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Tagged with “australia” (63) activity chart

  1. Superannuation in Australia - Rear Vision - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Rear Vision dives into the murky waters of superannuation to see just how Australia came up with its unusual system of retirement funding.

    A means-tested age pension became available in Australia to all women aged sixty and men aged sixty five in 1910. It was - and is - paid out of general revenue. Superannuation – a retirement savings scheme in which our employer contributes a certain percentage of our wages into a fund – didn’t become widely available in Australia until it was introduced by the Keating government in the early 1990s. Rear Vision looks at how Australia came up with its unusual system of funding retirement through a mix of superannuation and the age pension.

    Guests:
    Professor Susan Thorp, Chair of Finance and Superannuation, University of Technology, Sydney

    Peter Martin, Economics correspondent for Fairfax Media

    Professor Francis Castles, Emeritus Professor, School of Politics and International Relations, Australian National University

    Further Information:
    ASIC Money Smart (https://www.moneysmart.gov.au/superannuation-and-retirement)

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/rearvision/superannuation-in-australia/4626038

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 3 weeks ago

  2. Australia and Asia - Counterpoint - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Does Australia really care about Asia? Are we too narrow in our perspective of a relationship that may just be too one sided? Sure they are major trading partners but beyond that how much do we understand, or want to understand our near neighbours.

    Guests:
    Michael Wesley, Former Executive Director The Lowy Institute for International Policy. Former Professor of International Relations and Director of the Griffith Asia Institute at Griffith University, and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Hong Kong and Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou, China.

    Publications:
    Title: There Goes The Neighbourhood: Australia and the Rise of Asia
    Author: Michael Wesley
    Publisher: NewSouth Publishing
    ISBN: 978 1 742 232 720

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/counterpoint/australia-and-asia/4285814

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 3 weeks ago

  3. Innovation in Australia part 2 of 3 - recent times - The Science Show - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Mark Dodgson continues his look at innovation in Australia. We hear about Australian inventor Arthur Bishop (1917–2006), described as a modern-day Leonardo da Vinci. He took on the world car industry with his new steering mechanism. Politician John Button sought to modernise Australia’s backward approach to industry in the 1980s, and the CSIRO, bruised and battered at the turn of the century survives as it transforms itself making its research more market-focussed. This week it launched its latest flagship, concentrating on digital communications.

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/scienceshow/innovation-in-australia-part-2-of-3---recent-times/4496206

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  4. Good Sex - The Confessions and Campaigns of W.J. Chidley - Hindsight - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Warning: This radio documentary contains sexual references.

    A century ago, Australian sex reformer William Chidley (c.1860-1916) was locked up for speaking openly about a taboo subject, and ultimately died in Callan Park Mental Hospital. But the moral outrage he provoked was largely to do with the kind of sex he advocated. It’s also what prompted later historians to call Chidley a ‘true feminist’.

    Chidley’s ideas about how sex should proceed still raise an eyebrow and provoke responses ranging from ridicule to alarm. In essence, he wanted to demote the erection, and elevate instead the woman’s readiness as the crucial determiner of when sexual intercourse should start. The Answer was dedicated ‘to womankind’.

    As well as being a sex reformer, Chidley was a dress and food reformer. To combat the human misery he saw all around him, he prescribed vegetarianism, fresh air, sunlight and unrestrictive clothing. But it was his critique of conventional sex that led him into trouble.

    In the years leading up to the First World War, he was a familiar sight in the streets of Melbourne and Sydney, dressed in a simple Grecian-style tunic, selling his book The Answer and addressing crowds for as long as he could get away with graphically describing his recipe for ‘natural coition’. He was repeatedly arrested and prosecuted; one police record lists twenty-five court appearances between 1912 and 1916.

    Even though he was regarded by many as a crank, Chidley gained a following and found people willing to defend him from persecution by the state. His supporters included free speech advocates, socialists and feminists. In this way, his story intersects with the most significant social movements of his day and forms part of the Australian history of radicalism.

    In the end, the arbiters of public morality defeated Chidley. The Answer was suppressed by a Supreme Court decision in 1914, and on three occasions between 1912 and 1916 Chidley was declared insane, with compulsory detention at asylums in Darlinghurst, Callan Park and Goulburn. He died of heart disease at Callan Park, just a couple of months after a failed suicide attempt in gaol.

    Good Sex – The Confessions and Campaigns of W.J. Chidley reveals how Chidley came to develop his unorthodox sexual theory through promiscuous life experience and wide reading in public libraries. It places his ideas in the broader context of social reform efforts around the turn of the century.

    Along the way, we glimpse a vivid and contested social order in early twentieth century Australia. We are introduced to the disparate forces that lined up in Chidley’s defence, as well as the machinations deployed by the state to suppress him. Ultimately we learn why Chidley’s critique of the politics of sexual intercourse was anathema in a patriarchal state on the brink of war.

    Guests:
    Sally McInerney, Editor - The Confessions of William James Chidley – Keep an eye out for a new edition of Chidley’s Confessions which Sally McInerney is currently working on.
    Associate Professor Frank Bongiorno, Associate Professor in History, Australian National University
    Professor Mark Finnane, Professor of History, Griffith University
    Dr Lisa Featherstone, Lecturer in History, University of Newcastle

    Publications:
    Title: The Confessions of William James Chidley
    Author: W.J. Chidley edited by Sally McInerney
    Publisher: University of Queensland Press, 1977

    Title: The Answer
    Author: W.J. Chidley
    Publisher: Australasian Authors’ Agency, 1911

    Title: The Sex Lives of Australians - A History
    Author: Frank Bongiorno
    Publisher: Black Inc. 2012

    Title: ‘Censoring Sex: The Case of W.J. Chidley’
    Author: Lisa Featherstone
    Publisher: article currently in press

    Title: ‘The Popular Defence of Chidley’
    Author: Mark Finnane
    Publisher: Labour History (journal), November 1981

    Title: What Rough Beast? The State and Social Order in Australian History
    Author: Sydney Labour History Group
    Publisher: Allen & Unwin 1982

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/hindsight/good-sex---the-confessions-and-campaigns-of-wj-chidley/4597570

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  5. Innovation in Australia part 1 of 3 - early beginnings - The Science Show - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Australia in the years following European settlement was so markedly different from today. So much that we take for granted in food production, medicine, communications transport and much else had not been developed. The early settlers’ approach to innovation was shackled by a colonial dependence on imported technology and a focus on individuals rather than any collective endeavour. Despite this, Australia had its inventors tinkering and making great strides, some of which were at the forefront of the world’s developing technologies. What was their secret? What needs to happen now? And why have Australians not heard of Henry Sutton, described by Professor Mark Dodgson, presenter of this series, as possibly one of the greatest inventors in history?

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/scienceshow/innovation-in-australia-part-1-of-3---early-beginnings/4482642

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  6. Space Junk - 360documentaries - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Come on a journey to Woomera in search of space junk; €”the human debris that litters the universe but has come to earth, in Rocket Park, Woomera.

    Space Junk is the detritus, the stuff left behind, circling the earth at enormous speed. Since the 1950s the vast outback deserts of central and western Australia have been considered the testing ground and launching pad for the British and American space programs and rocket testing. Woomera is central to this history—it owes its existence entirely to the space industry and weapons testing programs.

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/360/space-junk/4496330

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  7. Battle for Android Supremacy, Pheed: New Facebook? - Download This Show - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Is Pheed the next Facebook? It’€™s been called the ultimate new social media network, it’€™s had high profile stars spruiking it and it’€™s already shot ahead of Facebook and Twitter in Apple’€™s App store … so just what is Pheed? As android phone manufacturers compete furiously to produce the best on the market, what does it all mean for the smartphone of 2013 and beyond? And we look at PromiseLocker the Aussie start-up measuring personal, public and political promises and holding them all to account.

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/downloadthisshow/dts082013/4589160

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one month ago

  8. The Chinese in Bendigo during the gold rush, La Trobe University

    When gold was discovered in Australia in the 1850s, it led to a gold rush. Prospectors came to the country from all over the world, with the largest foreign contingent coming from China.

    http://www.latrobe.edu.au/news/articles/2012/podcasts/podcasts/chinese-in-the-bendigo-goldfields/transcript

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 2 months ago

  9. RareCollections: Northern Soul from Downunder - ABC Canberra - Australian Broadcasting Corporation

    The Northern Soul scene sprang up in the UK in the late 1960’s in clubs like The Twisted Wheel and Wigan Casino. Initially the music played in the clubs was popular American soul singles but as the crowds grew so did the appetite for new and increasingly obscure recordings. DJ’s looked to all corners, including Australia, for fresh sounds. Here’s a selection of some of the Australian singles that have developed a reputation amongst DJ’s and dancers alike over the years.

    Jordie Kilby and David Kilby are joined by Melbourne based Northern Soul DJ Vince Peach and artists Judy Jacques and Doug Parkinson.

    Lynne Randell - Stranger In My Arms - CBS - 1967.
    Lynne Randell was a style icon and queen of Australian pop music in the mid 1960’s. Her early records were cut with Melbourne R&B band the Spinning Wheels backing her but by 1967 she was beginning to record overseas. Stranger In My Arms was cut in New York while Randell was on tour there. The A side, Ciao Baby, was a huge hit but it was the flip side that set dance floors alight on the Northern scene.

    Cheryl Gray - You Don’t Love Me Anymore - HMV - 1967.
    Cheryl Gray found international fame in the 1970’s working with the Bee Gees and hitting the charts as Samantha Sang. A decade earlier however she released a string of pop singles for HMV records produced by David Mackay. The B side of her hit You Made Me What I Am is a great pop/soul side that showcases her powerful vocals.

    Doug Parkinson and the Southern Star Band - I’ll Be Around -Southern Star Records - 1979.
    One of the most soulful singers Australia has produced. A decade after his first hit with a cover of Dear Prudence, Doug Parkinson entered the studio to cut this cover of a song made famous originally by the Spinners. Interestingly though it wasn’t the Spinners track that had inspired him. He’d heard Ross Wilson perform it at a nightclub in Kings Cross as was immediately struck by it. He recorded it with the Southern Star band that included a young Tommy Emmanuel on guitar. It’s been a long time favourite in the modern rooms of Northern clubs.

    Judy Jacques - You’re Messin’ Up My Mind - Astor - 1967.
    Looking for a song that was a bit different to the jazz, gospel and blues numbers she’d been performing up till that point, Judy Jacques took on this Van McCoy song, originally cut by Herb Fame, and made it her own. Judy recalls that the song received little radio airplay at the time because many stations thought it sounded "too black". It’s got a great horn section and a driving rhythm making it perfect for the Northern Soul dancefloors.

    Maria Dallas - Ambush - Viking - 1967.
    Maria Dallas began her career in NZ. She spent time in the US recording with Chet Atkins and performing at the Grand Ole Opry. In later years she moved to Australia. Most of her records were in the country vein but this track is different. Recorded in the U.S this great cut is not strictly a Northern Soul track but it is a fantastic dancer nonetheless.

    http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2012/02/06/3423651.htm?site=canberra

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 3 months ago

  10. RareCollections: Jazz-Rock in Australia - ABC Canberra - Australian Broadcasting Corporation

    Inspired by international acts like Miles Davis, John McLaughlin, Si Zetner and Herbie Hancock a number of Australian musicians began experimenting with jazz-rock and fusion in the late 60’s and early 70’s. David and Jordie Kilby take a look at some of the classic recordings and speak with Col Loughnan (Ayers Rock), Warren Daly (Daly-Wilson Big Band) and Jim Kelly (Crossfire & SCRA).

    Sven Libaek, John Sangster, Peter Martin and Col Nolan are just a few of the musicians who began experimenting with blending jazz, pop and rock in the late 1960’s. They weren’t the only ones though……

    Daly-Wilson Big Band - Ode To Billie Joe - Reprise - 1973.
    Warren Daly and Ed Wilson got this group together in 1968 and were blowing audiences away from the get-go. With band members numbering more than twenty on occasions they criss-crossed the country bringing their jazz-rock arrangements to the masses. After a break during ‘72 they returned bigger and better than ever in 1973 with the "On Tour" album. Ode To Billie Joe is a shining example of what the outfit were all about.

    Ayers Rock - Angel In Disguise - Mushroom - 1976.
    In the mid 70’s Ayers Rock were writing and recording material unlike any of their contemporaries. Their first album Big Red Rock featured classic tracks like Crazy Boys (The Hamburger Song), Lady Montego and Nostalgic Blues. When Michael Gudinski took it to the U.S in an attempt to find international markets for his newly established stable of Mushroom acts he found interest straight away. A&M Records instantly put up a considerable advance to get the group over to record a follow up. In Hollywood, with Steve Wonder in the booth next door, they recorded the "Beyond" LP which featured this track written by Col Loughnan.

    Sun - Vendetta - RCA - 1972.
    Notable for being fronted for a while by the teenage Renee Geyer, who would go on to great fame in the following years performing her own brand of jazz, funk and rock. The band formed around jazz aficionado Keith Shadwick and they were a popular live act in Sydney during 1971 and into 1972. Their only recording was the "Sun ‘72" album which was recorded and mixed in just 25 hours at Copperfield Studios. The album features a distinctive cover painted by artist Peter Upward.

    Crossfire - Remember The Trees - Harvest - 1975.
    Jim Kelly, Mick Kenny and Ian Bloxsom formed the core of Crossfire who set the pace for jazz fusion in Australian in the late 70’s. Before putting the band together Jim Kelly had also been a part of the Southern Contemporary Rock Assemble (SCRA) who are another notable jazz rock group of the time. With a regular gig at French’s Tavern in Sydney they built a very strong live following before unleashing a string of classic albums beginning with their self titled 1975 album that featured this track - the first song Jim Kelly had ever written.

    http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2011/12/07/3385363.htm?site=canberra

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 3 months ago

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