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Australia s culture of ideas suffers when we starve our creative institutions of funding | Arts funding

An Indigenous artwork is projected on to the sails of the Sydney Opera House on 26 January. ‘The arts, universities, public broadcasting and the relationship with First Nations peoples are at the frontier of the new and the important big ideas we need to embrace – and fund – to build an Australia we can be proud of,’ writes Wesley Enoch. Photograph: James D Morgan/Getty Images An Indigenous artwork is projected on to the sails of the Sydney Opera House on 26 January. ‘The arts, universities, public broadcasting and the relationship with First Nations peoples are at the frontier of the new and the important big ideas we need to embrace – and fund – to build an Australia we can be proud of,’ writes Wesley Enoch. Photograph: James D Morgan/Getty Images

Wesley Enoch: the 2021 budget must think big and reinvest in the social capital of ideas

Big thinking has been unfashionable for too long. Over the past decade, successive leaders have overseen cuts to universities, the arts and public broadcasting. There has also been a rejection of First Nations attempts to wrestle back dignity and create lasting change for the whole country. In one fell swoop, the funded arts sector and the creative imagination of the nation shrunk. This money was redirected away from peer assessment into funds for distribution at the discretion of the minister. After a long and consistent outcry, much was returned to the Australia Council’s peer assessment process but grants and funding to artists from the Australia Council decreased by 19% in real terms between 2013-14 and 2019-20, and increased by $1 million in last year’s budget.

Human Rights Commission vows to continue anti-racism program after Amanda Stoker complaint

Human Rights Commission vows to continue anti-racism program after Amanda Stoker complaint Amy Remeikis © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP The president of the Australian Human Rights Commission says it is not normal practice for government MPs to intervene with the agency’s work, after the assistant attorney general, Amanda Stoker, raised concerns over its use of the term “anti-racism”. The AHRC has been forced to temporarily pull a tender aimed at enhancing an existing anti-racism program over Stoker’s concerns that it was using taxpayer funds to promote critical race theory. The $140,000 tender, which aimed to enhance the “Racism. It Stops With Me” campaign by looking at “structural/systemic and institutional racism and unconscious bias” was removed on Monday, the same day the Queensland senator called the commission president, Prof Rosalind Croucher.

How Can We Achieve Affordable, Secure Homes For Everyone?

Friday, 23 April 2021, 11:55 am Much has been written about the reasons contributing to the crisis in housing affordability in New Zealand and its immediate and longer term consequences. This paper draws on research and commentary about how we got here and what can be done to help people in Aotearoa New Zeaand have a decent home, whether through owning it or renting/leasing it. “There is no easy or quick fix to New Zealand’s over-valued housing market. Whether house prices spiral up or down, the impacts of the necessary policy solutions will not be seen immediately. Not one single change will be enough. The solutions need to be a

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