage, exploitation and politics.
Elizabeth Biok is a lawyer and member of the International Commission of Jurists.
She talks to the Creating Space Project about the case of Witness K and his lawyer, Bernard Collaery. These two men exposed the Australian government for bugging the offices of the newly formed government of Timor-Leste.
“The Australian intelligence agents were asked to put listening devices inside the cabinet room and some of the ministers’ offices in the parliament of Timor-Leste. And that was no doubt to eavesdrop on what the Timorese politicians were saying, while the negotiations were going on with Australia about the oil boundary, and sharing the resources in the Timor Sea.”
For exposing corruption, Witness K and his lawyer are charged with breaching the National Security Act and are now imprisoned and facing a trial that lacks open and fair justice.
Elizabeth went to East Timor as a legal monitor of the Independence Ballot in 1999 and bore witness to the political oppression and militia violence of the Indonesian occupation.
She takes us, with wonderful clarity, through the history and geography of our relationship with Timor-Leste, and our place in South East Asia, to help us understand how this situation came about and how it pertains to processes of economic development, democracy, and our identity and values as Australians.