WFH, Uni Protests and Online Radicalisation | Q+A

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024
  • What’s the future of work?
    COVID disrupted the office and accelerated the transition to hybrid working. Full-time remote working is a reality for some, but there’s a tension in some corporates who want staff back in the office at least a few days a week.
    For many Australians, WFH isn’t an option, entrenching social and economic divides between those who can and those who can’t. How will technological advances and the rise of artificial intelligence further exacerbate those differences?
    What are Australia’s labour advantages - and vulnerabilities - as an unstable world threatens international supply chains? And is the federal government’s new ‘made in Australia’ pitch, promising billions of dollars to rebuild manufacturing capacity, smart economics or extravagant protectionism?
    Panellists: Minister for Employment & Workplace Relations and Minister for the Arts Tony Burke, Shadow Minister for Science, Arts, Government Services and the Digital Economy Paul Fletcher, ACTU Secretary Sally McManus. Work Futurist, Atlassian Dominic Price and Founder and CEO, Carman's Kitchen Carolyn Cresswell.
    This episode was broadcast on Monday May 6. 2024.
    For more from Q+A, click here: www.abc.net.au/...
    Follow us on Twitter: / qanda
    Like us on Facebook: / abcqanda
    Q+A is a television discussion program that focuses mostly on politics but ranges across all of the big issues that set Australians thinking, talking and debating.
    It is driven by interaction: Q+A provides a rare opportunity for Australian citizens to directly question and hold to account politicians and key opinion leaders in a national public forum and Q+A is broadcast live so that not only the studio audience but also the wider audience can get involved.
    We aim to create a discussion that is constructive, that reflects a diverse range of views and that provides a safe environment where people can respectfully discuss their differences.
    It’s impossible to represent every view on a single panel or in one audience but we’re committed to giving participants a fair go.
    In order to be as inclusive and diverse as possible, the program is presented from a range of locations around the country and all Australians are encouraged to get involved through social media as well as by joining the audience.
    This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation RUclips channel.

Комментарии •