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    aborigines

    Explore " aborigines" with insightful episodes like "How Nanna and Pop Learnt About Climate Change (The Hard Way)", "117 From the Outback to the Gold Coast, Australian Policing With Sergeant Oliver Laurence", "Reconstructing Ancient Superhighways with Stefani Crabtree and Devin White", "Consider the Lilies-(#122-Elim)" and "The Australian Dream ─ Stan Grant's speech on racism at Ethics Centre IQ2 Debate, 2015" from podcasts like ""Climate Change and Other Small Talk", "Cops and Writers Podcast", "COMPLEXITY", "Reverend Ben Cooper's Podcast" and "Speakola"" and more!

    Episodes (9)

    How Nanna and Pop Learnt About Climate Change (The Hard Way)

    How Nanna and Pop Learnt About Climate Change (The Hard Way)

    Nan and Pop are horrified to learn about climate change from their granddaughter. Should they get their hearing aids adjusted or did she just talk about cows farting? 

    How Nanna and Pop Learnt About Climate Change (The Hard Way) was written by Marie Munkara. Find the transcript here.

    Climate Change and Other Small Talk is  a worldwide tour for your ears - minus the carbon footprint and lost luggage. Audio dramas from 9 creative teams around the globe will entertain as well as explore our climate crisis. And maybe even what could get us out.

     

    --- FOLLOW US---

    Sign up for our newsletter to get bonus content including discussion guides and a listening party hosting guide: https://www.sunnydrake.com/climatechangeandothersmalltalk

    Follow Sunny, the series creator, on Instagram: instagram.com/sunny_drake

    Follow Sunny Drake Productions on Facebook: facebook.com/sunnydrake.creations

    Twitter: twitter.com/sunny_drake

     

    --- CREDITS ---

    Written by MARIE MUNKARA

    Directed by RACHAEL CHISHOLM

    Starring: 

    MARIE MUNKARA as Nanna

    PETE HAYES as Pop

    RACHAEL CHISHOLM as Daughter

    NYASHA OGDEN as Granddaughter

     

    Sound design, music, audio mixing and recording engineer MATTHEW CUNLIFFE

     

    Episode Produced by DARWIN COMMUNITY ARTS with support from SUNNY DRAKE PRODUCTIONS

    Episode Producers ANNA WEEKES and TANIA LIEMAN

     

    --- SERIES CREDITS for CLIMATE CHANGE AND OTHER SMALL TALK ---

    Created by SUNNY DRAKE

    Produced by SUNNY DRAKE PRODUCTIONS in association with WHY NOT THEATRE

    Lead Producers: FANNY MARTIN and NAJLA NUBYANLUV

    Concept Dramaturg: KEVIN MATTHEW WONG

    Impact Producer & Climate Dramaturg: CHAPRECE HENRY 

    Communications Producer: DANIELA GERSTMANN 

    Central Audio Producers: HEATHER BROWN and RICHARD FEREN

    Series funders: Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council and Toronto Arts Council

    See our website for full credits - it truly does take a village to raise a podcast.

    117 From the Outback to the Gold Coast, Australian Policing With Sergeant Oliver Laurence

    117 From the Outback to the Gold Coast, Australian Policing With Sergeant Oliver Laurence

    G’day mates! Today we are going to the land down under to speak with Oliver Laurence, who was a police sergeant in Australia! 

    Oliver Laurence worked for the South Australian Police and the Queensland Police Service as a constable, senior constable, and was promoted to the rank of sergeant. 

    During his career in law enforcement in Australia, he worked in a variety of positions and locations from the Gold Coast to the Outback. 

    Upon retirement, he started his own security agency spanning from Asia to the UK. He is also the host of the popular Protect and Serve Podcast.                    

    In today’s episode we discuss:

    ·      How Oliver got his start in law enforcement.

    ·      Where his interest in law enforcement came from. 

    ·      Police training and equipment in Australia.

    ·      Policing in the Outback and dealing with indigenous people who live there?

    ·      The types of crimes he investigated in the Outback.

    ·      Public order policing in Australia’s Gold Coast. 

    ·      Starting a private investigation company and some of the cases he has worked on.

    ·      His podcast, Protect and Serve!

     All of this and more on today’s episode of the Cops and Writers podcast.

    Check out Oliver's
    Protect and Serve Podcast!
    Come visit Oliver on his
    LinkedIn page.

    Check out
    Field Training (Brew City Blues Book 1)!!
    Enjoy the Cops and Writer's book series.
    Please visit the Cops and Writers website.
    If you have a question for the sarge, hit him up at his email.
    Join the fun at the Cops and Writers Facebook group

    Consider buying me a coffee :-)

     

    Do you enjoy gritty, action-packed real-life police dramas to get your fill of blood, heartache, and cop humor, and maybe even a little romance?

    I have partnered up with Michael Anderle and we have released a new crime fiction series called “Brew City Blues.” 

    If you're a fan of Hill Street Blues, Southland, or Bosch you’re going to love Brew City Blues! 

    Brew City Blues is now live! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BLR7FX27

     

                

    Only for Cops and Writers Podcast listeners! Get 50% off the audiobook version of the F.B.I. K-9 thriller, Avenging Adam by Jodi Burnett. Use code, https://jodi-burnett.com/copsandwriters/


    Avenging Adam Audiobook by Jodi Burnett
    Get 50% off Avenging Adam audiobook with this link!

    Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

    Support the show

    Reconstructing Ancient Superhighways with Stefani Crabtree and Devin White

    Reconstructing Ancient Superhighways with Stefani Crabtree and Devin White

    Seventy thousand years ago, humans migrated on foot across the ancient continent of Sahul — the landmass that has since split up into  Australia and New Guinea. Mapping the journeys of these ancient voyagers is no small task: previous efforts to understand prehistoric migrations relied on coarse estimates based on genomic studies or on spotty records of recovered artifacts.

    Now, progress in the fields of geographic information system mapping and agent-based modeling can help archaeologists run massive simulations that explore all likely paths across a landscape, bridging the view from orbit with thoughtful models of prehistoric peoples and how they moved through space.

    The new research expands our scientific understanding of how ritual and story encode vital geographic features, and sheds light on how our modern world is the product of deep, ancient forces.

    Agent-based modeling in archaeology can also help save lives by improving science communication, empowering stakeholders in cultural resource management, and facilitating better international planning and coordination as the climate crisis looms…

    Welcome to COMPLEXITY, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I’m your host, Michael Garfield, and every other week we’ll bring you with us for far-ranging conversations with our worldwide network of rigorous researchers developing new frameworks to explain the deepest mysteries of the universe.

    This week we talk with Stefani Crabtree, SFI Fellow and Assistant Professor in Socio-Environmental Modeling at Utah State University, and Devin White, R&D Manager for Autonomous Sensing & Perception at Sandia National Laboratories. Stefani and Devin are the first two authors on the recent Nature Human Behaviour paper, Landscape rules predict optimal superhighways for the first peopling of Sahul, a project at the bleeding edge of agent-based modeling for archaeology that simulated over 125 billion potential ancient migratory routes.

    In our conversation, we discuss bringing advanced technologies to bear on research into human prehistory; the ways humans make sense of space; how our minds and landscapes inform each other; and the ways agent-based modeling might help avert disaster for the sedentary populations of our century.

    If you value our research and communication efforts, please subscribe to Complexity Podcast wherever you prefer to listen, rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, and/or consider making a donation at santafe.edu/podcastgive. You can find numerous other ways to engage with us at santafe.edu/engage. Thank you for listening!

    Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.

    Podcast theme music by Mitch Mignano.

    Follow us on social media:
    Twitter • YouTube • Facebook • Instagram • LinkedIn

    Related Reading & Listening:

    • Stefani’s Website

    • Devin’s Webpage

    • Landscape rules predict optimal superhighways for the first peopling of Sahul by Stefani A. Crabtree, Devin A. White, Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Frédérik Saltré, Alan N. Williams, Robin J. Beaman, Michael I. Bird & Sean Ulm 

    • Complexity 60: Andrea Wulf on Alexander von Humboldts Naturegemälde

    • Complexity 33: The Future of the Human Climate Niche with Tim Kohler & Marten Scheffer

    Subscribe to updates from SFI Press on the upcoming ABM for Archaeology textbook

    • Lauren Klein’s SFI Seminar: What is Feminist Data Science?

    • Sam Bowles, Wendy Carlin, Suresh Naidu: Core Economics

    • Scale and information-processing thresholds in Holocene social evolution by Jaeweon Shin, Michael Holton Price, David H. Wolpert, Hajime Shimao, Brendan Tracey & Timothy A. Kohler 

    • The universal visitation law of human mobility by Markus Schläpfer, Lei Dong, Kevin O’Keeffe, Paolo Santi, Michael Szell, Hadrien Salat, Samuel Anklesaria, Mohammad Vazifeh, Carlo Ratti & Geoffrey B. West

    • Outreach in Archaeology with Agent-Based Modeling in Advances in Archaeological Practice by Stefani Crabtree, Kathryn Harris, Benjamin Davies, and Iza Romanaowska

    Consider the Lilies-(#122-Elim)

    Consider the Lilies-(#122-Elim)

    Today Reverend Ben and Leya discuss how God works through the natural world around us.  How creation is beautiful and ever expanding, how the detail of His design is proof of His perfect existence and what a comfort it is to meditate on the awesome complexities of natures.  You can find the pictures of nature that Leya references on her instagram page.- leya_through_a_lens

    Support the show

    The Australian Dream ─ Stan Grant's speech on racism at Ethics Centre IQ2 Debate, 2015

    The Australian Dream  ─ Stan Grant's speech on racism at Ethics Centre IQ2 Debate, 2015

    This episode features award winning Australian journalist Stan Grant's stirring speech in an IQ2 debate at the Ethics Centre on the topic 'That racism is destroying the Australian Dream'. The speech went viral after it was broadcast in early 2016, and sits as one of the most articulate and challenging speeches ever delivered on the subject of racism.

    The IQ2 speech is on Speakola, as is Grant's powerful UNSW address in the aftermath of Four Corners revelations of brutality in Northern Territory youth detention centres. The episode opens with a snippet of James Baldwin speaking on a similar topic at the Cambridge Union in 1965.

    Stan Grant's books are available through Harper Collins, and his 'Tell it to the World' memoir is on Amazon.

    If you'd like to donate to support Speakola in both its website and podcast form, Tony would appreciate any help in these covid times! 

    Tony's books available online and at his website. Send an email to swap details for a signed copy. The video of Tony reading Jack 'The Cow Tripped Over the Moon' is here

    Episode supported by GreenSkin™ and PurpleSkin™ avocados.

    Please subscribe to the podcast, visit Speakola,  and share any great speeches that are special to you, famous or otherwise. I just need transcript & photo /video embed. Speakola also has Twitter and Facebook feeds.

     

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    20171105 Inspiring Saints #2 John and Mary Green

    20171105 Inspiring Saints #2 John and Mary Green
    For more than a decade, John and Mary Green served as managers at Coranderrk Aboriginal reserve. Their love for those on the reserve is a testimony to God at work in and through them. We see the Apostle Paul share a love for those he served in 1 Corinthians 9:19-27a as we are challenged to live with a similar love for others. A message by David Toscano
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