Browse: Home / conference
By Mark Bahnisch on February 22, 2010
On Q&A tonight, the defence from John Roskam of Tony Abbott’s remarks on homelessness and the government’s social housing strategy at the Catholic Social Service Association’s national conference appeared to be that it wasn’t clear what he’d said. [It's worth [...]
Posted in Film, TV, Video etc, Media, Policy, Politics, Poverty | Tagged Catholic Social Service Association, choice, Christopher Pearson, conference, homeless, homelessness, John Roskam, poor will always be with us, Q&A, Qanda, remarks, Rudd government, social housing, strategy, text, The Australian, Tony Abbott, Tony Jones, transcript |
By Mark Bahnisch on February 19, 2010
In the wake of Abbott’s Brutopian comments at the Catholic Social Services Australia national conference, Stephen Nash, CEO of Melbourne homelessness and housing support agency HomeGround Services, has published a rebuttal of the claim that homelessness is a choice at [...]
Posted in Authoritarianism, Ethics, Policy, Politics, Poverty, Religion, Sociology | Tagged Andrew Hamilton, Catholic Social Services Australia, Catholicism, conference, Eureka Street, HomeGround Services, housing policy, Jesus, John Falzon, New Matilda, paternalism, poor, Poverty, Religion, Rudd government, Stephen Nash, theology, Tony Abbott, Vinnies |
By Mark Bahnisch on December 18, 2009
Helmut is live blogging President Obama’s address to the Copenhagen climate change conference at Phronesisaical.
Posted in Blogging, Climate change | Tagged barack obama, Blogging, Climate change, conference, Copenhagen, live blogging |
By Mark Bahnisch on September 17, 2009
There’s a big confab on in Sydney on the 5th and 6th of November on all things social media and future of journalism – Media140. Rachel Hills is running a competition to win a free pass to the conference. For [...]
Posted in Blogging, Media, Notices, Sydney, The Web | Tagged conference, contest, future of journalism, future of media, Media, media140, Rachel Hills, social media, Sydney, web 2.0 |
Recent Comments