Through the work of 11 regenerative artists, this exhibition invites us us to reconsider our perspectives on material sustainability and explore how creativity can contribute to ecological healing. By Alexi Freeman
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Design leaders and practitioners across Australia and Aotearoa, New Zealand are pushing back against the status quo, exploring the ethics of social design amidst the challenges of advanced capitalism. Discover insights from the Doing Design Differently Tour, where community and collaboration were key. By Dr Emma Blomkamp…
Read MoreCommunity only grows stronger when people feel at home. First Hike Project achieves this by taking young people from migrant and refugee backgrounds on day hikes and overnight camping trips throughout the Australian wilderness. Surrounded by a peaceful setting, the easygoing conversation helps to form lasting bonds. By Hudson Brown
Read MoreWhile government support for the arts declines, Supper Sessions works to empower local creatives through fine-dining communal dinners. Learn about the experimental grassroots funding model taking place in these highly collaborative events. By Hudson Brown
Read MoreThe Common Ground Project is a regenerative farm and social enterprise cultivating change in Geelong, Victoria. Bridging food, farming, and community, they offer education, empowerment, and a vision for a healthier food system. By Hudson Brown
Read MoreCultivate your understanding of co-design evolution with Dr Emma Blomkamp's in-depth analysis. Explore toolkits, maturity models, and effective collaboration strategies in social innovation.
Read MoreFrom interactive icebergs to illuminating mushrooms, these awe-inspiring projects awaken urgency and inspire global change. Discover how artists around the world are using their environmental works of art to awaken urgency, spark conversations, and inspire action in favour of a better tomorrow. By Daniel Simons
Read MoreWhether it’s the future of general intelligence or the disruptions caused by generative AI, almost everyone alive is waking up to the world-changing potential of these breakthrough technologies.
Read MoreWhen it comes to tackling society’s most wicked challenges, some people are ‘dreamers’ and some people are ‘doers.’ For Katie Patrick, the author of ‘How to Save The World,’ dreaming, is doing.
Read MoreWhen you reflect on your connection to food what comes to mind? Childhood memories steeped in rich, homely recipes, a concoction of our favourite flavours? Or maybe it's the evenings gathered around the dining table with friends and family? At the root of this ritual is an understanding that food is grounded in much more than what gets served on the table. By: Rachel Worcou
Read MoreExtrapolations is the latest Apple TV series from Burns. It is set 15 years in the future, roughly the same amount of time that passed between Contagion and Covid. This time, instead of dropping us into the middle of a pandemic, Burns transports us to a future where the climate crisis has continued to intensify unabated. We can only hope that this time his cautionary prognostication won’t be as accurate.
Read MoreSolitaire Townsend sees the future as a race between armageddon and awesome, and she’s betting on awesome. The rebel-with-a-cause, who grew up on a council estate in Bedford and began her ‘activist career’ at the age of 12. Since then she has authored two best-selling books, is an in-demand global keynote speaker, runs one of the most influential purpose-driven communications agencies on the planet, and was recently named as a United Nations SDG Pioneer.
Read MoreIn a 2016 lecture given at the opening of Cambridge University’s Centre for the Future of Intelligence, renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking warned that the development of Artificial Intelligence would ‘either be the best, or the worst thing ever to happen to humanity,’ and that, 'if we were not careful, it might be the last thing'. | Words: Daniel Simons
Read More“Imagination allows us to conceive of delightful future possibilities, pick the most amazing one, and pull the present forward to meet it.” - Jason Silva | Words: Daniel Simons
Read MoreFree to Feed is a wonderful Melbourne-based social enterprise with food, community, and connection at its heart. The registered charity creates empowering employment opportunities for refugees and people seeking asylum through the creation of shared food experiences. These include community cooking classes, food events, and catering that celebrate and showcase the diverse cuisines and stories of the people they support.
Byline: Lisa Cugnetto
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