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    Behind the Lines

    Come behind the scenes at the Guardian Australia newsroom. We talk to our journalists about the stories they’ve written and how they came to write them. If there are particular articles you’d like us to discuss, please do get in touch
    en-gbThe Guardian49 Episodes

    Episodes (49)

    Behind the lines podcast: what kind of PM would Shorten make? What will he die in a ditch for?

    Behind the lines podcast: what kind of PM would Shorten make? What will he die in a ditch for?
    This week’s podcast is a special live recording (heavily edited) of Guardian Australia’s first Quarter Time event in Melbourne. Podcast regular Bridie Jabour is joined on stage by Guardian Australia’s deputy political editor, Katharine Murphy, as well as the editor of the Saturday Paper, Erik Jensen, and the comedian Lawrence Leung. The panel talk about politics – and look ahead to the election

    How personal stories are shaping the debate on marriage equality - Behind the Lines

    How personal stories are shaping the debate on marriage equality - Behind the Lines
    At Guardian Australia’s Why Knot? event, campaigners told how the battle for marriage equality can be won if gay and straight supporters alike go out and spread the word about their own experience. Bridie Jabour and Miles Martignoni look back at some of the most moving speeches from Benjamin Law, Ally Hocking Howe, Kristina Keneally and Rodney Croome, and ask what role religious faith will play in the debate

    What can we expect from the report of Victoria's royal commission into family violence? - Behind the Lines podcast

    What can we expect from the report of Victoria's royal commission into family violence? - Behind the Lines podcast
    Guardian Australia’s Gay Alcorn and Melissa Davey discuss Victoria’s royal commission into family violence, due to report this week after a year gathering evidence. The state government has vowed to adopt every recommendation and the report is expected to be influential across Australia.

    Why do children in remote Indigenous communities need open heart surgery?

    Why do children in remote Indigenous communities need open heart surgery?
    In rural and remote Indigenous communities throughout Australia, and particularly in the Northern Territory, it is not uncommon to see children as young as seven carrying the long scars of open-heart surgery running vertically down their chest. Melissa Davey describes what she saw on a trip to the Tiwi Islands and what needs to be done to stop children from needing the invasive operation • ‘I’m too young to die’: the disease forcing Indigenous children to have open heart surgery

    Behind the Lines podcast: in the NT, can you really tell if someone has air-con just by looking at them?

    Behind the Lines podcast: in the NT, can you really tell if someone has air-con just by looking at them?
    While personal attacks and silly antics dominate politics in the Northern Territory, there are also serious issues at play in the region, which is home to some of Australia’s most remote communities. Guardian Australia’s Darwin correspondent, Helen Davidson, talks about the challenges and privilege of reporting from places like Arnhem Land, where the local Indigenous culture is still extremely strong

    Behind the Lines podcast: the day our opinion editor was groped by a stranger at dinner

    Behind the Lines podcast: the day our opinion editor was groped by a stranger at dinner
    Bridie Jabour talks to Guardian Australia’s opinion editor Gabrielle Jackson and senior editor Lucy Clark about covering feminism and sexism for the Guardian. They examine why the opinion desk gets so few pitches from female writers, discuss the way in which the media often treat feminist issues like minority causes ... and talk about the night Gabrielle was assaulted by a drunk man while out for dinner – and what happened next
    Behind the Lines
    en-gbFebruary 12, 2016