Women
Press conference on Manus Island and deportation of a 96-year-old woman
Greencast | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Thursday 11th August 2011, 1:09pm
in
Audio from Sarah's door stop today in Adelaide where she spoke on the reopening of the Manus Island detention centre and the possible deportation of a 96-year-old British woman living with her family in Tasmania.
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Save and expand foreign aid
Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 19th July 2011, 10:21am
by ParisLord in
This month the world is learning about the ongoing famine in the Horn of Africa, where about 12 million people have been hit by the worst drought in almost 60 years. Australia has pledged more than $11 million in aid. It's heart-wrenching to see malnourished children in refugee camps in Kenya with tubes in their noses to feed them because their hungry mothers cannot.
Driving change in Saudi Arabia
Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 21st June 2011, 10:02am
by ParisLord in
I love driving. While some readers may find that shocking, it's true. Like many everyday Australians, I relish the chance to jump in my car, a hybrid, with my daughter in the back and her favourite music on the stereo as we barrel through the Adelaide Hills.
Lots to celebrate, still a long way to go
Blog Post | Blog of Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 8th March 2011, 11:48am
by RobertSimms in
Women have made some pretty incredible gains in the 21 years since Carmen Lawrence became the first woman premier in Australia.
Since then there have been women premiers in every state except South Australia (it seems that, for Mike Rann, no women are eligible for promotion in his boys-club cabinet) and we have women leading Queensland, NSW and Tasmania, along with women as Prime Minister and Governor-General.
There is, however, a pattern emerging when it comes to the promotion of women in politics. It seems in Australia when governments are facing electoral oblivion, they turn to women to lead them from the abyss (perhaps in politics, like the household, it still takes a woman to clean up the mess the boys have left behind).