Rural policy, people and place: sustainability in an uncertain future

About the speaker

Margaret Alston was Director of the Centre for Rural Social Research at Charles Sturt University, prior to commencing at Monash University in 2008. She is also an Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney and at Charles Sturt University. She has served on a number of boards and has been an advisor to the socio-economic working group for the Murray-Darling Basin Authority and the Health Workforce Australia working group on teaching. In 2008 she was appointed to the Australian delegation attending the commission for the status of women meeting in New York. She also spent time as a visiting expert at the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation in Rome. She has published widely in the field of rural gender and rural social issues and has acted as a gender expert for UN–Habitat in Kenya in 2009. She has been a keynote speaker at a number of national and international conferences over the last several years and is sought out for media commentary on the rural social condition, and on climate change and gender issues. She received the Medal of the Order of Australia in 2010 for services to social work and the advancement of women, particularly in rural areas. She is currently researching the gendered impacts of climate change in Australia, the Pacific, Bangladesh and the Philippines.

About the talk

This lecture will focus on rural people and places. It will note the changes and uncertainties relating to climate, policy, population movements and socio-economic factors on Australia’s rural heartland. Professor Alston will examine issues and policies that are shaping rural spaces including those relating to water, production, climate change, environment, telecommunications, health and education. Underlying these factors is an unstated assumption based on technological and economic ‘certainties’ that rural people will adapt and that rural places will reshape in efficient, down-scaled ways. She will examine these assumptions and their impact on rural people and places, arguing for greater attention to the social aspects of rural life. She will suggest the goal of rural policy should be vibrant, well-serviced and supported people and places.

Shine Dome,9 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory

Contact Information

Event Manager: Mitchell Piercey
Phone: (02) 6201 9462

4:30 PM November 06, 2012
FOR Public
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Add to Calendar 06/11/2012 4:30 PM 06/11/2012 4:30 PM Australia/Sydney Rural policy, people and place: sustainability in an uncertain future

About the speaker

Margaret Alston was Director of the Centre for Rural Social Research at Charles Sturt University, prior to commencing at Monash University in 2008. She is also an Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney and at Charles Sturt University. She has served on a number of boards and has been an advisor to the socio-economic working group for the Murray-Darling Basin Authority and the Health Workforce Australia working group on teaching. In 2008 she was appointed to the Australian delegation attending the commission for the status of women meeting in New York. She also spent time as a visiting expert at the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation in Rome. She has published widely in the field of rural gender and rural social issues and has acted as a gender expert for UN–Habitat in Kenya in 2009. She has been a keynote speaker at a number of national and international conferences over the last several years and is sought out for media commentary on the rural social condition, and on climate change and gender issues. She received the Medal of the Order of Australia in 2010 for services to social work and the advancement of women, particularly in rural areas. She is currently researching the gendered impacts of climate change in Australia, the Pacific, Bangladesh and the Philippines.

About the talk

This lecture will focus on rural people and places. It will note the changes and uncertainties relating to climate, policy, population movements and socio-economic factors on Australia’s rural heartland. Professor Alston will examine issues and policies that are shaping rural spaces including those relating to water, production, climate change, environment, telecommunications, health and education. Underlying these factors is an unstated assumption based on technological and economic ‘certainties’ that rural people will adapt and that rural places will reshape in efficient, down-scaled ways. She will examine these assumptions and their impact on rural people and places, arguing for greater attention to the social aspects of rural life. She will suggest the goal of rural policy should be vibrant, well-serviced and supported people and places.

Shine Dome,9 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory false DD/MM/YYYY

Contact Information

Event Manager: Mitchell Piercey
Phone: (02) 6201 9462

4:30 PM November 06, 2012

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