The HASSCast explores the power of humanities, arts, and social sciences research in Australia and around the world. It looks at how HASS research can impact our lives, and our understanding of the world around us. HASSCast uncovers how HASS research can cross the boundaries of discipline, helping researchers to share their work and its impact.
The HASSCast places humanities, arts, and social sciences researchers in the spotlight, to explore their role in how we understand the changing world.
Want to know more? Subscribe to the HASSCast and learn more about how and why humanities, arts, and social sciences research is having an impact today.
The HASSCast is supported by Swinburne University’s School of Social Sciences, Media, Film and Education. Produced by me, Damien O’Meara, Kirsten Ambrens, and Dr Carolyn Beasley.
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The HASSCast explores the power of humanities, arts, and social sciences research in Australia and around the world. It looks at how HASS research can impact our lives, and our understanding of the world around us. HASSCast uncovers how HASS research can cross the boundaries of discipline, helping researchers to share their work and its impact.
The HASSCast places humanities, arts, and social sciences researchers in the spotlight, to explore their role in how we understand the changing world.
Want to know more? Subscribe to the HASSCast and learn more about how and why humanities, arts, and social sciences research is having an impact today.
The HASSCast is supported by Swinburne University’s School of Social Sciences, Media, Film and Education. Produced by me, Damien O’Meara, Kirsten Ambrens, and Dr Carolyn Beasley.
Follow us on Twitter - now X - at SwinHASSCast.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In this episode of the HASSCast Dr Effie Karageorgos talks through her recent publication, Medical fears of the malingering soldier: ‘phony cronies’ and the Repat in 1960s Australia in the journal Medical History.
Dr Effie Karageorgos is Lecturer in History at the University of Newcastle, Australia and Deputy Convenor of the UON Future of Madness Network. Her research focuses on histories of conflict, violence, gender and psychiatry, specifically soldier and veteran trauma, as well as protest movements. She co-edits Health and History, the official journal of the Australian and New Zealand Society for the History of Medicine and runs the Social Production of Mental Health seminar series alongside Dr Natalie Hendry. With Professor Catharine Coleborne, she is pursuing a new history of mental health aftercare funded by the Australian Research Council.
See more of Dr Effie Karageorgos' work through her Google Scholar profile.
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Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.