Podcast appearances and mentions of Marilyn Waring

New Zealand politician and academic

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  • Dec 14, 2024LATEST
Marilyn Waring

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Best podcasts about Marilyn Waring

Latest podcast episodes about Marilyn Waring

The Sustainable Hour
The path to a green economy

The Sustainable Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2024 60:00


Transforming the economic system to protect both nature and ourselves. Podcast episode with Dr Mark Diesendorf, Dr Geoff Davies, Dr Marilyn Waring and Dr Steven Hail.

Different Matters by Damien Grant
Marilyn Waring on Different Matters

Different Matters by Damien Grant

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2024 85:53


Marilyn Waring is a New Zealand feminist, former politician, author of multiple books, academic, and activist for female human rights and environmental issues.She is best known for her 1988 book If Women Counted, and she obtained a D.Phil in political economy in 1989. Through her research and writing she is known as the principal founder of the discipline of feminist economics.Join me, Damien Grant as I interviews Marilyn Waring about her career in politics, her relationship with her father, attending Bob Marley's funeral in Jamaica, and femisim.  For more information, or to get in touch, visit the Different Matters Website.

When the Facts Change
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

When the Facts Change

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 56:14


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Gone By Lunchtime
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

Gone By Lunchtime

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 55:44


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Business Is Boring
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

Business Is Boring

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 56:14


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Dear Jane
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

Dear Jane

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 55:44


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air.

Behind the Story
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

Behind the Story

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 55:44


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air.

The Fold
Listen Now: episode one of Juggernaut – I Love You, Mr Lange

The Fold

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 55:44


We thought you might like a wee taster of our brand new #1 series, Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government, hosted by Toby Manhire. Click here to follow Juggernaut so you get every episode as soon as it's released! 1. I love you, Mr Lange Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Juggernaut: The Story of the Fourth Labour Government

Fuelled by brandy and fury, Sir Rob Muldoon calls a snap election, sparking a 1984 campaign of contrasts – the menacing, protectionist National PM against the fresh, upbeat Labour leader, David Lange. The pretext for the election is the decision by Marilyn Waring, a young, gay MP, to back an anti-nuclear bill and quit the National caucus, prompting an earful from Muldoon. Lange, meanwhile, is joined at the hip by a hungry would-be finance minister, Roger Douglas. They are about to confront a profound crisis, and launch a revolution. Includes previously unheard interviews with David Lange from the 84 campaign trail, and new and exclusive interviews with Marilyn Waring, Roger Douglas, Geoffrey Palmer, Richard Prebble, Peter Harris, Margaret Wilson, Bob Harvey and Gary McCormick. Click here for full details of archive material used in this series Juggernaut was made with the support of NZ On Air.

Resources Radio
Doing Environmental Economics at the White House, with Fran Moore

Resources Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 34:27


In this week's episode, host Daniel Raimi talks with Fran Moore, an associate professor at the University of California, Davis, about what it's like to serve as a senior economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA). Moore discusses the function of the CEA within the executive branch of the federal government, the range of economic expertise within the CEA, and how economists can improve the utility and relevance of their research for policymaking. References and recommendations: Frontiers of Benefit-Cost Analysis from the US Office of Management and Budget; https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/information-regulatory-affairs/frontiers-of-benefit-cost-analysis/ “A Progress Report on Climate-Energy-Macro Modeling,” containing a memo on tools to support the management of near-term macroeconomic and financial climate risks, from the Council of Economic Advisors; https://www.whitehouse.gov/cea/written-materials/2023/12/22/a-progress-report-on-climate-energy-macro-modeling/ “Losing Earth: A Recent History” by Nathaniel Rich; https://www.mcdbooks.com/losing-earth/ “If Women Counted: A New Feminist Economics” by Marilyn Waring; https://www.marilynwaring.com/publications/if-women-counted.asp “The Economist's View of the World and the Quest for Well-Being” by Steven E. Rhoads; https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/economists-view-of-the-world/ABF1A4B73AA084CB909A3FF498153F16#fndtn-information

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
1566. 151 Academic Words Reference from "Marilyn Waring: The unpaid work that GDP ignores -- and why it really counts | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2023 135:31


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/marilyn_waring_the_unpaid_work_that_gdp_ignores_and_why_it_really_counts ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/151-academic-words-reference-from-marilyn-waring-the-unpaid-work-that-gdp-ignores----and-why-it-really-counts--ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/fQzZf2Hq1Ms (All Words) https://youtu.be/L3542c8GU6g (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/EEdHWzPK-mA (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

RNZ: Morning Report
Number of women MPs surpasses men for first time

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 6:23


Almost 130 years ago New Zealand led the world, as the first nation to give women the vote. It took another 26 years before they could stand for Parliament and a further 14 years before Canterbury woman Elizabeth McCombs was sworn in as the county's first female MP. On Tuesday Labour's Soraya Peke-Mason will become the 177th - and for the first time women will hold a majority of seats in the House. Māni Dunlop spoke to two women familiar with navigating the political landscape, Marilyn Waring and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

The Country
The Country 14/06/22: Te Radar talks to Jamie Mackay

The Country

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 5:48


We get a preview of the FMG Young Farmer Grand Final coming up in Whangarei on July 7-9, plus we reflect on the 38th anniversary of the 1984 "Schnapps Election" being called, with a great story about Marilyn Waring's role in it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Girl Power Gurus
Marilyn Waring

Girl Power Gurus

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 42:12


For our latest episode, we interviewed Dr. Marilyn Waring, a prominent New Zealand economist and feminist, and a leading activist for women's human rights.  Dr. Waring was one of the youngest New Zealanders ever elected to Parliament, serving as a National MP between 1975 and 1984. She was just 23 when she entered Parliament and from 1978 to 1981 she was the only woman in the National caucus.   After leaving politics she wrote her famous book “If Women Counted”.  Due to her writings and research she is known as being the principal founder of the discipline of feminist economics.  Since 2006, Dr. Waring has been a Professor of Public Policy at the Institute of Public Policy at AUT in Auckland.  During this time she has focused on public policy and governance, political economy, gender analysis, and human rights.

The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma
Ep 259: The Loneliness of the Indian Woman

The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 237:37


Indian women are lonely in the bedroom, lonely in the kitchen, lonely in the workplace. Shrayana Bhattacharya joins Amit Varma in episode 259 of The Seen and the Unseen to discuss the interior and exterior lives of these unseen millions. Also check out 1. Desperately Seeking Shah Rukh: India's Lonely Young Women and the Search for Intimacy and Independence -- Shrayana Bhattacharya. 2. Select Shah Rukh Khan films: Baazigar, DDLJ, Dil Tho Pagal Hai, Kal Ho Naa Ho, Dilwale, Mohabbatein. 3. Shar Rukh Khan interviews selected by Shrayana: 1, 2, 3, 4. 4. The Power to Choose -- Naila Kabeer. 5. Naila Kabeer on Amazon. 6. Counting for Nothing: What Men Value and What Women are Worth -- Marilyn Waring. 7. The Odd Woman and the City -- Vivian Gornick. 8. Vivian Gornick on Amazon. 9. Future Sex -- Emily Witt. 10. Kamala Das's autobiography, poems and stories. 11. Deborah Levy and Bell Hooks on Amazon. 12. Poor Economics -- Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo. 13. Exit, Voice, and Loyalty -- Albert O Hirschman. 14. The Art of Loving -- Erich Fromm. 15. The Penguin Complete Novels of Nancy Mitford. 16. Selected Satire: Fifty Years of Ignorance -- Shrilal Shukla. 17. Most of Amit Varma's writing on DeMon, collected in one Twitter thread. 18. Dani Rodrik's tweet thread about the 'jerk quotient' in economics. 19. The Hidden Taxes on Women -- Sendhil Mullainathan. 20. "Academia is a giant circlejerk" -- Amit Varma's tweet. 21. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen with Ajay Shah (in reverse chronological order): 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 22. The Universe of Chuck Gopal -- Episode 258 of The Seen and the Unseen. 23. Miss Excel on Instagram and TikTok. 24. Bahujan Economics. 25. Raghuram Rajan at the Harvard Kennedy School in 2018. (Minute 5 onwards.) 26. In Service of the Republic -- Vijay Kelkar and Ajay Shah. 27. Superforecasting -- Philip Tetlock and Dan Gardner. 28. Listen, The Internet Has SPACE -- Amit Varma. 29. Raees: An Empty Shell of a Gangster Film -- Amit Varma. 30. The Baptist, the Bootlegger and the Dead Man Walking -- Amit Varma. 31. Bootleggers and Baptists-The Education of a Regulatory Economist -- Bruce Yandle. 32. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen with Jai Arjun Singh and Uday Bhatia. 33. The Life and Times of Abhinandan Sekhri -- Episode 254 of The Seen and the Unseen. 34. Films, Feminism, Paromita -- Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 35. Modi's Lost Opportunity -- Episode 119 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Salman Soz). 36. Women at Work -- Episode 132 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Namita Bhandare). 37. What explains the decline in female labour force participation in India? -- Urmila Chatterjee, Rinku Murgai and Martin Rama. 38. Why Are Fewer Married Women Joining the Work Force in India? -- Farzana Afridi, Taryn Dinkelman and Kanika Mahajan. 39. India Moving — Chinmay Tumbe. 40. India = Migration -- Episode 128 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Chinmay Tumbe). 41. House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths. 42. The Right to Sex -- Amia Srinivasan. 43. 'Let Me Interrupt Your Expertise With My Confidence' -- New Yorker cartoon by Jason Adam Katzenstein. 44. Katty Kay and Claire Shipman -- Katty Kay and Claire Shipman. 45. The Ugliness of the Indian Male -- Mukul Kesavan. 46. The Blank Noise Project by Jasmeen Patheja. 47. Why Loiter? -- Shilpa Phadke. 48. The Jackson Katz quote on passive sentence constructions. 49. The Kavita Krishnan Files -- Episode 228 of The Seen and the Unseen. 50. Metrics of Empowerment — Episode 88 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Devika Kher, Nidhi Gupta and Hamsini Hariharan). 51. Jane Austen and Pico Iyer on Amazon. This episode is sponsored by CTQ Compounds. Check out The Daily Reader and FutureStack. Use the code UNSEEN for Rs 2500 off. Check out Amit's online courses, The Art of Clear Writing and The Art of Podcasting. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free!

TED Talks Daily
The unpaid work that GDP ignores -- and why it really counts | Marilyn Waring

TED Talks Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021 18:02


If you: do laundry, are (or have been) pregnant, tidy up, shop for your household or do similar labor, then by GDP standards, you're unproductive. In this visionary talk, economist Marilyn Waring seeks to correct the failures of this narrow-minded system, detailing why we deserve a better way to measure growth that values not just our own livelihood but the planet's as well. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Policy Forum Pod
What we value with Marilyn Waring

Policy Forum Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 54:33


On the second instalment in our Policy Forum Pod mini-series on work, principal founder of the field of feminist economics Marilyn Waring joins us to talk about what society values and why. Gross domestic product (GDP) is often held up as the key metric of national economic performance, despite decades of criticism over the extractive, gendered model it represents. So how can policymakers better understand the value of what GDP often excludes, such as the natural environment and unpaid work? How can Australia and New Zealand have a more inclusive conversation about economics? And will time become the baseline for a new economic paradigm? On this episode of Policy Forum Pod, public policy scholar, environmentalist, and former New Zealand parliamentarian Dame Marilyn Waring joins Professor Sharon Bessell and Dr Arnagretta Hunter.Marilyn Waring is a New Zealand feminist, former politician, author, academic, and activist for female human rights and environmental issues.Sharon Bessell is Professor of Public Policy and Director of Gender Equity and Diversity at ANU Crawford School of Public Policy.Arnagretta Hunter is a cardiologist, physician, and a Senior Clinical Lecturer for ANU Medical School. Policy Forum Pod is available on Acast, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Subscribe on Android or wherever you get your podcasts. We'd love to hear your feedback for this podcast series! Send in your questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes to podcast@policyforum.net. You can also Tweet us @APPSPolicyForum or join us on the Facebook group. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Auckland Libraries
Marilyn Waring: Tracking the Vernacular

Auckland Libraries

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2021 34:24


Marilyn Waring delivered the Gala Night oratory at the Going West Books and Writers Festival in 2002, speaking to the theme Tracking the Vernacular. Made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2020, and a former politician, scholar, feminist, farmer, author, academic, and activist for female human rights and environmental issues , Waring is an exceptional and inspiring New Zealander. Her keynote address is wise, compassionate, insightful and witty as she tracks what is her personal vernacular, a vernacular partly expressed through her writing. The address is part memoir and part love letter to Aotearoa. This appearance was the first time Marilyn Waring had been invited to speak about her writing in New Zealand - but wouldn't be the last. The 15th woman elected in New Zealand and one of only four women in Parliament at the time, her nine tumultuous years as a National Party MP boiled over in 1984 when she backed the Labour Opposition's nuclear-free policy, prompting then-Prime Minister Robert Muldoon to call a snap election he would lose. She is best known for her 1988 book If Women Counted, and she obtained a D.Phil in political economy in 1989. Through her research and writing she is known as the principal founder of the discipline of feminist economics. Since 2006, Waring has been a Professor of Public Policy at the Institute of Public Policy at AUT in Auckland, New Zealand, focusing on governance and public policy, political economy, gender analysis, and human rights. Since 2006, Waring has been a Professor of Public Policy at the Institute of Public Policy at AUT in Auckland, New Zealand, focusing on governance and public policy, political economy, gender analysis, and human rights. She has taken part in international aid work and served as a consultant to UNDP and other international organisations.

The Women Talking About Learning Podcast

Jayne Harrison is a qualified executive coach and has over 25 years' experience in the people development field in mainly leadership and career development.  She is interested in what makes people tick, why they choose the work they do and general wellbeing.  She has just launched the #WellbeingWednesdays series which examines how to stay well (particularly during a pandemic) paying attention to mind, body, soul and work. She has recently qualified in vegan nutrition and in her spare time she's usually in the kitchen, ‘veganizing' her favourite dishes.  Food is definitely a passion, as are her dogs and dancing (and sometimes all at once on a Friday listening to Radio 1). LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jayneharrisonpeakpotential Twitter:  @JayneHarrison3 Web:  https://peakpotentialltd.co.uk/   Lorna set up little tent because she believed that there was a better way for business to work for people and to shape work for herself. Little tent offers coaching and people and change consultancy to organisations and leaders who want to make positive, impactful, change happen. She describes Little Tent as her passion project, livelihood and contribution to making work better for everyone. When she's not running Little Tent, she sings a bit – a passion that's brought more to her world of work and beyond than she would ever have imagined. Website: Littletent.co.uk Twitter: @reallornaleeson https://www.linkedin.com/in/lornaleeson/ Episode Links: Scott Galloway Passion Video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jIia7aXins Cal Newport blog - https://www.calnewport.com/blog/ Brené Brown - https://brenebrown.com/ Judith Glaser Conversational Intelligence - https://www.conversationalintelligence.com/images/pdf/Sums-Conversational-Intelligence.pdf Susan David - https://www.susandavid.com/ Marilyn Waring - https://www.marilynwaring.com/ Mariana Mazzucato - https://marianamazzucato.com/ Amy Cuddy - https://ideas.ted.com/inside-the-debate-about-power-posing-a-q-a-with-amy-cuddy/ Kim Scott Radical Candour - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLBDkz0TwLM Ikigai - https://jaspreettehara.org/2019/06/21/ikigai/ Life Wheel - https://positivepsychology.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/The-Wheel-of-Life.pdf   ================================ You can contact Women Talking About Learning through our website, womentalkingaboutlearning.com We're on Twitter @WTAL_Podcast You can buy us a coffee to support Women Talking About Learning via Ko-Fi. Or you can email us via hello@llarn.com.

Mansplaining Feminism
Interview Episode - Professor Marilyn Waring - Well-being over Growth

Mansplaining Feminism

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2020 35:56


A hugely influential feminist, economist, and politician, Professor Dame Marilyn Waring spoke with us about her worries about the lack of change, her hopes for the future, and ways in which she has helped shape our understanding of measuring success in public policy. Her 1988 classic, If Women Counted, her 1988 classic, will be discussed in Season 2 of Mansplaining Feminism.

growth professor marilyn waring
On The Engender
On the Engender: The Briefing Ep. 5

On The Engender

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2020 23:15


The fifth episode of The Briefing explores the Public Sector Equality Duty and how it (doesn't) work for women's equality. Alys and Amanda are joined by Engender's Emma Ritch and Marsha Scott, CEO of Scottish Women's Aid.  Note: Unfortunately Marsha's tech failed halfway through, but we promise we'll invite her back soon! The recommendations from this episode were: The Learned Fangirl blog and Twitter, Fangirls by Hannah Ewens, and Sacha Judd's talk on fandoms and STEM. Marilyn Waring's 'Who's Counting?' film and Ted Talk on unpaid work. Small Island by Andrea Levy National Women's Soccer League challenge cup - you can watch the past matches with a 7 day free trial from CBS, or highlights on the NWSL website.    Read the transcript of the podcast here.  This podcast was produced by Amanda Stanley, for Engender. The jingle was performed by Bossy Love.

Going West Audio
Marilyn Waring Oratory at Going West

Going West Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 34:25


Marilyn Waring delivered the Gala Night oratory at the Going West Books and Writers Festival in 2002, speaking to the theme Tracking the Vernacular. Made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2020, and a former politician, scholar, feminist, farmer, author, academic, and activist for female human rights and environmental issues delivers, Waring is an exceptional and inspiring New Zealander. Her keynote address is wise, compassionate, insightful and witty as she tracks what is her personal vernacular, a vernacular partly expressed through her writing. The address is part memoir and part love letter to Aotearoa. This appearance was the first time Marilyn Waring had been invited to speak about her writing in New Zealand - but wouldn't be the last.  The 15th woman elected in New Zealand and one of only four women in Parliament at the time, her nine tumultuous years as a National Party MP boiled over in 1984 when she backed the Labour Opposition's nuclear-free policy, prompting then-Prime Minister Robert Muldoon to call a snap election he would lose.  She is best known for her 1988 book If Women Counted, and she obtained a D.Phil in political economy in 1989. Through her research and writing she is known as the principal founder of the discipline of feminist economics. Since 2006, Waring has been a Professor of Public Policy at the Institute of Public Policy at AUT in Auckland, New Zealand, focusing on governance and public policy, political economy, gender analysis, and human rights.    Since 2006, Waring has been a Professor of Public Policy at the Institute of Public Policy at AUT in Auckland, New Zealand, focusing on governance and public policy, political economy, gender analysis, and human rights. She has taken part in international aid work and served as a consultant to UNDP and other international organisations.

The Panic Pod
Episode 11: Work/Life Balance - with The Repeat Beat Poet

The Panic Pod

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2020 38:44


The Repeat Beat Poet (a.k.a PJ) is a friend of Ella’s from the London spoken word/live music scene. Ella often times reaches out to PJ for advice, as he is a performer with a crazy schedule who always seems to keep his work in balance with his own mental health. After many frank conversations about how to keep passion and play in line as independent artists, this is Ella and Repeat Beat’s first recorded discussion aiming to shed light on the topic. The conversation is for anyone who struggles with overworking or swinging between apathy and fits of passion for what they do to make a living. We’ll be back next week with a normal episode between Joshua and Ella. Repeat Beat Poet: https://www.instagram.com/repeatbeatpoet/ Things we talked about: Imaginary Millions - London jam night / music collective https://www.imaginarymillions.com Three Different Rooms: The Disney Method - Creative Strategy https://online.visual-paradigm.com/knowledge/disney-creative-strategy/what-is-disney-creative-strategy/ Ecofeminism Documentary - If Women Counted (Book) or documentary (Who’s Counting?) by Marilyn Waring http://www.nfb.ca/film/whos_counting/ Repeat Beat Broadcast (Radio Show) https://www.mixcloud.com/ThreadsRadio/playlists/the-repeat-beat-broadcast/ Silvertongue: Beneath the Surface https://silvertonguesax.co.uk/ Please get in touch with us if you would like to submit a question to be discussed on the podcast: talk@thepanicroom.co.uk

TED Talks Daily
The unpaid work that GDP ignores -- and why it really counts | Marilyn Waring

TED Talks Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


If you: do laundry, are (or have been) pregnant, tidy up, shop for your household or do similar labor, then by GDP standards, you're unproductive. In this visionary talk, economist Marilyn Waring seeks to correct the failures of this narrow-minded system, detailing why we deserve a better way to measure growth that values not just our own livelihood but the planet's as well.

gdp counts unpaid marilyn waring
TEDTalks 뉴스와 정치
GDP가 간과하는 무급 노동, 그 중요성에 대하여 | 마릴린 워링(Marilyn Waring)

TEDTalks 뉴스와 정치

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


우리가 빨래를 하거나, 임신 하거나, 청소를 하거나, 장을 보는 것 같은 노동은 GDP의 기준에서 보면 비생산적 활동에 해당합니다. 이 강연에서 경제학자 마릴린 워링은 이러한 근시안적 시스템의 오류를 바로잡고, 우리의 삶과 환경까지 생각하는 더 나은 성장 측정 방법이 필요한 이유에 대해 자세히 이야기 합니다.

gdp marilyn waring
TED Talks Daily (HD video)
The unpaid work that GDP ignores -- and why it really counts | Marilyn Waring

TED Talks Daily (HD video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


If you: do laundry, are (or have been) pregnant, tidy up, shop for your household or do similar labor, then by GDP standards, you're unproductive. In this visionary talk, economist Marilyn Waring seeks to correct the failures of this narrow-minded system, detailing why we deserve a better way to measure growth that values not just our own livelihood but the planet's as well.

gdp counts unpaid marilyn waring
TEDTalks Politique et médias
Le travail non rémunéré que le PIB ignore -- et pourquoi cela a de la valeur | Marilyn Waring

TEDTalks Politique et médias

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


Si vous faites de la lessive, que vous êtes (ou avez été) enceinte, que vous faites le ménage, des courses pour votre maison ou que vous faites des tâches similaires, alors d'après les standards du PIB, vous êtes improductif. Dans cette discussion visionnaire, l'économiste Marilyn Waring cherche à rectifier les échecs de ce système restrictif, détaillant pourquoi nous méritons une meilleure façon de mesurer la croissance qui estime non seulement notre subsistance, mais aussi celle de la planète.

TEDTalks Notícias e Política
O trabalho não remunerado que o PIB ignora, e por que deveria considerá-lo | Marilyn Waring

TEDTalks Notícias e Política

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


Se você lava roupas, está (ou esteve) grávida, arruma a casa, faz compras para a casa ou algum trabalho similar, pelos padrões do PIB, você está improdutiva. Nesta palestra visionária, a economista Marilyn Waring procura corrigir as falhas desse sistema limitado, explicando por que nós merecemos uma forma melhor de calcular o crescimento que valorize não apenas nossa própria subsistência, mas também a do planeta.

TEDTalks Noticias y Política
El trabajo no remunerado que el PIB ignora y que realmente cuenta | Marilyn Waring

TEDTalks Noticias y Política

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


Si hacen la colada, están o han estado embarazadas, ordenan, hacen la compra para la familia o hacen un trabajo parecido, entonces, para los estándares del PIB no son productivas. En esta charla visionaria, la economista Marilyn Waring busca corregir los errores de este sistema de mentalidad estrecha, y detalla porqué merecemos un modo mejor de medir el crecimiento que valore no solo nuestro medio de subsistencia, sino también el del planeta.

TED Talks News and Politics
The unpaid work that GDP ignores -- and why it really counts | Marilyn Waring

TED Talks News and Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 17:19


If you: do laundry, are (or have been) pregnant, tidy up, shop for your household or do similar labor, then by GDP standards, you're unproductive. In this visionary talk, economist Marilyn Waring seeks to correct the failures of this narrow-minded system, detailing why we deserve a better way to measure growth that values not just our own livelihood but the planet's as well.

gdp counts unpaid marilyn waring
Word Christchurch Festival
Marilyn Waring: The Political Years

Word Christchurch Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 64:15


31 August 2019 | WORD Christchurch Shifting Points of View Marilyn Waring’s new book The Political Years looks at her extraordinary years in parliament. She tells the story of her journey from being elected as a new National Party MP in a conservative rural seat to being publicly decried by the Robert Muldoon for her ‘feminist anti-nuclear stance’ that threatened to bring down his government. Her tale of life in a male-dominated and relentlessly demanding political world is both uniquely of its time and still of pressing relevance today. Waring’s other new book, Still Counting, follows up on her ground-breaking work Counting for Nothing, in which she explained, through meticulous economic analysis, how the success of the global economy rests on women’s unpaid work. Today, many people hope that the shift to a wellbeing approach will mean women’s work is finally valued fairly. But what does Marilyn Waring make of it? In this unmissable session, Waring talks politics, women, and wellbeing economics with Bronwyn Hayward.

RNZ: Eating Fried Chicken in the Shower
Marilyn Waring on her time in Parliament: 'I wasn’t able to stomach the place'

RNZ: Eating Fried Chicken in the Shower

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2019 38:39


Author, economist and recovering politician Marilyn Waring talks to host James Nokise about activism, feminism and the etiquette of eating fried dumplings. Produced by Charlie Bleakley.

Auckland Writers Festival
Number 15: Marilyn Waring (2019)

Auckland Writers Festival

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2019 56:36


In 1975 Marilyn Waring was elected to the New Zealand Parliament as the MP for Raglan. Aged just 23 and only the fifteenth woman to enter Parliament, she served through the turbulent years of Muldoon’s government, including as chair of the Public Expenditure Committee, before crossing the floor to support nuclear-free legislation which ultimately led to the fall of the National government. The Political Years is an autobiographical account of her time at the forefront of male-dominated public life and sits alongside other books including Counting for Nothing and Still Counting. The talented and determined Waring speaks with Jennifer Curtin.

Uncommon Sense – Triple R FM
Interview with Marilyn Waring, on the limits to GDP and how we do not count our largest sector

Uncommon Sense – Triple R FM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2019 32:51


Feminist and political economist Professor Marilyn Waring became the youngest female MP in New Zealand’s history. She joined Amy to talk about the limits of GDP as an economic measure of national success and how it doesn’t count the contribution of women's unpaid work and the inherent value of our environment. She wrote a landmark book 31 years ago, 'Counting for Nothing: What Men Value and What Women are Worth.' We discuss her new book that follows on from it; 'Still Counting.'

Uncommon Sense
Uncommon Sense - 19 February 2019 - Marilyn Waring

Uncommon Sense

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2019 37:08


New Zealand politician, economist and feminist legend Marilyn Waring talks about the limits of GDP as a useful economic measure in her latest book,Still Counting: Wellbeing, Womens Work and Policy-making.

Uncommon Sense
Uncommon Sense - 19 February 2019

Uncommon Sense

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2019 105:59


New Zealand politician, economist and feminist legend Marilyn Waring talks about the limits of GDP as a useful economic measure in her latest book,Still Counting: Wellbeing, Womens Work and Policy-making.Tim Norton, Chair of Digital Rights Watch, talks about Australia's controversial encryption legislation and cybersecurity breaches at Parliament. Plus Ben Eltham on federal politics.

Grid Lines
4 Marilyn Waring

Grid Lines

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2018


Marilyn Waring raised the alarm that women's unpaid labour is invisible in GDP. She pointed a challenge directly to the UN, and every bureaucracy around the world that used their system. And her book, Counting for Nothing, inspired a new generation to add a potent dose of unadulterated feminism to economics.

200 Women: The Listening Ground by Westpac

Inspiring someone is one of the greatest gifts you can give. It’s not a tangible thing, you can be inspired to do many things – ethical business, raising awareness, improving people’s living and working conditions or simply to love more. We hope you feel inspired listening. In this episode, you’ll hear from: Valerie Van Galder, a former film producer who now runs Depressed Cake Shop to raise awareness and funds to help those suffering with mental health issues. Marilyn Waring, a former member of the New Zealand parliament and professor of public policy. Miranda Tapsell, an actor and Indigenous rights activist. Bobbi Brown, the founder of Bobbi Brown Cosmetics and the recently launched Pretty Powerful Campaign for Women & Girls. Damaris Coulter, a restaurateur and community organiser. Collette Dinnigan, Australian-based fashion and interior designer. Karen Walker, acclaimed kiwi fashion designer. Eva McGauley, an anti-sexual violence activist. She has been diagnosed with terminal nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Zoleka Mandela, an author, cancer survivor and recovering addict. She is the grandchild of Nelson Mandela and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. Ruchira Gupta, a former journalist and award-winning documentary filmmaker. She works to resist and end sex trafficking in India. Sarah Beisly, co-founder of a leather goods workshop that offers employment to women seeking to free themselves from sex work in India.

GreenplanetFM Podcast
Caroline Robinson: Regenerative Development - the Art, Science & Beauty of Co-evolving Place & People

GreenplanetFM Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2017 59:04


Caroline Robinson is the founder of Cabal, a creative studio exploring and advancing new pathways for regenerative development. Results of Cabal’s public art collaborations can be seen across Auckland City and beyond. The whole living systems practice behind these artworks, informs Cabal’s wider role as an integration facilitator, contributing to complex city-making projects by supporting project teams to grow the capability to work in full reciprocity within their unique community and place. I first met Caroline at Dave Breuer’s - Anew NZ ‘group mind gathering’ - at AUT - Auckland University of Technology.  There she had a huge blank art board at this visionary function that let her visually translate the stories that speakers covered, to that very engaged audience.  This enabled people to see how intellectual concepts and mental information can be elegantly transcribed into a visual form that was holistic in intent and that lead us to explore as participants, how we the people can become involved and renew our whole country. Based on Measures of Genuine Progress (and “genuine economic success”), as a challenge to the misuse of GDP, via the measurements of social, cultural, economic, environmental and governance wellbeing - with the public shared visions determining the goals of wellbeing.  (See at the bottom of this posting.) Measuring Human Joy and Contentment Dr Ron Coleman from Canada was at this function to explain and Dr Marilyn Waring http://www.marilynwaring.com/ as an Ex National Party Member of Parliament (who went/rebelled against the National Prime Minister Robert Muldoon, many years previously) introduced Ron as she had been doing work on the ’true’ cost of living index and how do we measure success - particularly our decision making process at a governmental level. Known as the ‘genuine progress indicators' - meaning not just managing the gross national product and financial benefits from across the country - but also understanding what makes us flourish - what brings joy and happiness and peace as well as bringing balance in a holistic way. Today, Caroline as an extraordinary creative artist - is still very much aligned with the notion of ‘genuine progress indicators’ she remains very interested and curious about what are the conditions that we need for life to flourish within our homes, within our communities, our nation and our planet. Community & Connection Asking the question? - How do we create a flourishing for all of life - including ourselves? Food being a conductor of getting together to eat and share … gatherings around eating and sharing - being a universal common ground - and in the world of today that needs to be more unified - Caroline's focus is - how do we bring this all together? So what is it we need to improve? Like how do we re relate to each other - connect the fragmentation and those who have been isolated from each other?  How do we best do this? So that we are working all together as a more dynamic whole? Because the processes of regeneration of rebirthing of healing is becoming paramount as there's a lot that is out of balance and in crises - there is much that needs to be addressed. So what is the journey we need to take to come back into wholeness and that everybody has a role to play in this. And with the experience and the practices that she brings to the conversation - The Land and Sacred Place Caroline is very aware of place and the historical implications of how did that particular area come into being - the terrain, the living matter, the water sources and courses - the Maori tribes or iwi that were present prior to the coming of the white man - the sacredness of life over a very broad context . That there are many areas of land in Auckland that housing and buildings sit on - yet underneath these houses are a hidden creeks where a spring once was. That in today’s urbanised sprawl a little rivulet - or tiny creek, can be a wonderful play area for young children - where the water is clear, healthy and cool. Kids can see their reflection, see the stones or marine flora around it, maybe cockabullies or kura - freshwater crayfish - yet today’s developers will most probably put pipes in this area and pipe all the water away underground and thus the stereotyped boring industrial housing complex - hypnotises us into a thousand high priced houses looking basically the same, on a treeless landscape - scraped of nature - is the NZ culture of homogenous sameness? Auckland Connection -Tamaki Makaurau Coming from a Taranaki farm near Stratford in the rural landscape, that had many different animals - gave her a deeper sense of nature and its richness. That when she arrived in high density housing Auckland gave her cause for reflection. Tamaki Makaurau - Auckland, gave her another understanding of place - of the Maori, the mauri (essence) and going deeper and feeling the grief of the landscape and ecology of what has been lost - in the vast forest of what was once Auckland and the covering up of water courses or arterial waterways by burying them and piping that water to the sea as per the Horotiu stream for example that used to run down the centre of Queen Street in Auckland. That there are springs or puna that are even very close to the PlanetFM radio station that emanates pristine water that bubbles up out of the volcanic rocks and lava - very pure water - and there are around 51 volcanoes that comprise the whole city of Auckland. With numerous cones that we can climb, dotted around the city. Public Domain and Community Involvement Caroline has a feeling for public domain and community projects She has been involved in the Panmure and Glen Innes suburbs of Auckland for the master plan for the town centre - bringing story of people and place, including geological and ecological activity so as to define and development projects. In this process - getting to know each other as humans is so very critical. if we are to develop trust - mana - wairua and mauri - all are integral to deeper connection. Living Earth Papatuanuku. The mentions Te Urewera in Tuhoe country - as a park with human rights - that for the Tuhoe people and the NZ Government acknowledge at some level that ‘the land is a living being.’  Papatuanuku - Mother Earth. Caroline is focused on find a space for people to work out the complexities of the challenges that are facing us - and allow them a way to work themselves out.   Regeneration In this regenerative practice it covers working out complexity - that there is a harmonising energy within nature that has the ability to work things out. Caroline says it is in many ways ‘beyond consensus’ - and in ‘trusting the wisdom of life.' It knows how to work complexity out - all we need is the space to take the time to connect - and communicate - share the breath and weave family - and though this sounds philosophical there is a very pragmatic quality to it - see her sculptures along the motorway in Grafton gully in Auckland - where the artwork has an intention to speak to the resonance of that place and its history and respond to that. She says that the art does not need to be a sculpture - that it can be a building as in the Living Whare in Taneatua - In Tuhoe country - it could be a roading project - even a skyscraper - (Listen) That everything we do - needs to become an art form. That the universe is a work of art - that our planet and all its biota and landscapes are an art form - thus the importance for us as humans is to create our homes on our home planet into art forms that embed beauty and geometry as a reflection of the magnificence of creation and of what we can evolve. Something that Caroline says meets all of our needs at once … be it every building built - every community developed can be part of a regeneration into a greater whole. Economic - social, cultural - spiritual and our human developmental journey they can all coalesce together - it is possible. That the universe is a work of art - and our planet and nature is one too The Living Future Institute - https://living-future.org/ The Living Building Challenge - has a ‘check out test’ where if you are an architect and/or builder you have to use only materials that are ecologically sustainable and non polluting?   They have a red list of 25 chemicals, that cannot be in any building materials.   Firth Concrete in NZ now have a product that is biologically safe and comes up with a big tick. You can now check your home building products - https://living-future.org/declare/declare-about/ ‘A Declare Label’ Answers Three Questions: Where does a product come from? What is it made of? Where does it go at the end of its life? The Regenerative Economy is becoming a renewed mantra for today and tomorrow. https://medium.com/@designforsustainability/towards-a-regenerative-economy-bf1c2ed6f792 Regenerative Building - One being finalised in the Wynyard Quarter here on Auckland Waterfront   Educational Centre for Sustainable Coastlines.  http://sustainablecoastlines.org/the-flagship/ Biophilia - living in accord with your home that is embedded in nature and all of life.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biophilia_hypothesis This interview covers Homelessness too. The amount of homeless in this country is a crisis here in NZ.  That there are ways forward on this important issue for people to have a home and be safe and secure  Not only warm and dry homes but homes that become temples of belonging - places where we can really belong and be and developed ourselves …   We can do many things, we can build good homes, we know how to live on and with the land - grow gardens and quality food - let’s have a conversation about the larger NZ - where we all live.  So that we are really regenerating life. (Listen) Omaru stream Glen Innes  Auckland - One of the few remaining streams that have not been piped and buried.     https://www.watercare.co.nz/SiteCollectionDocuments/AllPDFs/Glen_Innes_Matters_Feb_2017.pdf “Ko au te awa, ko te awa ko au." The whakatauki above, translated into English, says ‘I am the river and the river is me' Call to Action Caroline says: “climate change is a deadline for humanity …” http://www.cabal.co.nz/ Introduction to Regenerative Development (5 short videos) https://vimeo.com/album/4650028 As per in the introduction of Dr Ron Coleman - Genuine Progress Indicators. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genuine_progress_indicator

Language of Bromance
107 Hide The Bill

Language of Bromance

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2016 62:15


There are a handful of things that can get you in trouble in life such as Friends, Women and booze.  During a magical time in 1984 in a land called New Zealand there was a Prime Minister by the name of Sir Robert Maldoon.     During 1984 Sir Robert had a bill that was going to be opposed by Marilyn Waring.  Instead of letting the government do it’s thing Sir Robert called for a Snap Election.  The kicker is he did this on TV visibly intoxicated.     Richard and Shawn take the idea of a drunk prime minister and run with it.  By run we mean they pretend t [...]

Glasgow Centre for Population Health Podcast
GCPH Seminar Series 2014-2015 - Lecture 3. Economics of Dignity (audio)

Glasgow Centre for Population Health Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2015 55:20


In Lecture 3 of the 2014-2015 Seminar Series, Marilyn Waring, Professor of Public Policy AUT University, Auckland New Zealand, delivers a presentation on the Economics of Dignity. The dignity discussed concerns those people who are care givers and in particular, children and the question of children's agency. Professor Waring relates this to the new provisions in Scotland for carers and young carers and poses questions about their dignity.

Humanities Lectures
NCPACS: Public Conversation: Professor Kevin Clements with Marilyn Waring

Humanities Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2014 90:40


Professor Kevin Clements talks to Marilyn Waring, development consultant, academic, writer and former National Party MP who triggered the 1984 snap election when she refused to support her own government in the vote against an opposition-sponsored anti-nuclear bill. Her best known work, "If Women Counted", also published under the title "Counting for Nothing", describes how economic orthodoxies exclude most of women's productive and reproductive work. In this conversation, Professor Clements seeks to explore what triggered Marilyn's interest in peace, justice and human rights. 21 July 2014

Humanities Lectures
NCPACS: Public Conversation: Professor Kevin Clements with Marilyn Waring

Humanities Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2014 90:48


Professor Kevin Clements talks to Marilyn Waring, development consultant, academic, writer and former National Party MP who triggered the 1984 snap election when she refused to support her own government in the vote against an opposition-sponsored anti-nuclear bill. Her best known work, "If Women Counted", also published under the title "Counting for Nothing", describes how economic orthodoxies exclude most of women's productive and reproductive work. In this conversation, Professor Clements seeks to explore what triggered Marilyn's interest in peace, justice and human rights. 21 July 2014

Humanities Lectures
NCPACS: Public Conversation: Professor Kevin Clements with Marilyn Waring

Humanities Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2014 90:48


Professor Kevin Clements talks to Marilyn Waring, development consultant, academic, writer and former National Party MP who triggered the 1984 snap election when she refused to support her own government in the vote against an opposition-sponsored anti-nuclear bill. Her best known work, "If Women Counted", also published under the title "Counting for Nothing", describes how economic orthodoxies exclude most of women's productive and reproductive work. In this conversation, Professor Clements seeks to explore what triggered Marilyn's interest in peace, justice and human rights. 21 July 2014