A Podcast of One’s Own with Julia Gillard
Society & Culture:Personal Journals
*Disclaimer* - This episode includes a discussion of eating disorders, and listener discretion is advised. If this episode raises issues for you, and you would like further support, visit the Butterfly Foundation website (butterfly.org.au) or call their helpline 1800 33 4673
Clementine Ford thinks women are only going to affect real change in gender equality if they stop appeasing men and start fighting. Julia talk Clementine about her honest and uncompromising approach to feminism, and how she was able to take her feminist voice into spaces not known for feminist discourse. Clementine talks openly about her battle with an eating disorder, and how she overcame the anxieties around body image and the pressures placed on young women to look a certain way. Julia and Clementine share with each other how they have coped with misogyny and abuse throughout their careers, and what the best way to deal with an online troll may be. Clementine also speaks about abortion and the language of shame in which it is often discussed to oppress women.
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Michelle Ryan on the glass cliff phenomenon
Audette Exel on saving the world, one investment banker at a time
Jenny Macklin on speaking out and making a change
Kate Mosse on giving voice to unheard women in history
Cordelia Fine on debunking gendered science
Tara June Winch on the power of Indigenous stories
Nobel Prize winner Esther Duflo on economics as a lever of action for the world
Alice Albright on girls’ education and creating the next generation of leaders
Associate Professor Patricia Kingori on the influence of fakes, fabrications and falsehoods
BONUS EPISODE: A new cultural reckoning? Gendered violence and misogyny in Australia and the UK
Mary Robinson on being the first female President of Ireland
Dame Cressida Dick on policing London through a pandemic
Madeleine Albright on politics and diplomacy
Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Julia Gillard on women and leadership
Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic on why incompetent men become leaders
Gail Kelly - the first female CEO of an Australian Big Four bank
University of Adelaide Panel: Frances Adamson, Tanya Monro and Amanda Vanstone
Julia Gillard on the year that was 2020
Edwina Grosvenor on women in the criminal justice system
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