• 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.
  • Series 4 Episode 5 Aseel Tayah on connecting communities through creativity and storytelling
    Feb 1 2023

    Synopsis:
    Melbourne-based artist and cultural leader Aseel Tayah was born and raised in Jerusalem and is passionate about the role of the arts in connecting diverse communities across generations. Aseel uses art and storytelling to foreground the experiences of displaced people and advocate for artists of color, mothers, children and young people — changing the world, one project at a time.

    Notes:
    Aseel's website
    Aseel Tayah: The home that lives within (YouTube)

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘AERATE’ by Higher Power, and ‘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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    38 Min.
  • Series 4 Episode 4: Sara Motta on feminine lineages, healing justice, and reconnecting to the ancestral Mother
    Jan 31 2023

    Synopsis:
    How do Indigenous communities weave together ancestral feminine lineages? This question is at the heart of Associate Professor Sara Motta’s praxis of transformation and collective liberation. Through a lens of feminised resistance, Sara, a proud mestiza salvaje, shares her healing journey from the wounds of patriarchal capitalist-coloniality, exploring restorative and reparative pathways of well-being and justice.

    Notes:
    Sara's personal website
    Geneologies (M)otherwise
    Weaving Enfleshed Citizenship (M)otherwise
    Voices of el pueblo: the road to the Colombian elections
    Decolonising critique in, against and beyond the business school
    Decolonising (critical) social theory: Enfleshing post-Covid futurities

    Music in this episode includes ‘ZEN’ by All Bets Off, and ‘AERATE’ by Higher Power 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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    45 Min.
  • Series 4 Episode 3: Alice Te Punga Somerville on fertility and making babies for the revolution
    Jan 25 2023

    Synopsis:
    Birthing holds a different significance for Indigenous communities that have experienced colonial attempts at elimination. For scholar, poet and irredentist Professor Alice Te Punga Somerville, (Te Āti Awa, Taranaki), birth is an act of resistance. She joins us to talk about her journey to parenthood and her experiences as a scholar who traverses between Indigeneity and migrancy.

    Notes:
    UBC academic page
    Personal website
    Alice Te Punga Somerville: My story as told to Elisabeth Easther
    Alice Te Punga Somerville and the politics of italics
    Important reading and writing questions for Alice Te Punga Somerville
    Writing while colonised
    Buy her first book of poetry

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘SMOOTH LIFE’ by Killer Chops 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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    49 Min.
  • Series 4: Episode 2 Cath Chamberlain on transforming intergenerational trauma.
    Jan 18 2023

    Synopsis:
    For Professor Cath Chamberlain, babies are a gift from the ancestors and birth is a critical life event. But what if this time is coupled with intergenerational and complex trauma? Cath is a  Palawa Trawlwoolway woman, registered midwife, and public health researcher who works to support the emotional and spiritual well-being of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander parents experiencing trauma. In this critical conversation, Cath talks about her passion for healing the past by nurturing the future, improving health equity, and building perinatal awareness through storytelling and deep listening.


    Notes:
    Making a decision to do the hard research, that’s what discovery is about
    Leadership award for health researcher
    MRFF Success - Improving the Health and Wellbeing of Indigenous Mothers and Babies
    Supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Families to Stay Together from the Start (SAFeST Start): Urgent call to action to address crisis in infant removals

    Music:
    Music in this episode includes ‘Developing Peace Health Wellness’ by Luca Tomassini, and ‘Unbend’ by Solix Music 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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    34 Min.
  • Series 4 Episode 1: Jacynta Krakouer and Indigo Willing on how colonisation and the idea of the “white saviour” have shaped responses to child welfare
    Jan 11 2023

    Synopsis:
    What does it mean to be part of a community without access to your birthing stories? Dr Jacynta Krakouer, a Mineng Noongar social worker and Dr Indigo Willing, a sociologist and adoptee from Vietnam contribute a powerful discussion about the history and politics of out-of-home care and inter-country adoption addressing justice, kinship, and belonging. Jacynta and Indigo bring their lived experience and their community advocacy into dialogue with a critical analysis of the institutions and mindsets that underpin how children are born in the lands now known as Australia.

    Notes:

    Links to Jacynta's work
    ResearchGate
    Google Scholar
    Separated at birth: Racism and unconscious bias in perinatal health services
    The Family Matters report 2022
    First Nations families need support to stay together, before we create another Stolen Generation
    First Nations children are still being removed at disproportionate rates. Cultural assumptions about parenting need to change

    Links to Indi's work
    Research Gate
    Google Scholar
    Siren Spotlight: Hybrid academic careers in sport—bridging scholarship, community, and consultancy work
    Podcast interview on The Vietnamese with Kenneth Nguyen
    Erika Hayasaki presents "Somewhere Sisters" with Indigo Willing
    We Skate Queensland

    Music
    Music in this episode includes ‘Developing Peace Health Wellness’ by Luca Tomassini, and ‘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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    59 Min.