UNSW Centre for Ideas

UNSW Centre for Ideas

An initiative of UNSW Sydney, the Centre for Ideas is a thought-provoking program of events and digital content from the globe's leading thinkers, authors and artists.

  • 47 minutes 41 seconds
    Economy of Algorithms: Marek Kowalkiewicz in conversation with Toby Walsh

    Recently listed among the Top 100 Global Thought Leaders in AI, Marek Kowalkieviczas introduces his latest book, The Economy of Algorithms: AI and the Rise of the Digital Minions.

    Hear a thought-provoking conversation between Marek and UNSW AI Institute’s Chief Scientist, Scientia Professor Toby Walsh, as they discuss the book's insights, current AI trends, challenges, and future prospects.

    Presented by UNSW AI Institute.

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    14 May 2024, 11:24 pm
  • 1 hour 27 seconds
    Polly Toynbee: An Uneasy Inheritance

    Is it possible to come from privilege whilst striving for a fierce socialist agenda? Polly Toynbee believes so. The prolific British Guardian journalist, commentator and broadcaster unpacks what it means to be privileged in Britain and Australia, and whether the deepening class divide can ever be transcended.  

    In an evening of conversation with journalist Nick Bryant, Polly opens up about her latest book, An Uneasy Inheritance, detailing how she still grapples with her charmed family history, and how she endeavours to dismantle the rigid class systems of Britain with her prolific writing.

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and supported by Adelaide Writers’ Week. 

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    8 May 2024, 9:45 pm
  • 59 minutes 28 seconds
    Consent Laid Bare

    In a world where female sexuality has been hijacked by forces such as porn, patriarchy, and male entitlement – how can we make sexual consent a priority for everyone? 

    Whether it’s on campus, at the workplace or in their homes, Australians are shocked week after week at the violence visited upon women who are simply living their lives.  

    In 2023, the Universities Accord review found that sexual assault and harassment on university campuses doesn’t just affect the wellbeing of students and staff, it can hold survivors back from success. As a result, campus safety has been deemed a top priority for universities, so what steps are those in positions of power taking to ensure the safety of women within university spaces and beyond?  

    Hear author and activist Chanel Contos, UNSW student activist and gendered violence researcher Angela Griffin, First Nations lead of the First National LGBT+ Sistergirls and Brotherboys experiences with sexual violence survey Vanessa Lee-Ah Mat, and Chair of national violence prevention foundation Our Watch, Moo Baulch, as they explore how we can utilise holistic approaches to community care when it comes to gendered violence. 

    UNSW is committed to creating a safe environment for all. To learn more head here

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and supported by Adelaide Writers’ WeekThe Wheeler Centre and the Sydney Opera House

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    29 April 2024, 3:20 am
  • 1 hour 2 minutes
    Samuel Moyn: Liberalism Against Itself

    Fear of a nuclear apocalypse, despot leaders and a world at war – how did the sharpest minds of the Cold War leave such a legacy of fear? Samuel Moyn’s Liberalism Against Itself: Cold War Intellectuals and the Making of Our Times takes aim at liberalism, portraying it as a failed creed marred by a paranoia of communism.  

    Known for his challenging perspectives and boasting a cult following on the left, the Yale Professor explores the transformation of Cold War liberals who, in his view, traded the Enlightenment's moral core for a fixation on individual liberty. Hear this compelling conversation as UNSW political philosopher Jessica Whyte and Samuel Moyn dissect why today’s liberals provide only pessimism, instead of vision. 

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and Australian Human Rights Institute, and supported by Adelaide Writers’ Week

    Secure your seat at Refuge, 23rd May 2024:  https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/refuge-viet-thanh-nguyen-shankari-chandran-registration-836801865907?aff=podcastad

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    17 April 2024, 11:00 pm
  • 45 minutes 9 seconds
    Perumal Murugan: Resurrected Through Writing

    Acclaimed Tamil-language author Perumal Murugan’s books were once burned by far-right groups, and now he’s longlisted for one of the most prestigious awards in literature.  

    Explore Murugan’s profound literary odyssey, from the challenges of being a Tamil writer in rural India, to the turmoil of book burning and societal backlash. This exclusive event explores Murugan’s latest work, Pyre, as he navigates societal complexities of villages “full of quiet menace”, so tense it leaves readers “gasping for air” (The New York Times). In an evening of conversation, chaired by award-winning author and UNSW lecturer Roanna Gonsalves, explore Murugan’s extraordinary literary resilience, his literary legacy and the cultural tapestry he weaves. 

    Perumal Murugan, a Tamil speaker, and Roanna Gonsalves, an English speaker, will be in conversation in their respective languages. A live interpreter will provide consecutive interpretation throughout the event.

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and supported by Adelaide Writers’ Week

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    17 April 2024, 11:00 pm
  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    Anjum Hasan: History's Angel

    Against the frenetic energy and colour of Delhi, a Muslim school teacher is caught between his love of history and contemporary India. Anjum Hasan’s work sheds light on the complexities of life, love, writing history, and how national and patriotic myths can be maliciously subverted. 

    Author Anjum Hasan’s latest book, History’s Angel, is a darkly funny portrait of one of Australia’s most important neighbours. Mild mannered teacher Alif feels the burden of his own time pressing down, but his wife is focused on a bigger house, his son wants to quit school and strike it rich, and his colleagues begin to question a Muslim teaching Indian history. 

    Hasan and fellow Indian fiction luminary, and UNSW academic, Roanna Gonsalves talk about how we understand ourselves, how we reflect on our histories, and drawing inspiration from others in a time of suspicion and indifference.

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and supported by Adelaide Writers’ Week

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    10 April 2024, 10:30 pm
  • 23 minutes 40 seconds
    Peter Frankopan: The Earth Transformed

    Human existence has always been bound with the health of our natural world. What can we learn from how a changing climate has already, for centuries, dramatically shaped the development and demise of civilisations across time? 

    In the 2024 Gandhi Oration, renowned historian and author Peter Frankopan unraveled the historical narrative, framing the natural environment as the crucial factor impacting humankind.  

    ABOUT THE GANDHI ORATION
    Since 2012, UNSW Sydney has hosted the annual Gandhi Oration celebrating the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi as a champion of human rights. The Oration features discussions on the significant human rights issues of our time. Past speakers have included Senator Pat Dodson, Peter Greste, Pat Anderson, Shoma Chaudhury, Reverend Tim Costello, Rosie Batty and Shen Narayanasamy. 

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas, and supported by Adelaide Writers’ Week and The Wheeler Centre.

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    3 April 2024, 10:00 pm
  • 1 hour 18 minutes
    Restoring public trust in democratic institutions

    This third session of the Accountability in crisis: the rise of impunity as a challenge to human rights explores how to restore public faith in the values and structures underpinning representative government and the role of key stakeholder groups such as business, media and civil society in resisting impunity, reclaiming accountability and reinforcing human rights.

    Moderator: 
    Natasha Mitchell, host of the ABC Radio National's flagship live events program and podcast Big Ideas​​​​​​​

    Speakers:
    Ed Coper, author, Facts & Other Lies
    Andrea Durbach, Emeritus Professor and former Director of the Australian Human Rights Centre (now Institute)
    Helen Haines MP, independent Federal Member for Indi in the state of Victoria
    Simon Holmes à Court, founder, Climate 200
    Shireen Morris, constitutional lawyer, senior lecturer and director of the Radical Centre Reform Lab at Macquarie University Law School​​​​​​​

    Presented by the Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney

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    27 March 2024, 11:00 pm
  • 57 minutes 25 seconds
    The rise of impunity as a challenge to democracy

    In this opening session of the 2023 Australian Human Rights Institute conference, Accountability in crisis: the rise of impunity as a challenge to human rights, the panel considers the key conference theme of the elevation of impunity over accountability and the consequences for national democratic institutions and global stability.

    Accountability and its corrosion is explored through the lens of government, business, media and civil society. The discussion considers whether checks, balances and human rights are seen as obstacles to the exercise of power rather than principles of good governance.

    Speakers:

    Jeremy Heimans (moderator), co-founder and Chairman, Purpose
    Chris Sidoti, international human rights consultant
    Lenore Taylor, Editor, Guardian Australia
    Saffron Zomer, Executive Director, Australian Democracy Network 

     

    Presented by Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney

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    13 March 2024, 2:25 pm
  • 59 minutes 57 seconds
    The decline of accountability and the erosion of rights

    This second session of the 2023 Australian Human Rights Institute conference, Accountability in crisis: the rise of impunity as a challenge to human rights, explores the decline of accountability, and the methods employed to protect human rights both in Australia and internationally.

    Unlike democratically-elected governments, businesses have unprecedented influence which raises the question of whether they should be taking the lead on issues of social significance. Are the media and social media complicit in the erosion of accountability or can they play a role in restoring political and public life? How can individuals and NGOs work together to enhance or recreate effective democratic institutions?

    Speakers:

    Justine Nolan (moderator), Director, Australian Human Rights Institute
    Larissa Baldwin-Roberts, CEO, GetUp!
    Brynn O'Brien, Executive Director, Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR)
    Lizzie O'Shea, Founder and Chair, Digital Rights Watch
    Siobhan Toohill, Chief Sustainability Officer, Westpac 
    Christopher Warren, media correspondent, Crikey

    Presented by the Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney

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    6 March 2024, 10:00 pm
  • 1 hour 3 minutes
    Women's Day ENCORE | Angela Saini: How Men Came to Rule

    Has the patriarchy always prevailed? We tend to see gendered oppression as a universal truth, but in her radical book, The Patriarchs: How Men Came to Rule, Angela Saini argues that the history of this deep-rooted hierarchy is a little more complicated…  

    In conversation with UNSW Sydney legal expert Rosalind Dixon, journalist Angela Saini takes us on a journey through time, tracing back through the complex history of the patriarchy – from its origins in the world's earliest human settlements to its global spread across diverse societies. Drawing on the latest research findings in science, archaeology, and cultural studies, Saini dismantles the status quo to reveal how the patriarchy varies from country to country, and culture to culture.  

    Embrace a radical vision for tomorrow with Angela Saini as she looks to a future emancipated from the shackles of inequality. 

    Presented by the UNSW Centre for Ideas and supported by The Wheeler Centre and Canberra Writers Festival

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    4 March 2024, 10:47 pm
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