In the City of Sydney, there are more than 400 parks and open spaces offering more than 188 hectares of natural respite. But are these places we go to, to escape the concrete jungles that tower over us, just another reminder that we have buried our histories?
This is part two of a series exploring the classism of the environmental movement.
Featuring:
Professor Jaky Troy - Director, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research at the University of Sydney.
Peter McNeil - Distinguished Professor in Design History, School of Design at the University of Technology Sydney.
Penny Allan - Professor of Landscape Architecture, School of Architecture at the University of Technology Sydney.
Genocide in the suburbs
The inner lives of wild animals: Conservation’s new frontier
Rewilding the city
Why we let corporations act like monsters
How to make a new carbon tax that sticks
Dark cloud: The true cost of data
We make a pro-climate ad campaign
The best (and worst) ads of the decade
The race to impregnate male seahorses
Forever chemicals: The poison in everyday items
Eco-anxiety: My two years in Sydney off the grid
Emotions let us make better decisions
#173 - Should we protect feral animals?
#172 - Algae and the human right to clean air
#171 - Trees? Not in my backyard
#170 - Is capitalism incompatible with a healthy climate?
#169 - Microgrids
#168 - Watch out! Seasons are shifting
#167 - Tracking sustainable development goals in our boardrooms and classrooms
#166 - How vibrations change living things
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