The Good Vote

Former Senator and Ambassador for Women and Girls Natasha Stott Despoja AM joins Tim Costello and Mel Wade to talk about women ahead of the 2019 Federal Election. On the agenda: representation in politics; domestic and family violence rates; federal funding for services; public policy and gender; stereotypes; international development; and hope for the future.

Trigger warning: This episode includes discussion of domestic and family violence. Australia's national helpline, 1800 RESPECT is available for sexual assault, domestic and family violence counselling and information referral service, 24 hours a day, every day of the year and we encourage anyone who is personally affected by this episode to call.

Show Notes

Trigger warning: This episode includes discussion of domestic & family violence. Australia's national helpline, 1800 RESPECT is available for sexual assault, domestic and family violence counselling and information referral service, 24 hours a day, every day of the year and we encourage anyone who is personally affected by this episode to call.

In this episode of The Good Vote, Tim Costello and Mel Wade speak to Natasha Stott Despoja about women.

Podcast guest: Natasha Stott Despoja

Natasha Stott Despoja AM is the founding Chairperson of Our Watch (the Foundation to Prevent Violence Against Women and their Children). She has been Australia’s Ambassador for Women and Girls December which involved 45 country visits between December 2013 and 2016 to promote women’s economic empowerment, women’s leadership and reduce violence against women and girls.

She is a member of the World Bank Gender Advisory Council and, currently, sits on the UN High LevelWorking Group on the Health & Human Rights of Women, Children and Adolescents. She is a former Senator for South Australia (1995-2008) and former Leader of the Australian Democrats.

In 2011, Natasha was made a Member of the Order of Australia for her service to the Australian Parliament, education and as a role model for women. She is still the youngest woman ever to enter the Australian Federal Parliament. In 2001, she was made a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum. Natasha has held the positions of Australian Democrats’ Leader and Deputy Leader and is the longest-serving Democrat Senator in the party’s history.

Natasha is an Honorary Visiting Research Fellow at The University of Adelaide; a columnist for The Adelaide Advertiser, and was a guest panellist on Channel 10’s TheProject. She is a former Deputy Chair of beyondblue, a former Burnet Institute Board member (now Patron); served on the board of the South Australian Museum (SAM) (2009-2013), the Advertising StandardsBoard (ASB) (2008-2013) and the Museum of Australian Democracy (MOAD) (2010-2013). She is a member of the Australian Privacy Foundation Advisory Board and the Global Women's InstituteLeadership Council.

She has been Patron or Ambassador for a number of not-for-profit groups including The Orangutan Project; Ovarian Cancer Australia, and ENUF the HIV/AIDS anti-stigma campaign. She lives in Adelaide with husband Ian and their two children Conrad and Cordelia.

A full transcript of this episode will be available soon at eternitynews.com.au/thegoodvote. Be sure to check out Eternity News' Election Guide for a more detailed look at this election's key issues.

What is The Good Vote?

What issues matter most to Australian Christians during an election? Hosts Tim Costello and Mel Wade talk to Australia's experts and leaders - including the ones that Christians don't usually get to hear from!
Episode guests:
Prof Ian Harper (Reserve Bank & Dean of Melbourne Business School, Melbourne University) - Economy;
John Anderson (Former Deputy PM & Nationals Leader) - Religious Freedom;
Natasha Stott Despoja (former senator & Ambassador for Women and Girls) - Women
Dr Tim Flannery (leading climate scientist & Australian of the Year winner) - Environment
Dr Susan Carland (author & Muslim spokesperson) - Islamophobia
Mark Yettica-Paulson (Aboriginal leader) - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples