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In 2014 and 2016, two shipwrecks were found which answered a lengthy mystery – what happened to Sir John Franklin’s North-West Passage expedition, which had been missing since 1845? The wrecks were found thanks to Inuit testimony, and now people are wondering why it took so long for that local knowledge to be trusted.
Guest: Annaliese Jacobs Claydon, author of “Arctic Circles and Imperial Knowledge - The Franklin Family, Indigenous Intermediaries, and the Politics of Truth” published by Bloomsbury Academic press
Letter writing with Shirley Hazzard and Elizabeth Harrower
Lorraine and Shaan Peeters on healing the Stolen Generation
Indigenous claims to Murray-Darling water rights
Johann Hari and the magic weight loss drugs
Bruce Shapiro's America
Wild Quests: Journeys into Ecotourism and the Future for Animals
Exploring the world through the ocean with James Bradley
Laura Tingle's Canberra: Albanese's attendance at women's march backfires
Melanie Oppenheimer on the commemoration of Australian women in war
Ross McMullin's 'Life so full of promise'
A little Greek island had a very big role in the Anzac story
Is there any hope for a two-state solution?
Reclaiming the Greek godesses with Natalie Haynes
Ian Dunt's UK
Out of the Darkness: The Germans, 1942 - 2022
Laura Tingle's Canberra: PM heads to Kokoda, and the government vs Elon Musk
From the LNL Archive: Andrew O'Hagan and Karl Miller
Tony Birch on First Nations writing
The world's most expensive spice threatened by climate change
Could the ANC lose power in South Africa?
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