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Big Ideas
ABC listen
250 episodes
3 days ago
Feed your mind. Be provoked. One big idea at a time. Your brain will love you for it. Grab your front row seat to the best live forums and festivals with Natasha Mitchell.
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Society & Culture
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Politics
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All content for Big Ideas is the property of ABC listen and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Feed your mind. Be provoked. One big idea at a time. Your brain will love you for it. Grab your front row seat to the best live forums and festivals with Natasha Mitchell.
Show more...
Society & Culture
News,
Politics
Episodes (20/250)
Big Ideas
Gareth Evans, Yassmin Khadra, Daniel Abot's plea for peace - how the UN and Australia can help end genocides
A frank and impassioned plea for peace by Gareth Evans. As Australia's former Foreign Minister and former president of the International Crisis Group, he's spent most of his career forging real paths to peace globally. From Sudan to Gaza, Myanmar to Ukraine - who can we rely on to stop "forever" wars and genocides?  Does Australia have a unique role to play? And what about the UN in its 80th year? It was created after the horror of World War 2 to keep the peace. Has it lost its way? The 2025 Brisbane Peace Lecture is presented by the United Nations Association of Australia, Brisbane -  and includes responses by two key leaders from the Sudanese and Palestinian communities. Speakers Professor the Hon Gareth Evans Honorary Professor at the Australian National University; Australia's former minister of Foreign Affairs and cabinet minister in the Hawke and Keating Labor Governments. Dr Yassmin Khadra Brisbane-based physician, Doctors for Palestine, and passionate Palestinian human rights advocate Bishop Daniel Abot South Sudanese Anglican bishop
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3 days ago
54 minutes 35 seconds

Big Ideas
Vale Dr Jane Goodall — why the renowned primatologist and environmentalist held onto hope
Primatologist Jane Goodall once said: "It actually doesn't take much to be a difficult woman. That's why there are so many of us." She spoke up. For all the species who go unheard, or unnoticed by humans. She was a giant in the global environmental movement. She first walked into the wild forests of Tanzania as a young woman with no science training and embarked on what is now the longest-running study of chimpanzees in their natural habitat. Her trailblazing fieldwork changed our understanding of other primates and the threat we pose to their continuing existence. It changed her. And it changed the world. At 91, she was still travelling the world right up until her last breath, to help give all other species theirs. She was deeply compassionate, and her campaigns deeply connected with people. Dr Jane Goodall joined Big Ideas host Natasha Mitchell to discuss hope in action the 2022 WOMADelaide Festival. This conversation was originally broadcast on ABC Radio National's Science Friction in May 2022. Guest Dr Jane Goodall Primatologist, environmentalist, naturalist Founder, Jane Goodall Institute Further info: The Book of Hope: A survival guide for an endangered planet Jane Goodall and Douglas Abrams (Penguin, 2021) Jane Goodall Institute Australia Roots and Shoots Australia The Jane Goodall Hopecast Thanks to the 2022 WOMADelaide Festival.
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3 days ago
27 minutes 2 seconds

Big Ideas
Is AI the new coloniser? How to create more life-centred AI before it's too late
AI is an incredible tool, but is AI also a new coloniser? Is there actually anything new or artificial about artificial intelligence? Join Natasha Mitchell at the 2025 Now or Never Festival to meet two big thinkers building a bridge between First Nations and Western knowledge to disrupt and reimagine the who, what, and why of AI? This conversation was recorded on 26 August 2025, in partnership with The Wheeler Centre and Now or Never Festival. Discover more talks and bold conversations by following The Wheeler Centre wherever you get your podcasts or at wheelercentre.com Speakers Jessica Russ-Smith Wiradyuri Wambuul woman Associate Professor of Social Work in the School of Allied Health, Australian Catholic University. Michelle Lazarus Professor and Director, Centre for Human Anatomy Education Deputy Director, Centre for Scholarship in Health Education Monash University. Coauthors of the open-access book THE AI (R)EVOLUTION: Valuing Country, Culture and Community in a World of Algorithms (Monash University Publishing, 2024). Get the book here: https://publishing.monash.edu/product/ai-revolution/
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4 days ago
56 minutes 57 seconds

Big Ideas
Condoleezza Rice — on how to fix the break-up of global cooperation
Former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice assesses the break-up of globalisation and the world order. The way in which countries such as the United States or Germany focus on sovereign goals is part of the problem. And that's likely not to stop any time soon. But she also comes up with practical ideas for creating a common economic and security future to address the issues that are too big for any single nation to tackle alone. What Comes Next? Imagining a New Economic and Security Commons was presented by the American Academy in Berlin Speakers Condoleezza Rice 66th Secretary of State of the United States (2005-09) Tad and Dianne Taube Director of the Hoover Institution and the Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy Philip Zelikow Botha-Chan Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution; 2009 Fellow, American Academy in Berlin Daniel Benjamin (host) President American Academy in Berlin
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5 days ago
54 minutes 35 seconds

Big Ideas
The rise of Spotify and the costs of the perfect playlist — with music journalist Liz Pelly
American music journalist Liz Pelly interrogates the ways Spotify and other streaming giants are reshaping music, not just for listeners, but also for the people who make it. This conversation was recorded on 28 August 2025 in partnership with The Wheeler Centre and Now or Never Festival. Discover more talks and bold conversations by following The Wheeler Centre wherever you get your podcasts or at wheelercentre.com. Speakers Liz Pelly Music critic, author, Mood machine: The rise of Spotify and the costs of the perfect playlist Lauren Taylor Senior programs and podcasts manager at The Wheeler Centre, and host of Breaking and Entering on community radio Triple R
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6 days ago
58 minutes 26 seconds

Big Ideas
Yolngu power — art, culture, country, law — with Marcia Langton and Clare Wright
Australian Indigenous art is celebrated around the world – but how much is understood about its pivotal role in Indigenous culture, country, politics and law?  For the Yolngu people of north-east Arnhem Land, art is more than just aesthetic, it is a means of cultural diplomacy, and a respectful assertion of power in its diverse forms, from sovereignty to influence, authority and control, to energy, strength and pride. This episode brings together two significant exhibitions of Indigenous art on now, Yolngu Power: the art of Yirrkala, and 65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art. This conversation was recorded at the Art Gallery of New South Wales on 30 July 2025.  Speakers  Marcia Langton Co-curator (with Judith Ryan) of the exhibition 65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art, Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne (until 22 November 2025)  Foundation Chair of Australian Indigenous Studies, Associate Provost and Distinguished Professor, University of Melbourne    Clare Wright Author, Naku Dharuk The Bark Petitions: How the People of Yirrkala Changed the Course of Australian Democracy and more  Professor of History and Professor of Public Engagement at La Trobe University  Anna Clark (host) Author, Making Australian History, Private Lives, Public History, the History Wars   Professor of history, Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology Sydney  Further information: Yolngu power: the art of Yirrkala Art Gallery of New South Wales (until 6 October 2025) 65,000 Years: A Short History of Australian Art Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne (until 22 November 2025) 
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1 week ago
54 minutes 33 seconds

Big Ideas
Nobel scientist Jennifer Doudna with Natasha Mitchell — the gene editing revolution, radical ethics, and what's next? [Archive episode]
Join a full house at the Sydney Opera House with Nobel winning scientist Jennifer Doudna and Big Ideas' presenter Natasha Mitchell to discuss the huge social, ethical, and scientific implications of the CRISPR gene editing revolution her groundbreaking discovery with Emmanuelle Charpentier and colleagues kicked off. From curative therapies to gene edited babies - will we use it to hack our own evolution - are we already?  This event was presented in 2024 by the Sydney Opera House, Big Questions Institute (BQI), Sydney Writers’ Festival, UNSW Sydney. Original publication: 24 July 2024 Speaker: Professor Jennifer Doudna 2020 Nobel Prize for Chemistry co-winner  Li Ka Shing Chancellor’s Chair Professor, Departments of Chemistry and of Molecular and Cell Biology Founder, Innovative Genomics Institute University of California, Berkeley Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Senior investigator, Gladstone Institutes Further information and listens: Doudna Lab Jennifer Doudna in conversation with Natasha Mitchell at an event in 2018 World's first CRISPR gene edited babies born - are we ready?(2018 Science Friction episode with Natasha Mitchell) The CRISPR gene-edited babies and the doctor who made them - what really happened? (2019 Science Friction episode with Natasha Mitchell) Out of jail, is the CRISPR-baby scandal scientist at it again? (2023 Science Friction episode with Natasha Mitchell) Feral science or solution? Unleashing gene drives (Science Friction episode with Natasha Mitchell) Making happier animals? Gene editing in the farmyard (Science Friction episode with Natasha Mitchell) Hear Natasha Mitchell learn how to do CRISPR gene editing in 2016 (as part of a 4-part Earshot series The Hidden History of Eugenics, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4) The science and ethics of genome editing with Jennifer Doudna and Kevin Esvelt (video of event hosted by Natasha Mitchell in 2018) Natasha Mitchell's review of Siddhartha Mukherjee's The Gene: An Intimate History
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1 week ago
54 minutes 33 seconds

Big Ideas
Helen Vatsikopoulos — when the stories of migrants in Australia are silenced it's bad for all of us
Stories help us to understand what is happening in the world and how it impacts us. Stories help us to relate to the experience of 'the Other' and their suffering building an emotional understanding. Journalist and academic Helen Vatiskopoulos describes the power of stories to share information to the masses and the problems that arise when the narrative is distorted. What is the responsibility of the media? How does media and social media impact on whose stories are being told and whose are being left out? What's the Story? Migration, Memories and the Importance of Controlling the Narrative, the Inaugural Oration for the 50th anniversary of the Multicultural Council of South Australia Speaker Dr. Helen Vatsikopoulos Walkley Award-Winning Journalist; Industry Professional Fellow at the University of Technology Sydney
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1 week ago
54 minutes 34 seconds

Big Ideas
The power of essays
For 85 years, Meanjin has published the essays of Australian writers. The magazine's founding editor, Clem Christesen, wanted Meanjin's writers 'to reveal and clarify our life by showing it to us though a vision different from ours and deeper." In the wake of the news the magazine is closing, Big Ideas explores and celebrates the essay in all its forms. This conversation was recorded at the Words on the Waves Festival on 28 May 2025. Speakers David Marr Presenter, Late Night Live, ABC Radio National, author, My Country: Stories, essays and speeches and more Esther Anatolitis Out-going editor, Meanjin, editor, Essays that Changed Australia, Meanjin 1940 to Today, and author, When Australia Became a Republic, (out in October through Monash University Publishing's In the National Interest series) Brooke Boland Author, Gulp Swallow Ashleigh Wilson (host) Author, Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing, A Year with Wendy Whiteley, and Transcendence: 50 Years of Unforgettable Moments at the Sydney Opera House
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1 week ago
55 minutes 4 seconds

Big Ideas
Fleeced — unravelling the history of wool and war
It's water and fireproof, versatile, warm and tough wearing. Wool not only expanded the British Empire, and created prosperity in the colonies, it also changed the nature of war and warfare. But wool's fortunes didn't last forever. This is the story of the rise and fall of wool. This conversation was recorded at the National Library of Australia on 31 July 2025. Speakers Trish Fitzsimons Documentary film maker, exhibition curator, adjunct professor with Griffith Film School (Griffith University) Co-author of Fleeced: Unraveling the History of Wool and War Madelyn Shaw Exhibition curator and co-author of Fleeced: Unraveling the History of Wool and War Annabelle Quince (host) Host, Rear Vision, ABC Radio National
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2 weeks ago
54 minutes 35 seconds

Big Ideas
What's up with dieting Doc? Rethinking the obesity obsession in healthcare
Has your doctor ever told you to go on a diet? Does that conversation put you off going to them in the first place, even if you need treatment for something not related to your weight? Has being in a larger body ever meant you can't access surgery or IVF? Some are pushing for a weight-inclusive approach to healthcare, which de-centres obesity, and focuses on 'health-at-every-size'. But what does that really mean, and why does it matter? This event was held at the 11th Annual Weight Stigma Conference at Griffith University. Speakers Ana Ximena Torres, clinical psychologist and founder of the practice, Elemental Collective. Dr Fiona Willer Dietitian, bioethicist, President of Dietitians Australia Lecturer in Nutrition and Dietetics at Queensland University of Technology Founder, Health, Not Diets consultancy Host, Unpacking Weight Science podcast. Tracy Taylor-Beck Manager, Strategy and Health Promotion (interim CEO at the time of this event) Women's Health in the North, a women's health promotion and advocacy organisation in Melbourne's North. Thanks to Dr Lily O'Hara from Griffith University, convenor of the conference.
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2 weeks ago
54 minutes 30 seconds

Big Ideas
Doing business ethically in turbulent times — with Helen Clark
In a world where rules are increasingly being broken, what role should business play in upholding human rights, international and domestic law, people and the environment? And what are the rules and responsibilities of business to ensure supply chains, hiring practices, workplace safety, environment and social governance practices abide by global human rights standards? This event was recorded at the inaugural UN Business and Human Rights Regional Forum: Australia and New Zealand on 26 August 2025. Speakers Robert McCorquodale Professor of International Law and Human Rights, UN working group on business and human rights Helen Clark Head of the UN Development Programme, Co-Chair of the WHO Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, former Prime Minister of New Zealand Sharan Burrow Former general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, former president of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, fellow with the London School of Economics Linda Kromjong President, amfori Peggy O'Neal Vice Chancellor RMIT University, former president Richmond Football Club
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2 weeks ago
54 minutes 34 seconds

Big Ideas
Jimmy Barnes – tells it all
Rock star and maverick Jimmy Barnes celebrates heritage, family, friends, music and the adventure of a grand life on stage. Get up close to the lead singer of Cold Chisel, author of Working Class Man and Working Class Boy. Learn how terrible experiences of family violence, but also a close bond to his brother shaped him into the performer he is now. Get a look behind the scenes of his music world, with wild characters and the occasional tall tale. This conversation was recorded live at the 2025 Melbourne Writers Festival. Listen to Big Ideas – Writers who rock Speakers Jimmy Barnes Australian rock singer, solo performer and lead vocalist with Cold Chisel Author of Highways and Byways, Working Class Boy, Working Class Man Brian Nankervis (host) Co-host of the music quiz show RocKwiz, Saturday Breakfast on ABC Radio Melbourne Writer, actor and comedian
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2 weeks ago
54 minutes 35 seconds

Big Ideas
Hanna Rosin on what’s happened to the end of men in Trump’s America
Thirteen years ago, US political journalist Hanna Roisin wrote a book called The End of Men: and the Rise of Women. Since then, there's been President Donald Trump x 2, the manosphere, the broligarchy, and more. So what happened? This event was recorded at the 2025 Women in Media Conference on 15 August 2025. Speakers Hanna Rosin — Senior Editor, The Atlantic, host Radio Atlantic, author, The End of Men: and the Rise of Women Edwina Bartholomew — Host, Sunrise, Channel 7
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3 weeks ago
54 minutes 30 seconds

Big Ideas
Nuked or not? The politics and power play over nuclear energy as a climate fix
Nuclear power is banned in Australia, and has been for decades, whilst some countries tilt towards nuclear energy again. Should or could Australia?  The politics and power play over nuclear in the Sunburnt country, why the Coalition failed with the nuclear card at the last federal election, and what next? Join Big Ideas host and science journalist Natasha Mitchell and guests Simon Holmes à Court, Geoff Cousins, and Royce Kurmelovs at the Byron Writers Festival. Guess the nuclear nerd in this discussion. You might be surprised.  Speakers Simon Holmes à Court Energy analyst, clean tech investor, climate philanthropist, and founder of Climate200 Geoff Cousins Businessman, board member, environmentalist, former president of the Australian Conservation Foundation, former consultant to former prime minister John Howard. Royce Kurmelovs Journalist and author of Slick: Australia's Toxic Relationship with Big Oil Thank you to Festival artistic director Jessica Alice and team at the Byron Writers Festival.
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3 weeks ago
58 minutes 38 seconds

Big Ideas
Heart-to-heart with John Wamsley and David Lindenmayer — why these trailblazing environmentalists won't back off
Meet two men on a lifelong mission. They've ruffled a lot of feathers along the way. Some revere them, others revile them. John Wamsley set up Australia's first wildlife sanctuary, but he's perhaps best known as the "cat-hat-man" (sorry, cat lovers!). World renowned forest ecologist David Lindenmeyer has copped heat from Australia's forestry industry for his science. But these two trailblazing environmentalists aren't afraid of their critics - to them it's a case of life-or-death for Australia's extraordinary species. Join them with oral historian Greg Borschmann as part of his Heartlands Conversations series presented at the Blue Mountains Music Festival. Speakers John Wamsley Environmentalist David Lindenmayer Distinguished Professor of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Australian National University Author of The Forest Wars: The ugly truth about what's happening in our tall forests Gregg Borschmann (host) Writer, radio producer and oral historian for the National Library of Australia
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3 weeks ago
54 minutes 29 seconds

Big Ideas
Are the reading wars really over?
It's estimated that one third of Australian school children can't read proficiently. Can explicit instruction turn things around?  This speech was recorded at the Advancing Effective Education Summit hosted by Multilit on 30 May 2025.  Speakers Jenny Donovan CEO, Australian Education Research Organisation
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3 weeks ago
54 minutes 35 seconds

Big Ideas
Is our university system broken?
Students are dropping out, academics are burning out, so is enough being done to save higher education? It's a multibillion-dollar sector, employing and educating millions, with expectations it can deliver the solutions and the workers Australia needs. But Emeritus Professor Graeme Turner says universities are in serious trouble. This conversation was recorded at Readings Books on 15 July 2025. Speakers Graeme Turner  Emeritus Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland Author of 30 books including Broken: Universities, politics and the public good (From Monash University Publishing's In the National Interest series) Dr Ben Eltham (host)  Lecturer in the School of Media, Film and Journalism at Monash University NTEU delegate, journalist and commentator From the Big Ideas archive: Higher education for everyone in Australia — is it doable? - Big Ideas, ABC Radio National, 18 June 2024
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1 month ago
54 minutes 5 seconds

Big Ideas
The radicalisation of boys — Jess Hill, George Megalogenis, Thomas Mayo with Natasha Mitchell at Byron Writers Festival
Some boys are being radicalised by misogynist online subcultures like the 'Manosphere' and the 'incel' (involuntarily celibate) scene. Parents are anxious and boys are confused. What's happening, why, and what can be done? Join Big Ideas host Natasha Mitchell and guests at the 2025 Byron Writers Festival for an insightful exploration with three influential Australians. Speakers Jess Hill, investigative journalist specialising in gendered violence, author of See What You Made Me Do, and the Quarterly Essay Losing it: Can We Stop Violence Against Women and Children? Thomas Mayo, Indigenous rights activist, maritime union leader, author of Always Was, Always Will Be, editor of Dear Son: Letters and Reflections from First Nations Fathers and Sons. George Megalogenis, journalist, political and social commentator, and author of the Quarterly Essay Minority Report: the New Shape of Australian Politics. Thanks to Byron Writers Festival artistic director Jessica Alice and team.
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1 month ago
1 hour 5 minutes 15 seconds

Big Ideas
The AI Con — unpacking the artificial intelligence hype machine
Is the world really in the midst of an AI revolution, or is it all just clever marketing, powered by immense amounts of money, capital and hype? This episode arms you to spot AI hype in all its guises, expose the exploitation and power-grabs it aims to hide, and push back against it at work and daily life. The conversation with Emily M Bender was recorded at RMIT University in partnership with Readings books on 1 July 2025. The panel discussion Reboot the Narrative was recorded at the Rose Scott Women Writers Festival on 27 June. Speakers Emily M Bender — Professor of Linguistics and Adjunct Professor in the School of Computer Science and the Information School at the University of Washington Co-author (with Alex Hanna), The AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech's Hype and Create the Future We Want Co-host, Mystery AI Hype Theater 3000 podcast Kobi Leins (host) — Digital ethics and human rights lawyer Author, New War Technologies and International Law: The Legal Limits to Weaponising Nanomaterials Tracey Spicer — Journalist and broadcaster, author of Man-Made: How the bias of the past is being built into the future Paula Bray — Chief Digital officer at the State Library of Victoria Lucy Hayward — Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Society of Authors Ally Burnham (host) — Screen writer and novelist, author, Swallow
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1 month ago
55 minutes 3 seconds

Big Ideas
Feed your mind. Be provoked. One big idea at a time. Your brain will love you for it. Grab your front row seat to the best live forums and festivals with Natasha Mitchell.