16 episodes

STIR Radio tackles global issues and current affairs. We interview people at the front line of the war on poverty and the struggle for a fair and peaceful world.
Presented by Vision Generation on Radio Adelaide each week and podcast for you right here.

World Vision STIR Radio (2009‪)‬ Vision Generation

    • Government

STIR Radio tackles global issues and current affairs. We interview people at the front line of the war on poverty and the struggle for a fair and peaceful world.
Presented by Vision Generation on Radio Adelaide each week and podcast for you right here.

    STIR Radio - Maternal Health in Indigenous Australia

    STIR Radio - Maternal Health in Indigenous Australia

    We might have passed Mothers’ Day for another year – but keeping mothers and babies healthy during pregnancy and childbirth is still a huge issue in communities all over the world. In fact, improving maternal health is the Millennium Development Goals towards which the least progress has been made so far.

    In general, Australia is one of the safest places in the world to give birth or to be born. But in many remote Indigenous communities, service providers face serious problems trying to provide effective, high-quality maternal healthcare in a supportive and culturally sensitive environment.

    This week Amye, Adelaide, Stephen and Eleanor focus on the creative ways governments and community groups are overcoming these hurdles. Drawing on the firsthand experiences of midwives and students who have worked in remote communities, they look carefully at programmes that are really working to work out which approaches are the most successful, why, and how they can be adapted for future use.

    • 51 min
    STIR Radio - Corruption and the Aid Industry

    STIR Radio - Corruption and the Aid Industry

    Special Guest: Dr. Emil Bolongaita, Technical Director, Management Systems International

    In the business of helping countries find their feet, some problems are perennial. Corruption has been bothering aid workers and organisations for as long as they’ve been handing out cash. Not surprisingly, in countries with very little, aid flows can become a source of power and prosperity for those who manage to skim a little off the top. In some instances, even anti-corruption officials have been implicated.

    David, Ryneisha, Fran and Gen investigate the grubby details of the gravy train.

    What does corruption do to a country’s civil service? How can aid organisations avoid becoming implicated? What strategies can the industry use to ensure that aid money reaches its intended beneficiaries?

    • 46 min
    STIR Radio - Pakistan

    STIR Radio - Pakistan

    The crisis facing the people of Pakistan’s Swat Valley has been all over the papers this month – but it’s hard to keep up with the who, what, when and why of a disaster which has now caused the largest displacement of people Pakistan has ever seen.

    This week Ryneisha, Hannah, Amye and Erana ask what could possibly cause more than two million people to flee their homes; where they’ve ended up; and who’s looking after them until they’re able to go home.

    They also take a closer look at the role aid agencies like World Vision are playing in helping support and shelter those who have been displaced and minimising the impact of the conflict on children; and provide a deeper insight into the huge funding gap aid that needs to be closed so NGOs can go ahead with their work in the region.

    • 46 min
    STIR Radio - Democracy and Development

    STIR Radio - Democracy and Development

    In a part of the year marked by some serious democratic events – the Indian elections, the Indonesian Presidential election, and the anniversaries of both the Tiananmen Square massacre and the victory of the Solidarity movement in Poland – STIR radio puts aside purse politics for a while and asks instead about the links between democracy and development.

    Does development lead to democracy? And does democracy always bring development? Join Stephen, Stacey, Claudia and David as they answer these questions and more.

    • 47 min
    STIR Radio - Healing the Wounds of the Past - Pt2

    STIR Radio - Healing the Wounds of the Past - Pt2

    Sometimes, one hour just isn’t enough!

    STIR Radio revisits the contrast between Truth and Reconciliation Commissions and Criminal Tribunals, focussing especially on the pros and cons of each approach and asking how much of a choice countries really have about the kind of process they end up with.

    Our reporter James Melhuish also has the great privilege of speaking with Justice Richard Goldstone about reconciliation and justice in the international community.

    SPECIAL GUEST:
    Justine Richard Goldstone
    former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia and Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa

    • 54 min
    STIR Radio - Healing the Wounds of the Past - Pt1

    STIR Radio - Healing the Wounds of the Past - Pt1

    How do countries cope with traumatic events in their history?

    Whether they’ve gone through apartheid, genocide or civil conflict, moving on is hard to do for both
    survivors and later generations.

    Eleanor, Nicola, Claudia and Adelaide use the examples of South Africa, Liberia, Cambodia and Rwanda to compare the way nations tackle the healing process, focussing especially on the contrast between Truth and Reconciliation Commissions and Criminal Tribunals. They also ask young people who have moved to Australia from some of these countries how they feel about the approach their country has taken.

    Tune in to hear more about the differences between the two types of process – which are still going on all over the world today – and the ways they can help ordinary people come to terms with the past and move forward into the future.

    • 53 min

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