Coming Together or Coming Apart? A New Phase of International Cooperation on Migration

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, countries introduced border closures or restrictions that essentially paused most forms of mobility, with significant consequences for migrants, their countries of origin, and destination countries. A new report by the Migration Policy Institute explores the rationale for deeper international cooperation on migration, the obstacles impeding it, and ways forward.

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Scrapping compulsory income management: Six options for investing in true change

In the lead-up to the Federal Election, we are running a series on specific asks for policy change at the federal level. The Federal Government has made it clear they continue to support compulsory income management; there is disproportionate targeting of Indigenous people, with Indigenous women’s experiences of such programs replicating colonial control and abuse. More broadly, there are serious concerns about the gendered impacts of compulsory income management schemes and their effects on the wellbeing of children and families. Today’s analysis by Priya Kunjan (@PriyaKunjan) and the policy team at the Accountable Income Management Network (@AIMNau) provides a specific policy ask of the Federal Government – put an end to the Cashless Debit Card and BasicsCard and invest the money in ways that will make a lasting community change.

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Sexual violence and Covid-19: all silent on the home front

The lack of public acknowledgement of sexual violence against women and children during the first month of UK lockdown could have long-term implications not only for individuals but for the services put in place to support them, a group of UK experts have argued in an article published by the Journal of Gender-Based Violence.

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Buying and Selling the Poor: Inside Australia’s Privatised Welfare-to-Work Market

Reform of Australia’s welfare-to-work system and its ripple effects are recurrent themes on the Power to Persuade blog. In today’s post, Siobhan O’Sullivan, Michael McGann, and Mark Considine discuss their landmark, long-term research into privatisation in Australia’s welfare-to-work system. Their new book Buying and Selling the Poor: Inside Australia’s Privatised Welfare-to-Work Market examines how well Australia is supporting its most vulnerable citizens, and what might be done differently.

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Power to Persuade
Why the gender pay gap never closes…

In the lead-up to the Federal Election, we are running a series on specific asks for policy change at the federal level. Today’s piece by Philippa Hall and Sandy Venn-Brown draws from the Women’s Electoral Lobby (@WELAust) Election 2022 Policy Platform. Here they explain what needs to change to close the gender pay gap and increase women’s financial security from employment.

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Welfare cuts and growing charity aim to mould citizens to prevailing political ideals

This blog is based on the article “Poverty by Design: The Role of Charity and the Cultivated Ethical Citizen”, published in Social Policy and Society by Cameron Parsell (@cameronparsell), Andrew Clarke (@andrew_c4000) and Francisco Perales from the University of Queensland. It originally appeared on The Social Policy Blog.

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A ‘hierarchy of rights’ will leave many without recourse from discrimination

While it has been anticipated for several years now, the Religious Discrimination Bill 2021 is already making headline news for failing to protect individuals from discrimination based on religious belief. In today’s analysis, Helen Dalley-Fisher and Toni Hassan (@ToniHassan) of the Equality Rights Alliance (@ERAAustralia) provide a summary of ERA’s submission that explains how the Bill will undermine gender equality. Portions of this analysis also previously appeared in the Canberra Times.

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The social safety net as a complex system failure for women

Women are more reliant on the social safety net than men, but what is their experience of it? In today’s analysis, researchers across multiple components of the safety net explain how deliberate design decisions have created a system that places women in crisis. This long read is based on a presentation at the Australian Social Policy Conference in October 2021.

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Behind the rosy unemployment rate, the health sector is under strain

The most recent unemployment figures show an astounding downturn, to the lowest rates since 2008. Unemployment is but one measure of a healthy economy, however. In today’s analysis, Policy Whisperer Leonora Risse (@Leonora_Risse) examines the incredible strain that has been put upon the health care sector - an industry that is female-dominated and at the heart of the government’s COVID-19 response. Despite this, there has been surprisingly little policy interest in addressing eroding employment conditions.

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Supporting young people experiencing family violence: Shortfalls but also opportunities

The Royal Commission into Family Violence found that appropriate supports for children and young people experiencing family violence were lacking. In a new report just released by Melbourne City Mission, the shortfalls and gaps are explored in depth, along with recommendations for strengthening the service response in ways appropriate for young people. Today’s analysis is a summary of key findings provided by co-authors Shorna Moore of Melbourne City Mission (@MelbCityMission) and Tanya Corrie (@TanyaCorrie) of Corrie Consulting. You can access the full report here: Amplify: Turning up the Volume on Young People and Family Violence.

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The NDIS – from then to now

In today's post, Dr Raelene West (@raelene_west) discusses the history and current state of Australia's National Disability Insurance Scheme. She argues that the NDIS is at a critical juncture, and that its success hinges on people with disability having a more significant role in its design and delivery. Dr West is a sociologist based at the Melbourne Disability Institute at the University of Melbourne, and she has lived experience of disability.

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The Unequal Burden of Australian Pension Reform on low-income women

Older women are the fastest-growing cohort at risk of homelessness in Australia, reflecting their increased financial insecurity, which is created by a cocktail of gendered social norms, differential career trajectories for women compared to their male peers, and the tax and transfer system. A key policy lever that is reducing older women’s financial independence is the increase in the qualifying age for the Age Pension. Originally legislated in 1994, this reform has not been fully examined for its impacts on older women, until now. Today’s analysis from Todd Morris (@ToddMorrisecon) shares research he conducted while with the University of Melbourne School of Business and Economics (@BusEcoNews) on how this policy reform has contributed to the financial insecurity of older women in Australia. This analysis first appeared on the Austaxpolicy blog; you can read it in its original form here: LINK The Unequal Burden on Women of Australian Pension Reform. You can read the full article here: : The Unequal Burden of Retirement Reform: Evidence from Australia

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