If we want to inform better public policy to end poverty and disadvantage, hard data and facts are more important than ever. This sets up both a challenge and an opportunity for organisations as philanthropy in Australia develops even further. In this episode, we draw together the threads of our earlier conversations.
We talk to Susan Urahn, from the Pew Charitable Trusts, about philanthropy’s role in bringing diverse groups together and governments to the table. She shares her insights from over two decades of work as a pioneer in the field, especially in relation to sentencing and corrections reform in the United States.
And we also hear from Anhaar Kareem, a young Australian woman, with her imagining of what a better future looks like.
This is the final episode is this season of Life's Lottery. Stay tuned for more in 2022.
Visit lifeslottery.com.au for more.
Produced by UTS Impact Studios:
Executive Producer: Olivia Rosenman
Audio Producer: Nicole Curby
Researcher/writer: Jackie May
Theme music and Sound Design: Frank Lopez
Production music: Blue Dot Sessions
Graphic design: Celia Neilson
S2/E8 A better start: game-changing preschool reform in NSW & VIC
S2/E7 Evidence is not enough: a review of Backing Kids
S2/E6 Children at the centre: looking overseas
S2/E5 Strong in culture: backing Indigenous kids
S2/E4 A pram walk from every home: the case for a universal early learning system
S2/E3 Building blocks for life: public health and kids
S2/E2 Kids and the Federal Budget
S2/E1 Children in the national conversation
S2/Introducing season 2: Backing Kids
S1/E4 Collective impact: communities driving change
S1/E3 Parents in prison
S1/E2 Possibility thinking
S1/E1 On merit
S1/Introducing Life’s Lottery
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