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Facts, stories and news you actually care about.
The Dish is brought to you by Central News, the award-winning UTS Journalism Lab, based in Sydney, Australia.
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You bet your life: surviving gambling addiction
While gambling may be a culturally engrained norm in Australia, finding yourself in serious debt from betting is often shrouded in stigma and shame. For those who suffer heavy losses, it can be this humiliation and inability to reach out for help that leads them to consider the most serious form of self-harm - suicide. Brooke Young talks with gambling survivors and industry experts.
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‘Where do we go?’ People with disabilities excluded from disaster risk reduction plans
For the more than 4 million Australians living with disability, preparing for a natural disaster can be overwhelming and isolating.
According to research from the Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience, people with disabilities face greater difficulties accessing emergency support during natural disaster events due to a range of accessibility barriers, leaving them at higher risk of injury or death.
As natural disaster events become more frequent and more intense across the country, disability advocacy groups are pleading with governments on all levels to invest in and support disability inclusive disaster risk reduction.
Grace Stranger reports.
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Find the full transcript here: gracestranger.wordpress.com/2022/05/24/…tion-plans/
Guests:
Marieta Adrião and Sarah Neto
Rachel Rowe
CEO/Founder, Autism Camp Australia
Steve Coulter
Manager Communications Media and Marketing, Queenslanders with Disability Network
Helen Styles
Project Officer/Research Assistant, Centre for Disability Research and Policy, University of Sydney
Presenter/Producer/Sound Engineer:
Grace Stranger
Music in order of appearance: Blue Dot Sessions - Access Road 138 (License: CC BY-NC); Blue Dot Sessions - Game Lands (License: CC BY-NC); Blue Dot Sessions - Blue Wind Blow (License: CC BY-NC).
Image: Marcus Aurelius | Pexels (Creative Commons) -
Beating the drums of war with China
Nicholas Rupolo examines the increasingly hawkish rhetoric around Australia's relationship with China and the growing risk of a military confrontation. Speaking with experts and politicians, including former NSW premier Bob Carr and career diplomat Bruce Haigh, he asks if think tanks such as the Australian Strategic Policy Institute are having a disproportionate influence on the government's defence policy.
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Can a traumatic experience cause chronic physical pain?
Some researchers believe there is a link between trauma and chronic, physical pain, and that traumatic experiences can switch the body's stress response system on high, causing pain to manifest in people physically as well as mentally.
Emelia Coe investigates the science behind the theory, speaking to doctors, researchers and people who say they have experienced trauma-induced chronic illness first-hand. -
Boom or bust? The pandemic's impact on the Australian film industry
The COVID-19 pandemic caused many movie sets to shut down completely but it also saw high profile sets and stars arrive at our shores, from Marvel movies such as Shang-Chi to TV series like Nine Perfect Strangers.
This brought in millions of dollars to major cities like Sydney, Melbourne and the Gold Coast and regional towns such as Broken Hill and the NSW Northern Rivers, but many workers were still made redundant.
Reporter Anna Dvorak, who has worked in the industry, looks at the impact of lockdowns on Australian films and the ongoing financial struggle of film makers, actors and workers. -
How the fall of the twin towers shaped the world today: September 11, 20 years on
On September 11 2001, two planes flew into the Twin Tower buildings in New York in a coordinated attack by terrorist group Al-Qaeda. The attack was a turning point in the relationship of the United States with the Middle East. Twenty years on, the impacts of the national and foreign policy can still be felt from border and immigration control to the recent fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban. Central News reporter Olivia Nunes-Malek interviews Nancy Schneider from the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Professor Michael Humphrey, expert in Islam perceptions in the West and Professor Shahram Akbarzadeh, research professor of Middle East & Central Asian Politics.
Presented by Olivia Nunes-Malek, edited by Soofia Tariq.
Brought to you by Central News, Journalism Hub for the University of Technology, Sydney.