Renewal: Five Paths to a Fairer Australia
By (Author) Sophie Cousins
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
2nd February 2021
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Social forecasting, future studies
Paperback
192
Width 154mm, Height 233mm, Spine 24mm
254g
A progressive, solutions-driven examination of how we can collectively reshape and rebuild a better and fairer Australia in the midst of a global pandemic, climate change and urgent questions of race equality. The COVID-19 pandemic has with great speed fundamentally altered the world in which we live. The changes it has wrought are of a type and on a scale unseen by most people alive. We are realising the truths we understood as immutable, the basis of our social order, are not rigid and inevitable, but constructions of our own making - and thus able to be reshaped. Whichever path takes us out of this crisis will lead to a new and unrecognisable world. In the face of disaster and devastation, we are also afforded a great privilege- the chance to reconsider the principles and values that underpin our society, and rebuild accordingly. What would the ideal Australia look like - a fair and equal, green and healthy, secure and smarter Australia And what would it take to get there Identifying five major areas for discussion - government and politics, health and education, welfare, Indigenous affairs, and industry and climate change - award-winning journalist Sophie Cousins talks to some of Australia's brightest thinkers about the possibilities for renewal and the best way forward.
Astute [and] very, very readable. * Jacinta Parsons *
A stand-and-deliver extended essay for our times. * Sydney Morning Herald *
Sophie Cousins is an award-winning journalist and writer. After almost a decade of working and living overseas, she has returned to Australia to report on the Coronavirus pandemic and its aftermath. Her work has been published in the Guardian, New York Times, Foreign Policy, London Review of Books and Atlantic, among many others. She has received numerous grants and fellowships including from the National Geographic Society, the International Reporting Project and the South Asia Journalists' Association. Her first book, A Woman's Worth, was published in 2019.