Episodes

  • Santilla Chingaipe on Black Convicts: How Slavery Shaped Australia
    Apr 23 2025

    Astrid Edwards interviews Santilla Chingaipe about Black Convicts: How Slavery Shaped Australia, which is shortlisted for the 2025 Stella Prize.

    • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
    • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    28 mins
  • Michelle de Kretser of Theory & Practice
    Apr 21 2025

    Astrid Edwards interviews Michelle de Kretser about Theory & Practice, which is shortlisted for the 2025 Stella Prize.

    • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
    • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    27 mins
  • We are back | Anonymous Was a Woman's NEW Stella Season
    Apr 15 2025

    We are back! Jamila Rizvi introduces a special Stella Season of Anonymous Was A Woman.

    Astrid Edwards, FW book nerd and Chair of Judges for the 2025 Stella Prize, has interviewed the six authors shortlisted this year.

    Astrid interviews Michelle de Kretser (Theory & Practice), Santilla Chingape (Black Convicts: How Slavery Shaped Australia), Melanie Cheng (The Burrow), Samah Sabawi (Cactus Pear For My Beloved), Jumaana Abdu (Translations) and Amy McQuire (Black Witness: The Power of Indigenous Media).

    Interviews will drop before the winner is announced on Friday 23 May 2025.

    • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
    • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    2 mins
  • CHILDCARE CRISIS: Nothing less than a revolution
    Feb 26 2025

    Hey Anon listeners! We wanted to share another podcast we think you'll love about Australia's childcare crisis. It's called At What Cost?

    In the blur of early parenthood, many parents don’t stop to think about how the roles they adopt at home – as the primary caregiver, or as the breadwinner – impact their careers and finances in the long-term. But they do. And when families can’t access affordable childcare, it’s generally women whose job security takes a hit. This fuels gender inequality on a national scale… contributing to the gender pay gap and the super gap. It also leaves real mums like Emma, whose story we hear in this episode, grappling with housing insecurity and an uncertain future.

    Join our host Georgie Dent in our third and final full-length episode as we unpack the costs of the childcare crisis to gender equality and the economy Plus: experts share five key solutions that could help make childcare truly accessible and affordable for all – which would be transformative for our country, and especially women.

    • At What Cost is an FW podcast in partnership with The Parenthood, a not-for-profit with a mission to make Australia the best place in the world to be a parent and raise a child. Join 80,000 other parents and carers today
    • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
    • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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      40 mins
    • CHILDCARE CRISIS: The childcare deserts
      Feb 18 2025

      Hey Anon listeners! We wanted to share another podcast we think you'll love about Australia's childcare crisis. It's called At What Cost?

      When is a choice not a choice? Almost a quarter of Australia’s population is now living in a ‘childcare desert’ - and this scarcity means that many families’ financial and work schedules hinge on being offered a childcare spot in the first place.

      In this episode, we hear from real parents and experts about the near-impossible workarounds for families who can’t access suitable childcare and can’t afford not to work: from regional mum Kelly, who forked out for a private carer when the local childcare refused her son full days of care, to agricultural workers taking their kids to work on the farm.

      • At What Cost is an FW podcast in partnership with The Parenthood, a not-for-profit with a mission to make Australia the best place in the world to be a parent and raise a child. Join 80,000 other parents and carers today
      • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
      • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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      30 mins
    • CHILDCARE CRISIS: The guilt-filled juggle
      Feb 12 2025

      Hey Anon listeners! We wanted to share another podcast we think you'll love about Australia's childcare crisis. It's called At What Cost?

      Australia is known as the “lucky country”. So how did struggling to access affordable childcare become the norm? Amid a cost-of-living crunch, most families say they need two incomes to make ends meet. But with childcare fees in Australia being among the highest in the world, parents are caught in a “cost of working trap”: they can’t afford not to work, but the cost of care is so high it eats into their earnings.

      • Follow At What Cost? on Spotify, Apple, Youtube or wherever you get your podcasts.
      • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development
      • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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      24 mins
    • SPECIAL: How Matildas star Lydia Williams embraced being "too humble"
      Jan 13 2025

      Hello listeners! We're sharing another FW podcast we think you'll love called Too Much. In it, FW founder and managing director Helen McCabe speaks to high-achieving women who overcame suffocating stereotypes, bucked trends, disrupted systems and refused to quit. Women who built careers by forging their own paths.

      Does cockiness make you better at your job? That's what former Matildas star Lydia Williams was told when she rose to the sport's top flight. Williams joins McCabe to reflect on her journey as a Matilda and how she pushed past being labelled “too humble” at key points in her career.

      • Liked this episode? Follow Too Much to hear more

      • Become an FW member to join the movement and fast-track your professional development.

      • Keep up with @futurewomen on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and Threads

      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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      21 mins
    • Aja Barber
      Oct 20 2021

      Aja Barber has pledged to never take a dollar from fast fashion, and in her 2021 book 'Consumed' she explains why.

      She is passionate about racial justice and exposing endemic injustices in our consumer and fashion industries. Aja is also no stranger to campaigning for change. Her Instagram video 'Why Performative Allyship is Triggering', which called out brands and influencers for monetising the Black Lives Matter movement, has accumulated over one million views. The video also put a spotlight on the disparity between fast fashion brand billionaires and their unpaid factory workers during the Covid-19 economic downturn.

      CHAT WITH US

      Join our discussion using hashtag #AnonymousWasAWomanPod and don't forget to follow Jamila (on Instagram and Twitter) and Astrid (also on Instagram and Twitter) to continue the conversation.

      This podcast is sponsored by Hachette Publishing and is brought to you by Future Women. The podcast is produced by Bad Producer Productions.

      See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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      30 mins
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