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Birthing and Justice with Dr Ruth De Souza

Birthing and Justice with Dr Ruth De Souza

Von: Dr Ruth De Souza
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Childbirth is supposed to be empowering, but for many birthing people it is not. For Indigenous women, immigrant women and women of colour, birthing within the western healthcare system can be anything but affirming. It can feel unsafe. In this raw and challenging talks series, health researcher, clinician and nursing educator Dr Ruth De Souza (RMIT University) hosts conversations about birth, racism and cultural safety with change makers working within the maternal health-care sector to break down the structures built on colonisation. This is a series that will give birthing people hope and power when they’re at their most vulnerable.© 2024 Birthing and Justice with Dr Ruth De Souza Hygiene & gesundes Leben Sozialwissenschaften
  • Series 4 Episode 8: Favorite Iradukunda on decolonisation, justice and inclusion
    Mar 1 2023

    Synopsis:
    Diasporic nurse scholar Dr. Favorite Iradukunda studied in Rwanda, South Africa and the United States. She is a global nurse leader and commited to decolonising nursing through an African lens. She combines her research on advancing the holistic well-being of African-diasporic women, with activism in black birth equity and justice.

    Notes:
    Google Scholar
    Dr. Favorite's personal website
    Dr. Favorite Iradukunda on Twitter 

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘Native American Dream’ by AudioLion used under an Audio Standard Licence from Adobe Stock.

    Birthing and Justice is written and produced by Dr Ruth De Souza on the traditional and unceded lands of the Boon Wurrung people of the Kulin Nations. Sound editing by Olivia Smith.

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    40 Min.
  • Series 4 Episode 7: Hannah Donnelly and Omar Sakr on centering the birth experience under capitalism
    Feb 21 2023

    Synopsis:
    Experiencing a “high risk” pregnancy and birth while growing a new life during the pandemic was transformative for Wiradjuri writer and producer Hannah Donnelly, and Arab-Turkish partner, writer Omar Sakr. We talk about queering birth, the administrative load of pregnancy, and the need for collective infrastructure to improve birthing experiences and outcomes for families and communities.

    Notes:
    Hannah
    Blacklight: Ten Years of First Nations Storytelling edited by Hannah Donnelly
    Arts and Cultural Exchange (ACE)
    Westmead Dragonfly Midwifery
    Omar
    Non-Essential Work by Omar Sakr
    Shelf Reflection: Omar Sakr
    Three poems by Omar Sakr

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘Dream Drone’ by Yigit Atilla, and ‘ZEN’ by All Bets Off used under an Audio Standard Licence from Adobe Stock.

    Birthing and Justice is written and produced by Dr Ruth De Souza on the traditional and unceded lands of the Boon Wurrung people of the Kulin Nations. Sound editing by Olivia Smith.

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    54 Min.
  • Series 4 Episode 6 Sapna Samant on being a GP, creative practitioner and adoptive single parent
    Feb 14 2023

    Synopsis:
    Dr. Sapna Samant, is a GP, radio producer, film maker, activist, and single adoptive parent and is passionately committed to social justice. Both her creative work and medical practice strive for  equity and work to rectify injustice wherever it occurs.

    Notes:
    Twitter
    Mastodon
    Sapna's blog
    What Bridgerton gets right and wrong about being Indian

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘Exclusiva One’ by Vzen Instrumental Beat used under an Audio Standard Licence from Adobe Stock. 

    Birthing and Justice is written and produced by Dr Ruth De Souza on the traditional and unceded lands of the Boon Wurrung people of the Kulin Nations. Sound editing by Olivia Smith.

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    43 Min.
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