Grace Tame knows how to advocate. Her campaigning for survivors of sexual assault and abuse helped to create real change and pushed powerful institutions to be better.
Now, Tame is turning her focus onto something she has lived with her whole life and which is now on the agenda in Canberra, – autism and neurodivergence.
Today, former Australian of the Year and contributor to The Saturday Paper, Grace Tame, on Australia’s first attempt at a national autism strategy – and why we must get it right.
Socials: Stay in touch with us on Twitter and Instagram
Guest: former Australian of the year and Contributor to The Saturday Paper, Grace Tame
Micheline Lee on fixing the NDIS
Is Australia about to burn again?
How an Australian pastor is influencing the presidential race
The woman fighting to end sex discrimination in Australia
The Pezzullo texts: How power really works in Canberra
Olympus has fallen: Dan Andrews is gone
Inside Lachlan's plans for the Murdoch empire
Is Australia about to waste our biggest opportunity?
The Albanese interview: There's still hope for the Voice
The Weekend Read: Patrick Dodson makes his case for the Voice
Is the ‘No’ campaign imploding?
‘Why I’m on trial for protesting climate change’
The media's campaign against trans kids
What the Voice polls aren't telling you
‘The Alan Joyce slayer’: The woman taking on Qantas
Leaks reveal ‘No’ tactics
Putin, Kim Jong-Un and a luxury train ride
‘Twiggy’ Forrest: Climate messiah or billionaire opportunist?
Why didn't Labor agree to a rent freeze?
Why speaking up in Australia is punished
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Daily
Morning Wire
Up First
Dobré ráno | Denný podcast denníka SME
Today, Explained