61 episodes

The Good Problem is a podcast series unpacking the sticky art of doing good. You'll hear me, Leigh Mathews getting curious about the ethics of doing good, the dangers of doing good, and how to do better at doing good.

The Good Problem Leigh Mathews

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 21 Ratings

The Good Problem is a podcast series unpacking the sticky art of doing good. You'll hear me, Leigh Mathews getting curious about the ethics of doing good, the dangers of doing good, and how to do better at doing good.

    Leigh Mathews & Mel Harwin: The Privilege of Doing Good

    Leigh Mathews & Mel Harwin: The Privilege of Doing Good

    We're flipping things for the final episode of season five, and host Leigh Mathews is being interviewed by the wonderful Mel Harwin who has over 15 years experience working as a leader, implementor, human designer and evaluator in the international development, social, and environmental programs globally. Mel's experience, curiosity and critical thinking thinking skills contribute to a wonderful interview unpacking the privilege of doing good.

    • 49 min
    Dr. Matt Beard: Moral Injury

    Dr. Matt Beard: Moral Injury

    Ethics is a term we throw around quite often in the doing good sector. But what does it really mean? Where do ethics apply? Is it at the organisational level, the individual level, or both?In the humanitarian sector, where staff are regularly placed in situations where they are required to make decisions that can deeply affect the lives of others, how does ethics apply? Is it ok to be placed in that situation? In a sector with a high burnout rate, and an expectation to just accept working conditions – who is responsible when things go wrong?Today, we are talking about my absolute favourite topics, ethics and philosophy, with Dr. Matt Beard (https://twitter.com/matthewtbeard). Matt is a husband, dad, and pop culture nerd, who also happens to be one of my favourite moral philosophers and ethicists. He is also the resident philosopher on one of the best kids ethics podcasts around – Short and Curly (https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/shortandcurly/). Matt is the Program Director for the Vincent Fairfax Fellowship at the Cranlana Centre for Ethical Leadership (https://cranlana.org.au/).

    • 59 min
    Monica Mukerjee & Arnab Majumdar: #Aidtoo, Dignity at MSF

    Monica Mukerjee & Arnab Majumdar: #Aidtoo, Dignity at MSF

    In the aftermath of the #metoo movement, we saw the emergence of #aidtoo and the resulting exposure of harassment, abuse and discrimination in the development and humanitarian sector. While the reports are shocking to read, it’s no surprise – abuse, sexual misconduct, racism, and discrimination have been long prevalent in the sector, and we continue to see reports naming major agencies in scandals. The rise of #aidtoo has resulted in long overdue attention on these issues, and the voices are only getting louder. The latest report to come out is by Decolonise MSF, an organic, unofficial anti-racism and anti-discrimination movement composed of more than 1200 current and former MSF staff, formed in response to decades of unanswered calls for change within the organisation.The report, called Dignity at MSF, was a survivor led initiative to publicly assess and disclose findings on abuse and discrimination within MSF, and the first to involve MSF’s global and historical staff base, as well as community partners. On reading the report, it is damning: more than 50% of respondents witnessed or experienced one or more forms of abuse in a one year period.I invited the report’s authors, Monica Mukerjee (https://twitter.com/MonicaMukerjee) and Arnab Majumdar (https://twitter.com/arnabmajumdar_?lang=en) onto the podcast today to talk us through the report, their own experiences working in MSF and what it means to have publicly authored a report like this.

    • 50 min
    Aleem Ali: Shifting Power in Practice

    Aleem Ali: Shifting Power in Practice

    Organisations all over the world are engaging in a long overdue self-analysis and reflection of how they operate and how they engage with communities whom they have traditionally worked ‘on behalf of’. This can be both confronting and challenging, but it’s also entirely necessary if we want to dismantle the harmful systems and structures rooted in colonialism that underpin how we operate. So how do organisations best go about this when they are still part of, and beholden to these systems?I’ve invited the amazing Aleem Ali (https://aleemali.com/)onto the podcast today to talk about what this journey looks like in practice. Aleem is the CEO of Welcoming Australia (https://welcoming.org.au/author/admin/), working with leaders and organisations across the country to cultivate a culture of welcome and advance communities where people of all backgrounds can belong, contribute and thrive. Aleem has spent the past 20 years seeding and mentoring the development of leading initiatives and social enterprises that advance welcoming and inclusive communities. He is also a mentor and advisor to various startups, community enterprises and government agencies.Follow Aleem on Twitter (https://twitter.com/AleemShaun)

    • 38 min
    Mary Ann Clements: Dismantling Development

    Mary Ann Clements: Dismantling Development

    Working in a sector that is traditionally seen as ‘doing good’ can mean that often, actions and behaviours that are not good at all, and in fact, cause harm are able to proliferate. The international development sector is built upon colonial ideals and has traditionally perpetuated those through a harmful system of top-down do-gooding that actively suppresses development instead of encouraging it. In recent times, voices speaking out against the system have gotten louder and louder, and in fact, a number of them have been guests on this podcast. Today, I’ve invited Mary Ann Clements (https://maryannclements.com/) on to the podcast. Mary Ann is one of AltoLearn's course creators, and is someone who has been speaking loudly about these issues for years now and actively interrogating her own role in the system. Mary Ann is currently Chief Transformation Officer (interim CEO) at ADD International.She’s a feminist author, facilitator, activist, and coach and has spent two decades working in the international development sector. She’s also the creator of Healing Solidarity (https://healingsolidarity.org/), a project that brings together activists, practitioners, and thinkers interested in welcoming the change we need in international development practice and figuring out how to care for ourselves and one another in the process.

    • 41 min
    Camilla Nelson: A Broken System

    Camilla Nelson: A Broken System

    As somebody who has spent their entire career working to protect the rights of vulnerable children, today’s episode was challenging to record. While we know that children’s rights are violated daily, we don’t expect that harm to be caused by the very institutions created to protect them. Australia’s family court was established in the 1970s, underpinned by a naive belief that if couples could separate quickly and easily, family violence would perhaps disappear. Forty six years later, we are faced with an institution that has, and continues to cause irreparable harm to children and families. The Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (https://www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au/) was damning and resulted in the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations (https://childsafe.humanrights.gov.au/national-principles), which are designed to guide how institutions are required to protect and safeguard children from harm. Sadly, despite being an Australian Government institution, the Family Court does not follow the Principles. I’m joined today by the wonderful Camilla Nelson (https://www.notredame.edu.au/about/schools/sydney/arts-and-sciences/school-staff/camilla-nelson), co-author of the new book Broken, a searing account of how Australia’s family law system is failing. The book explores the complexities and failures of the family courts through the stories of children and parents whose lives have been shattered by them. 

    • 41 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
21 Ratings

21 Ratings

philpreston ,

Loving it

Great to be a listener and then a guest on Leigh’s show! Conversations that push the boundaries in many directions.

junicorn20 ,

Hi I’m Leigh Mathews daughter

Her podcast is awesome!

jilly field ,

The good problem

Listening to each podcast with a keen ear. This is the unspoken topic that we must break down. What is our place in helping. Leigh is a brilliant interviewer. She asked both micro and macro and personal and non. I love it

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