Watch & Listen
Watch and listen to UNSW’s thought leaders share their insights, ideas and research from live events and digital platforms. Sign up to get the latest talks and ideas content straight to your inbox.
Are Anzac biscuits our strongest symbol of survival and resilience?
What happens when teamwork doesn’t make the dreamwork?
Do you lie awake at night worrying about volcano eruptions, asteroid impacts, global pandemics, evil robots, or nuclear warfare? What can we do today to prepare for the unimaginable?
Our increasing intrusion into the natural world is creating strange new risks and endangering the future of all life. How can we think about not just surviving, but thriving in the Anthropocene?
How can we learn to deal with the unexpected? And how can we teach the skills that the unexpected depends on – creativity, collaboration and never giving up?
When writing policy for public health and welfare, what changes can be made to improve the health and well being for everyone in our community?
Hosted by coral biologist from UNSW Sydney, Associate Professor Tracy Ainsworth, this series of 12 podcasts will focus of research being undertaken in Australia by leading marine experts talking about the marine places on their doorsteps that have inspired them, and how their love of these places has influenced their life’s work.
The UNSW-GWI Global Water Matters Podcast was launched in 2020 to share interesting and important water-related developments and insights from global experts across the broad spectrum of water-related disciplines. Born from the demand to continue the Water Issues Commentary seminar series under the constraints of social distancing, new episodes are released monthly.
We’re in the midst of a climate crisis, so what can we do to ensure our survival?
2020 Gandhi Oration | Rosemary Kayess questions why over half of Australians living with a disability lack access to support services they need.
2020 Gandhi Oration | Rosie Batty tackles family violence in a country that allows more than one woman to be killed every week by a partner or former partner.
Was The Handmaid's Tale a feminist novel?