What kind of country do you want? | Between the Lines
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —The Wrap with Amy Remeikis
What Peter Dutton and the Coalition are offering Australian voters is a fiction.
It’s headlines without substance, chimeras and half-truths that never stand up to scrutiny, but comprehensively misdirects the media’s gaze.
The nation has been in election mode since the beginning of the year, when Anthony Albanese used his January press club address to remind voters of what he had spent the better part of the last three years doing.
Dutton fronted his own quasi election opening campaign launch in Victoria, the state he hopes will help deliver a Labor defeat, complete with a new slogan ‘let’s get Australia back on track’.
If it sounds as though someone in Coalition headquarters ran ‘Make America Great Again’ through ChatGPT with the instruction to make something similar for Australia, but different, congratulations – your neurons are firing in exactly the way someone receiving big money worked to manipulate.
But on the eve of the election being formally called, one has to ask – what track is a Dutton led Australia heading towards? An imaginary fantasy of the 1950s, when ‘strong’ men made decisions and women did what they were told, and migrants were indistinguishable from their neighbours, as long as their name wasn’t printed on the letter box?
The New York Fed DSGE Model Forecast—March 2025
— Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics —Just Power: A Guide for Activists and Changemakers
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
If you are an organiser, a movement builder, a community leader, an ‘artivist’, a student, a social justice NGO worker, a philanthropist, or someone from any other part of the social change ecosystem – this Guide is for you!
This Guide, Just Power: A Guide for Activists and Changemakers, by JASS is based on decades of experience in and alongside movements, and is by and for change-makers of all kinds.
Based on two decades of movement accompaniment and strengthening, the Just Power Guide combines provocative thinking and concepts with tried and tested activities for groups. Several years in the making, this cutting edge Guide supports activists, organizations and movements to be strategic as they navigate increasingly hostile contexts. It provides movement allies and donors with conceptual frameworks and analysis to understand what movements are facing and what they need.
This Guide is intended for use by a wide range of people and groups. We believe that there are many roles to play in terms of creating change. We think about this in terms of an ecosystem, in which movements define and lead change and many others contribute and play important roles.
From Illegal Immigrants to Republican Voters
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —In his address to Congress this month, President Trump boasted—and justly so—of his administration’s astonishing success in stopping illegal border crossings over just six weeks. “Since taking office, my administration has launched the most sweeping border and immigration crackdown in American history. And we quickly achieved the lowest numbers of illegal border crossers ever recorded.” This is no Trumpian bombast: A 94% year-on-year reduction in illegal entries really is an unprecedented accomplishment. It is also a popular one: a majority of Americans approve of controlling the border.
An even larger majority—some 76%—approve of his policy of deporting undocumented aliens who have committed felonies. Even some on the Left like Jon Stewart have been wondering: if ICE knew exactly where to find all those murderers, rapists, drug dealers, and human traffickers, as clearly they did, why then did the Biden Administration never act to deport them? Good question.
The details matter
— —It is exhausting to live in a country in turmoil. With the Trump regime and the Republican Fascists wilding and so many elite institutions bending the knee, it can be overwhelming to pay attention. But I believe we must, if only to keep a record for the future. When it comes time to rebuild a federal state that is a constitutional democracy committed to rule of law and secular pluralism – and I have no doubt that time will come – the people rebuilding need to know who tried to protect these things and the steps they took. For us now, it is important to pay attention to who is trying and what they are doing: we must know who to support, protect, and join with. This brings me back to Judge Boasberg, the federal district court judge hearing J.G.G. v. Trump.
Degrowth’s unhelpful contribution global environmental challenges: A rejoinder to a critique of growth contingency
— Publication: Progress in Political Economy —I write in response to the recent critique by Terry Leahy of my article ‘Beyond green growth, degrowth, post-growth and growth agnosticism’ in JAPE (94, Summer 2024/2025).
While it is great to open this sort of debate, it is crucial, first and foremost, to clarify what is being argued. My article in JAPE should not be characterised as making an argument for ‘green growth’ – which is a position I reject as being poorly formulated, overly rigid and lacking in qualification and nuance. The key arguments I put forward in the JAPE article were actually as follows:
Love Notes to Our Social Justice Leaders: A Workbook to Support Your Reflective Leadership Practice
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
This workbook, Love Notes to Our Social Justice Leaders: A Workbook to Support Your Reflective Leadership Practice, introduces key leadership concepts, reflective leadership questions, inspirational and thought-provoking quotes, as well as resources you can use to deepen your leadership practice.
This workbook by Strategies for Social Change is organized into seven chapters by topic, covering subjects such as:
- challenging the mythology of leadership
- practicing emotional intelligence, and
- leading in the context of racism and trauma.
Every chapter includes some foundational information on the topic as well as exercises to kickstart reflection, and quotes to spark inspiration.
Strengthening women’s participation in low-carbon jobs in Senegal: spotlight on the solar energy sector
— Publication: Advancing Learning and Innovation on Gender Norms (ALIGN) —Urbanists Have a Communication Problem, and It’s Costing Us Great Cities
— Organisation: Strong Towns —This article was originally published, in slightly different form, by Iain Montgomery on his Substack Challenger Cities. It is shared here with permission. Images were provided by the writer.
Undemocratic environment laws to silence the public
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —The changes to the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act will reportedly be rammed through Parliament next week as a favour to the salmon industry in Tasmania. They would also benefit gas and coal mines.
The proposal would prohibit third-party civil society organisations like The Australia Institute and Environmental Defenders Office from challenging environmentally damaging projects.
“Weakening environmental laws doesn’t help the Australian community or the Australian economy. It simply boosts the profits of salmon corporations, coal companies and other corporate interests,” said Rod Campbell, Research Director of The Australia Institute.
“Any change that makes it harder for community groups to use Australia’s environment laws is, by definition, anti-democratic.
“This legislation appears to be in response to The Australia Institute triggering a review of the impact of salmon farming in Tasmania’s Macquarie Harbour, where salmon corporations are pushing the endangered Maugean skate towards extinction.
“This isn’t just The Australia Institute’s view, it’s the view of the Federal Environment Department. Documents released under freedom of information reveal that officials told Minister Plibersek that it was ‘likely’ salmon farming would have to stop while a full environmental assessment is done.
“The role The Australia Institute and other NGOs play in environmental decision-making fundamentally strengthens Australia’s democracy.
Fossil fuel subsidies hit $15 billion, as crossbench seeks reform
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —That equates to $28,381 per minute, handed to some of the biggest, most profitable companies in Australia at a time when ordinary Australians are battling a long-running cost-of-living crisis.
As the federal election approaches, independent and minor party candidates have indicated that winding back these subsidies would be a key objective if they are elected into a hung parliament.
Key points:
- Federal Government fossil fuel subsidies reached $12.6 billion, mainly due to the Fuel Tax Credit Scheme which refunds fuel tax to major diesel users
- Major mining corporations are the key beneficiaries of federal subsidies, with the coal industry receiving $1.1 billion through the Fuel Tax Credit Scheme
- State governments provided $1.2 billion worth of assistance measures such as cheap access to infrastructure, gas purchase commitments and handouts for research and development
“Fossil fuel subsidies harm the budget and make climate change worse,” said Rod Campbell, Research Director at The Australia Institute.
“Cutting back subsidies like these, which make the community and the climate worse off, should be a priority for the next parliament.
“It is pleasing to see crossbench members looking seriously at fossil fuel subsidies such as the Fuel Tax Credit Scheme.
“This is a major opportunity to redirect billions of dollars from mining companies like BHP and Glencore, and instead invest this money in health, education and other community services.”
Investigating gender disparities in electrical engineering training: a case study of technical colleges in Zimbabwe
— Publication: Advancing Learning and Innovation on Gender Norms (ALIGN) —The Era of Efficiency Is Here
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —An unexpected line to trace through Christopher Caldwell’s The Age of Entitlement underscores how post-1960s America—high on a new civil rights regime enforced by the federal bureaucracy—evolved into a culture of easy capital and low-accountability work. Caldwell’s warnings about limitless government spending, cheap credit, and extraordinary leniency on personal and corporate debt hint at a deeper transformation that I will make explicit: easy money ultimately begat easy jobs, embedding a sense of entitlement not just in civic life, but also in corporate America. Lax job performance and perpetual punting on profitability became commonplace, normalizing positions unattached to genuine operational needs.
The book’s climax spotlights Ronald Reagan’s decision to cut taxes and increase spending to buoy the Baby Boomers. Rather than halting the runaway habits of endless federal agencies, trimming spending, and repealing harmful laws from the prior generation, the Reagan Administration doubled down. The massive expansion of the administrative state—ostensibly to enforce civil rights—spilled into economic policy: free-flowing money, perpetual government growth, workless jobs, and inflated assets in both the public and private spheres. The federal government, alongside subsidized industries, sprawling corporate giants, and a host of NGOs, served as the unwitting backstop for this risky status quo.
Greg’s budget wishlist
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —On this episode of Dollars & Sense, Greg and Elinor preview next week’s Federal Budget and why the Government doesn’t need to leave so much tax revenue on the table.
This discussion was recorded on Thursday 20 March 2025 and things may have changed since recording.
Order What’s the Big Idea? 32 Big Ideas for a Better Australia now, via the Australia Institute website.
Host: Greg Jericho, Chief Economist, the Australia Institute and Centre for Future Work // @grogsgamut
Host: Elinor Johnston-Leek, Senior Content Producer, the Australia Institute // @elinorjohnstonleek
Show notes:
5 ways and 63 billion reasons to improve Australia’s tax system by Greg Jericho, the Australia Institute (March 2025)
The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode #259
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —The American Mind’s ‘Editorial Roundtable’ podcast is a weekly conversation with Ryan Williams, Spencer Klavan, and Mike Sabo devoted to uncovering the ideas and principles that drive American political life. Stream here or download from your favorite podcast host.
Tren Wreck | The Roundtable Ep. 259
You’re fired. Trump, by executive order, has moved to terminate federal contracts with law firm Perkins Coie for its role in promoting the 2016 Russiagate conspiracy and otherwise influencing elections—sparking fervorous debate in and across the aisle. Meanwhile, the administration invoked the emergency powers of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport members of the violent Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, provoking an activist judge to obstruct the law’s use. Who rules: Congress or courts? The hosts sit down to discuss these ongoing legal battles in government, real battles abroad, and the absurd responses from the Left across the board. Plus, more media recommendations!
Recommended reading:
Time to clean up Australia’s failing, scandal-plagued universities
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —The Australia Institute has recommended an extensive list of reforms to make our once-great university sector more efficient, transparent and democratic – in a submission to the Senate Inquiry into the Quality of Governance at Australian Higher Education Providers.
Australia’s higher education sector has been plagued with scandals in recent years, from wage theft and conflicts of interest, to excessive spending on marketing, travel and consultants.
Yet our university Vice-Chancellors are among the highest-paid in the world.
In 2023, the Australian National University spent around $54 million on consultants. It was later revealed that contracts were awarded to a consulting firm run by a friend of Chancellor Julie Bishop. As the University cut costs and slashed jobs, Ms. Bishop spent $150,000 on travel.
America’s Constitutional Crisis (w/ Katherine Franke) | The Chris Hedges Report
— —This interview is also available on podcast platforms and Rumble.
Mahmoud Khalil’s arrest and detention in a Louisiana ICE facility is a harbinger for a new authoritarian era of the United States. Khalil’s arrest, the capitulation of Columbia University against dissent and protest by its own students and the Trump administration’s threat of stripping the university of $400 million in grants if it does not meet its requests is just one place where the tentacles of fascism tighten their grip.
Dog acts
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —On this episode of After America, Dr Ruth Mitchell joins Dr Emma Shortis to discuss how Canada and Australia have responded to tariffs, what America’s decision to sell out Ukraine means for efforts to abolish nuclear weapons, and RFK Jr’s performance as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
This discussion was recorded on Thursday 13 March 2025 and things may have changed since recording.
Read more from Emma in the latest edition of Australian Foreign Affairs.
Order What’s the Big Idea? 32 Big Ideas for a Better Australia now, via the Australia Institute website.
Guest: Ruth Mitchell, Board Chair, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War // @drruthmitchell
Host: Emma Shortis, Director, International & Security Affairs, the Australia Institute // @EmmaShortis
Host: Angus Blackman, Producer, the Australia Institute // @AngusRB
Show notes:
Brisbane MP Stephen Bates says Australia is facing ‘existential housing crisis’, bold reform needed
— Organisation: Everybody's Home —Brisbane Greens MP Stephen Bates has warned Australia’s housing market is heading towards an economic cliff unless urgent national reforms are made to tackle soaring rents and a broken tax system.
Everybody’s Home hosted the third town hall in its online series with incumbent MPs on Tuesday, where Mr Bates described the crisis as “existential” and said it was impacting people across the country – including many in his electorate of Brisbane, where more than half are renters.
“No one is free from the housing crisis we’re facing in this country,” Mr Bates said. “We have people living out of their cars with their kids … these are public servants who are now in this position where they can’t afford the rent.”
Mr Bates said the current housing system was the result of decades of policy failure.
“This isn’t something that has just come out of nowhere, it’s something that has been building for decades now…we can trace a lot of it back to the slowdown in the build of public housing and tax reforms that were brought in under the Howard Government,” he said.
“We’ve transformed the idea of a house to be somewhere that you live and a home where you raise your family that is now something to be speculated on, and bought and sold … an investment class.”
Mr Bates said $176 billion is “essentially given out as a handout” to property investors in tax cuts while families are sleeping in their cars.
Mission Barbados: The story so far
— Organisation: UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose (IIPP) —
By Mariana Mazzucato, Sarah Doyle, Bridget Gildea, and Luca Kuehn von Burgsdorff
“You need six months to break the habit, one year to build a new habit, and seven years for transformation.” In February 2023, Prime Minister Mia Mottley set out the need for a new economic and social transformation strategy in Barbados. Six months to deconstruct, one year to reconstruct, and seven years to transform.
Fish out of water
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —On this episode of Follow the Money, Eloise Carr, Director of the Australia Institute Tasmania, the Federal Government’s dangerous proposal to get around Australia’s already inadequate environmental protections and why salmon farming in Macquarie Harbour needs to end.
This discussion was recorded on Wednesday 19 March 2025 and things may have changed since recording.
Sign our petition to end salmon farming in Macquarie Harbour.
Order What’s the Big Idea? 32 Big Ideas for a Better Australia now, via the Australia Institute website.
Guest: Eloise Carr, Director, the Australia Institute Tasmania // @eloise-carr
Host: Ebony Bennett, Deputy Director, the Australia Institute // @ebonybennett
Show notes:
5 ways and 63 billion reasons to improve Australia’s tax system
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —When old and new MPs return to Canberra after the election, they’ll have a unique opportunity to tackle Australia’s biggest challenges on inequality, sustainability, health and education.
There is a need for more spending in disability care, childcare, aged care, health care, education and housing. There are also calls for more spending in defence. Regardless of which parties form government after the next election, they are going to need more revenue.
Fortunately, significant revenue can be raised relatively easily, and in ways which will make Australia fairer and safer.
By cutting fossil fuel subsidies, ending the gas industry’s free ride, reforming negative gearing and closing tax loopholes for superannuation and luxury utes, Treasury would raise between $12 billion and $63 billion.
- $12 billion could fund 70,000 extra jobs to improve education, health and a host of other public services.
- $63 billion would enable the government to raise support payments above the poverty line and double spending on education and housing.
Not only would these changes be easy to implement, they’d be popular.
And – after all that – Australians would still be paying significantly less tax than taxpayers in equivalent developed countries.
The Australia Institute’s new Discussion Paper, Raising Revenue Right, has five realistic recommendations for Australia’s 48th Parliament:
Cle Elum’s Costly Mistake: A Cautionary Tale for Cities Under Pressure to Grow
— Organisation: Strong Towns —
A Federal Blueprint for Patriotic Education
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —As the Trump Administration pushes DEI out of schools and colleges, it should incentivize patriotic civic education as a salutary alternative. While curricular mandates from Washington violate federalism—besides the views of the growing chorus of Americans to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education—many federal tools remain available.
DEI, which nominally denotes “diversity, equity, and inclusion,” has come to stand for the full set of anti-American teachings and principles outlined in the January 2021 report of the President’s Advisory 1776 Commission. These include promoting a false history of slavery that inaccurately denigrates the American Founders, praising progressivism and muting the horrors of Communism, and inculcating racist identity politics.
In contrast, the 1776 Report highlights ways Americans can develop enlightened patriotism. The family, inspiring and accurate education, noble stories, solid scholarship, and reverence for the rule of law under our common Constitution of the United States all have their roles.
Roll up! Roll up! This show is a gas!
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —Take your seats, ladies and gentlemen, for Australia’s annual gas pantomime, guaranteed to scare the wits out of struggling consumers.
Every year it’s the same tired script, where the villain is cast as the hero, and crisis is averted in the nick of time. Hurrah! The heating stayed on for another winter. Standing ovation.
Frack that
On Thursday, the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) releases its annual gas statement of opportunities, GSOO as it’s affectionately known. Cue scary headlines and claims of a looming “gas shortage” and a “catastrophic supply shortfall” unless we let the gas cartel unleash more fracking and mining of the fossil fuel.
For media companies, GSOO is manna from heaven — almost guaranteed to deliver a “warning” that, framed a certain way, can scare the bejesus out of people and pull in a big audience. For the gas industry, it’s an opportunity to demand more and more gas expansion and to castigate any government concerned about climate change and the environment.
Nothing short of bull
As Public Enemy sang, don’t believe the hype. There is no gas shortage. Australia has an abundance of gas. It is the third largest exporter of liquified natural gas in the world. Each year, giant gas companies ship offshore far more of the fuel than Australian businesses and households could possibly use. The gas industry uses more of it to liquify the gas for export than Australia’s entire manufacturing industry consumes.
Down the Rabbit Hole on Another William Edmondson Mystery
— —AUSFTA: A bad deal then. Even worse now.
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —At the time, many argued we had paid too much, and US President Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on Australian steel and aluminium shows it can’t even protect Australia’s steel and aluminium from being slapped with arbitrary tariffs.
Those exports will now face 25 per cent tariffs in the United States.
This should serve as a wake-up call that the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA) can’t even do what it’s supposed to do: protect free trade between Australia and its most powerful ally.
AUSFTA was signed in 2004. The Howard Government had pulled Australia into the Iraq War and was dedicated to deepening ties with the George Bush-led USA through a trade deal.
The final text included no major concessions from the US, and, despite Australia’s focus on boosting agricultural exports, the US only gave small and gradual concessions on its otherwise protected and subsidised agricultural sector, and didn’t loosen restrictions on sugar imports at all.
Toward New Gravity: Charting a Course for the Narrative Initiative
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
During the early years of Narrative Initiative, we interviewed more than 100 thought leaders working on narrative change. This report captures some of what we learned.
In early February 2017, we set out on a listening tour of over 100 experts, innovators, and visionaries from a range of disciplines and communities working at the intersection of social justice and narrative change.
This report presents an overview of common challenges, hard-earned lessons, and urgent needs for the field, as well as insights into best practices.
Foreward
The field of narrative change is both emerging and eternal. From mythology to marketing, the human impulse — no, necessity — to make sense of the world, to justify values and bolster beliefs, is innate and immutable. We build, inherit and rely on schematic shortcuts for our own cognitive comprehension and physical survival. We learn codes and internalize signals meant to protect us: which colors and sounds represent safety or danger, whose authority we trust or reject, whose lives and dreams matter.
Humans, as pattern-seeking social creatures, assemble collections of mutually-reinforcing stories, in turn establishing shared common sense and constructing stereotypes about people and places, communities and cultures, ideologies and institutions.
TDS and Fake Constitutionalism
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —Much has been written about Trump Derangement Syndrome, that mental and emotional affliction that distorts its victims’ ability to make measured judgments about the doings of our past and present president. No doubt much more will be written about it, because this malady shows no signs of abating.
One of the worst side effects of TDS is the widespread circulation of bogus constitutional claims. As Trump, the astute politician that he is, has staked out popular positions on many issues of interest to the public, his critics, at a loss for other arguments, routinely say he is trashing the Constitution.
This is a serious problem. Preserving our constitutional system, and the many blessings that flow from it, depends on preserving a correct understanding of the Constitution’s various provisions among the public. But the public’s understanding of the Constitution is undermined by the TDS brigade’s continual reiteration of fanciful claims of constitutional violations.
Trump aiming for contempt of court fight to be on his terms
— —The blizzard of lawsuits against the Trump regime continues apace. The developments today in a relatively recent one, J.G.G. v. Trump, were truly wild, perhaps the wildest in any of the litigation against the regime so far. Ultimately, the best way to understand the executive branch's actions and positions in the case is to see all of them as bid to get the question of executive branch compliance with judicial orders in front of the Supreme Court as quickly as possible, and in a case where Trump is claiming he has vast, unilateral authority because he claims to be acting in the national security context. (He is deploying the same strategy in Perkins Coie v. U.S. Department of Justice.)
IIPP launches Strategic Economics Alliance in Latin America aiming to reshape economic theory and…
— Organisation: UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose (IIPP) —IIPP launches Strategic Economics Alliance in Latin America aiming to reshape economic theory and practice
The UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose has expanded its Strategic Economics Alliance (SEA) initiative in Latin America through a series of convenings in Mexico and Brazil. These sessions seek to reinforce and deepen IIPP’s existing policy work in the region bringing together women economists, policy practitioners, and civil society leaders to advance new economic thinking and translate theory into transformative policy outcomes.
Transforming Narrative Waters: Growing the Practice of Deep Narrative Change in the UK
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
Transforming Narrative Waters: Growing the practice of deep narrative change in the UK provides background on narrative change practices as well as the opportunities and challenges for narrative work in the UK.
The report examines what it takes to design deep narrative change, how to design narrative interventions, and offers recommendations for building more successful narrative change projects in the UK.
While we might win occasional policy battles, these wins are constantly under attack and in danger of being reversed. We win some battles, but we are losing the war. One of the reasons for this is that we are often working against powerful narratives that are embedded in the overarching culture. Thus we also need to look beyond the policy sphere, as narratives are embedded in the larger culture and in institutions. They shape the way in which problems and priorities are identified; they limit the types of solutions that are viewed as acceptable and possible, and determine how certain types of people are categorized and treated. – Brett Davidson
Contents
Introduction 04
Defining deep narrative change 07
What it means to do deep narrative change 14
Current practice in the UK 19
Barriers to practice 32
Recommendations 42
Concluding thoughts 60
Sources 61
Response to the consultation on the National Research Infrastructure 2026 Roadmap.
— Organisation: Open Access Australasia —ANU’s latest scandal shows us why transparency is so important, and where to start
— Organisation: The Australia Institute —The sector is plagued with scandals, from wage theft and conflicts of interest to excessive spending on marketing, travel, and consultants.
Alongside these scandals, Australia’s Vice-Chancellors are some of the highest paid in the world.
A recent Australia Institute submission provides an extensive list of recommendations that would improve university governance.
However, the Australian National University (ANU) has unwittingly shown that a good place to start would be greater use of a powerful existing tool: Senate Estimates.
Last month ANU’s Chancellor Julie Bishop was the subject of questions at Senate Estimates about external consultants and conflict-of-interest processes.
Wilful Acts of Bastardry
— Organisation: Prosper Australia —Narrative Change: A Working Definition (and Some Related Terms)
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
Starting in 2016, Narrative Initiative began gathering up different ways people talk about narrative change, how it’s structured, and how it moves in the world. As our staff—a team experienced in capacity building, organizing, communications, philosophy and culture work—engage partners and practitioners, we’ve found it helpful to highlight existing terms in use and offer shared terminology where we identify gaps.
Narrative change is a practice that draws on many different disciplines. Some have well established standards, like the legal profession. Others, digital organizing for instance, rely on an evolving set of practices to get the job done.
We and many others are doing the work of “narrative change” every day and, depending on where we’re coming from, we talk about it in many, many different ways.
What is Narrative Change?
A narrative reflects a shared interpretation of how the world works.
Narrative change, writes Brett Davidson, “rests on the premise that reality is socially constructed through narrative, and that in order to bring about change in the world we need to pay attention to the ways in which this takes place.”
Rental affordability crisis extends to six-figure salaries
— Organisation: Everybody's Home —Australian renters now need an annual income of $130,000 to afford an average rental, with even six-figure earners facing housing costs exceeding 30 percent of their income in capital cities and many regional areas.
The 2025 Priced Out report by national housing campaign Everybody’s Home shows a single person needs to earn at least $130,000 per year to comfortably afford the national weekly asking rent for a typical unit. An even higher income is required to afford the average unit rent across capital cities.
The report, which analyses rental affordability for Australians earning between $40,000 and $130,000 per year, found rental stress has extended well beyond low-income earners.
Monetary Policy: Forward Looking and Data Dependent in the Face of Uncertainty
— Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) —Renewal of Bilateral Local Currency Swap Agreement with Bank of Japan
— Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) —Overturning Kelo
— Organisation: The Claremont Institute —The Supreme Court’s ruling in Kelo v. City of New London is undoubtedly one of its worst decisions in the past 20 years. The Court gave state and local governments the option to transfer private property from its rightful owner to another private owner, justifying this as a “public use” since it will supposedly promote “economic development.” Kelo is a classic example of activist judges rationalizing a predetermined result—in this case, overturning the Constitution’s protection of private property rights.
The Court’s decision stripped Susette Kelo and her neighbors in the historic Fort Trumbull neighborhood of their property in order to build an “urban village”—a fact Justice John Paul Stevens breezily dismisses in his opinion, which is a thoroughly unimpressive piece of legal legerdemain. Stevens failed to note that the neighborhood would be bulldozed even though he acknowledged that not only had Kelo lived in her house since 1997, and had made substantial improvements to her property, but that “Wilhelmina Dery was born in her Fort Trumbull house in 1918 and has lived there her entire life.” The continued existence of what was apparently a very stable residential area, however, could not be allowed to stand in the way of “progress.” Stevens held that the residents and their homes must be sacrificed in the interest of a supposed greater good.
Definitions of Organising Models
— Organisation: The Commons Social Change Library —Introduction
Here is a list of definitions of different organising models, including the snowflake model, strike circles, distributed network, Ganz model, etc. This list of definitions is from an academic paper published in 2025 in The Organizing Journal, which summarises the first known exploration of the community organising landscape across Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand. The list illustrates the combination and evolution of organising models and approaches mentioned by the survey respondents.
The academic paper was developed from a project by the Commons Social Change Library, Australian Conservation Foundation, and Australian Progress which aimed to fill a gap in understanding how advocacy groups organise in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.
Organising Models
Ganz Model
Marshall Ganz’s organizing model focuses on developing leadership through relationships, storytelling, and strategy.
It emphasizes the importance of building teams, creating shared purpose, and developing the capacity for strategic action. The model combines personal narrative (the “Story of Self”), collective identity (the “Story of Us”), and a vision for change (the “Story of Now”) to motivate and mobilize people for collective action (Ganz 2010).