Upload
vohanh
View
215
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 1
Friday 1st to Sunday 3rd September, 2017 3-day conference and grassroots economics fiesta – South Bank, Brisbane
Building a New Economy for Australia
KEY DATES
• Conference is hosted Friday
1st to Sunday 3rd September
• Extra evening events are held
on Thursday 31st August,
Friday 1st and Saturday 2nd
September
• Site visits around Brisbane are
taking place Saturday night
2nd September, and Monday
4th September
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
(now closed)
WEBSITE
www.neweconomy.org.au
FACEBOOK page
https://www.facebook.com/newec
onomyaustralia
FACEBOOK group
https://www.facebook.com/events
/1744412832537351/
JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST
www.neweconomy.org.au
CONTACT US
Today’s dominant economy is built on the foundations of a global industrial and financial system with immense productive capacity, but the extractive nature of which has created extreme income disparity and social injustice and wrought devastation on the natural world.
All across Australia, people are working to create new systems, diverse economies and better ways for our society to live, work, play and care for the environment. Building on the inaugural 2016 conference held in Sydney, the 2017 ‘Building a New Economy for Australia’ conference invites people to come together to share stories of success, address challenges and join the broader movement so we can continue working together to build a ‘new’ economic system.
Please join us for three days of discussions, ‘unconference’ open working spaces, facilitated workshops, site-visits, clinics, training and learning opportunities – as well as academic presentations, games and more!
The 2017 New Economy Conference will:
• Bring together hundreds of people and organisations interested in moving beyond the current unsustainable and unjust economic system that currently dominates Australian society
• Enable people to share, learn, listen, play, and work together to co-create a strong, vibrant economic system that’s fair for all Australians and cares for our precious natural environment
• Launch the New Economy Network Australia
• Co-create powerful new collective strategies for creating positive social and economic change, to achieve long term, liveable economies that fit within the productive capacity of a healthy environment
Proudly supported by:
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 2
PROGRAM - Day 1 - Friday 1st September
Framing the discussions - ‘The Edge’, State Library
8.00 - Registration opens 8.40 -Traditional welcome - Nunakul Yuggera Dancers 9.00 - Open and overview of conference - Michelle Maloney, AELA/NENA 9.20 - “Linking the New Economy to “A24” - an Australian-wide progressive movement”, David Ritter, CEO Greenpeace Australia Pacific 9.40 CRITICAL PARAMETERS FOR THE NEW ECONOMY • “Climate change and Australia’s ecological health”, Ian Lowe • “Relational economics - learning from indigenous economic systems”,
Mary Graham, Kombumerri/Wakka Wakka Peoples
10.30 Morning tea - provided at ‘The Edge’ 11.00 ADDRESSING BARRIERS TO BUILDING A NEW ECONOMY • “Inequality and structural reform”, Richard Denniss, Australia Institute • “The reform needed to build an ecological economy”, Robert Costanza,
Australian National University 12.20 GOOD NEWS ABOUT THE STUFF WE DON’T LIKE TALKING ABOUT • “Challenging growth and consumption,” Haydn Washington, CASSE NSW • “Addressing Population,” Jane O’Sullivan, Sustainable Population Australia 1.00 LUNCH BREAK - people are invited to bring their own lunch, or purchase lunch from one of the many cafes near the venue at South Bank
2.00 POWER, LEADERSHIP AND SYSTEMS CHANGE • “Diversity as resilience - building the post-fossil fuels economy”,
Amanda Cahill, Centre for Social Change • “Technology and inequality”, Darren Sharp, Social Surplus • “'Power and value in the new economy’”, Elsie L’Hullier 3.10 LEARNING FROM THE PAST, LOOKING TO THE FUTURE • “A history of ‘new economy’ movements”, Peter Westoby, UQ • “New economy trends around the world”, Jason Nardi, RIPESS International
and Social Solidarity Europe
4.00 Afternoon tea - provided at ‘The Edge’
4.20 “DOUGHNUT ECONOMICS”, Kate Raworth via skype from the UK
5.00 “Our next steps for building the New Economy Network together”,
Michelle Maloney, AELA/NENA
5.20 PERFORMANCE - Peace N’Choir
5.30 CLOSE OF DAY 1
6.00 SOCIAL DRINKS & DINNER, MUOOZ RESTAURANT, WEST END
• Dinner Speaker: Jo Nemeth “My Life Without Money”
Friday evening 1st September
Social Drinks and Dinner
Muooz Restaurant
54 Mollison Street, West End
$30 vegetarian buffet-style dinner; drinks can be purchased at the bar
** Bookings via our SIDE EVENTS booking page are
essential
http://trybooking.com/RAZP
CES and BrisLETS is inviting all conference delegates to use - or try
for the first time - an alternative community currency for the NENA Marketplace - see our
website for more information
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 3
PROGRAM - Day 2 - Saturday 2nd September and
Day 3 - Sunday 3rd September
Saturday 2nd September All Saturday sessions are held at Griffith University South Bank Campus
(Buildings S02, S05 and S07 on Map 2 – see p.16 of this Program)
8.30 - Open session ‘pitches’ - QCA Lecture Theatre (see p.6 for details)
9.30 - Parallel Session 1
10.30 - Morning break – tea & coffee provided outside QCA Lecture Theatre
11.00 - Parallel Session 2
12.00 - Parallel Session 3
1.00 - LUNCH – people are invited to bring their own, or purchase lunch from
one of the many cafes at South Bank
** Visit the pop-up info booth - New Economy Support Centre, Ship Inn **
2.00 - Parallel Session 4
3.00 - Parallel Session 5
4.00 - Afternoon break – tea & coffee provided outside QCA Lecture Theatre
4.20 - Parallel Session 6
5.20 - Close of Day 2
5.30 to 9pm – CONFERENCE DINNER & SITE VISIT — FOOD CONNECT
Sunday 3rd September Sunday morning sessions (9am to 12.30pm) are held at Griffith University
South Bank, (Buildings S02, S05 & S07 on Map 2 – see p.16 of this Program
9.00 - ‘Building the New Economy Network’ - QCA Lecture Theatre –
everyone’s invited to contribute to building NENA’s 2017-2019 Strategies
10.00 - Parallel Session 7
11.00 Morning break – tea & coffee provided outside QCA Lecture Theatre
11.30 Parallel Session 8
12.30 - 2pm - a lovely long lunch break, to give everyone time to return to
‘The Edge’ for the final conference sessions. People are invited to bring their
own lunch or purchase it from one of the many cafes at South Bank
Sunday afternoon sessions (2pm - 4pm) are held at ‘The Edge’, State Library
Building the New Economy Network (see p.5 for information)
2.00 – 3pm - An overview of issues and priorities identified throughout the
conference, for integrating into new economy strategies. Includes feedback
from the strategy sessions facilitated by the NENA Steering Group (see p.5)
3.00 - 4pm - Official launch of the New Economy Network Australia; next
steps in building the new economy network; announce 2018 Conference
4.00pm CLOSE OF CONFERENCE
Wrap up drinks at the Ship Inn
Saturday Evening 2nd September
Conference Dinner + site visit + arts projection
Food Connect, $70 3 course organic meal
5.30pm charter bus picks up delegates from QCA Lecture Theatre
6-7pm site visit and presentation by Rob Pekin
7pm Dinner and launch of Organic and Regenerative Investment Coop (ORIcoop)
9pm charter bus takes participants back to South Bank
** Bookings via our SIDE EVENTS booking page are
essential
http://trybooking.com/RAZP
Grassy square next to QCA Theatre
All day Saturday + Sunday morning
Use your LETS currency to buy great food and hand-made crafts, or get a massage (and even a haircut!)
NENA Market Place and Outdoor Economics Fiesta Grassy square next to QCA Theatre – Saturday 2nd September
Use your LETS currency to buy hand-made crafts, take a yoga class or even get a massage!
* * Visit our website for more information **
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 4
1. Friday 1st September – Muooz Restaurant, West End (short walk from Day 1 Conference Venue),
Social Drinks and Day 1 Dinner- 6pm – $30 per person (price includes entrée and main)
2. Saturday 2nd September – Conference Dinner - Food Connect, Salisbury. Organic Dinner, Site Visit,
Arts Projection and Brisbane launch of the Organic and Regenerative Investment Coop (ORIcoop) - 5.30pm.
Delegates will be picked up from QCA Lecture Theatre via charter bus, taken to the Food Connect Hub and
returned to South Bank by 9pm - $70 pp (price includes 3 course meal + entertainment + transport costs)
3. Monday 4th September - Day trip to Stradbroke Island, to join a Cultural Walk hosted by Quandamooka
people and learn about First Nations People’s businesses and economic transition strategies on Stradbroke
Island. The day trip includes charter bus pick up from South Bank at 7.30am, ferry tickets, cultural walk
and presentation about indigenous businesses. Delegates will be returned to South Bank by 5.30pm
Monday afternoon. Participants are invited to bring their own lunch or purchase lunch from a café at
Stradbroke Island. Limited to 35 people - $80 per person.
4. Monday 4th September – 10am - 12noon - Site Visit to UCS, Brisbane Workers Community Centre,
2 Latrobe Terrace, Paddington. Participants will be given a brief presentation about the 50-year history of
the Union Cooperative (UCS) and its plans to redevelop its Paddington property into a co-operative owned
and operated, ESD&R designed 'green building' and social enterprise complex. Participants are invited to
find their own way to the venue by 9.45am, for a 10am start. Limited to 30 people – no cost.
More information about each of these side events can be found on our website:
https://neweconomy.org.au/2017-conference/side-events/
(Photo: North Gorge Walk, Stradbroke Island)
Conference Side Events Details about all side events can be found our website
(All side events now fully booked)
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 5
Building the Network How can you get involved and be part of the New Economy Network Australia?
(1) Join a 1 hour session at the conference, to share your views about important strategies and work plans for NENA During the conference, everyone’s invited to join a 1 hour, facilitated workshop, to provide your input to creating effective strategies for NENA’s work. This is your opportunity to work with members of the NENA Steering Group (Michelle Maloney, Amanda Cahill, David Thompson, Bronwen Morgan, Darren Sharp, Alan Reid and Jose Ramos) and NENA Working Groups, to provide your ideas and suggestions and get involved.
On Saturday 2nd and Sunday 3rd September, there are THREE IDENTICAL 1 HOUR SESSIONS being hosted at the conference. You’re invited to join one of these sessions, to provide your input to NENA strategies. You’ll also have the chance to hear about the A24 Progressive Initiative and connect with their work. The 1 hour sessions are as follows:
o Saturday – Parallel Session 4, from 2pm to 3pm, Room S02_3.30 o Sunday – first session of the day, 9am to 10am, QCA Lecture Theatre o Sunday – Parallel Session 8, from 11.30am to 12.30pm, Room S02_3.30
(2) Join a NENA working group meeting at the conference
Since our first conference in August 2016, we’ve had around a dozen working groups meeting via
skype and conference calls, building their own projects and ideas for the conference and the
network. If you’d like to learn about working groups, or join a discussion, you can visit the
Noticeboards that will be set up near registration at the conference. A number of working groups
will be hosting discussion sessions at the conference, including: NENA Qld Working Group, NENA
NSW Working Group, the Ecological Economics Working Group and the Indigenous Economics
Working Group
(3) Work with our ‘Conference Bumblebees’ who are chatting to people throughout the conference.
A number of people will be working as ‘idea pollinators’ during the conference. We’ll introduce Tirrania Suhood and her team on the Friday morning of the conference, and invite everyone to chat with these cheerful ‘bumblebees’ as they move around the 3 day conference, connecting people and ideas. The bumblebees will also give feedback at the final session of the conference on Sunday.
(4) Participate in the final session at the conference, where we discuss strategy ideas for NENA and
launch the network On Sunday 3rd September, in the final plenary session (2pm to 4pm), we’ll bring the whole conference delegation back together at ‘The Edge’ (State Library). This final session of the conference will provide feedback about the facilitated strategy sessions and discuss next steps for the network. We’ll then officially launch NENA and announce details about the 2018 Conference.
(5) AFTER the conference, the conversations and work will continue – we hope you’ll join us and stay involved with NENA. Email us anytime: [email protected]
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 6
Open sessions/unconference sessions Opportunities for people to create open sessions and discussion groups at the conference
(Open Sessions will be allocated rooms in Building S07, Room 2.17 and Room 2.19)
A number of opportunities will be created at the conference to enable people to create open sessions or ‘unconference’ sessions, including the following:
• On Day 1, Friday 1st September, noticeboards at the venue will be available for people to share unconference proposals. Announcements about the process for unconference sessions will be shared throughout the day on Friday 1st
• On Day 2, Saturday 2nd September, a special 1 hour, open mic session has been set aside from
8.30am to 9.30am in the QCA Lecture Theatre, for people to give a 2-3 minute ‘pitch’ about their proposed open session. The ‘pitch’ will enable people to share their ideas for their session and invite others to join them
• Two extra rooms have been set aside for Saturday (all day) and Sunday (morning only) of the
conference (Building S07, Rooms 2.17 and 2.19), for the unconference sessions. The room allocations will be available on the noticeboards outside the QCA Lecture Theatre Saturday morning.
If you have any questions, please email: [email protected]
(Photo: Clem Jones Promenade, South Bank, Brisbane)
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 7
PARALLEL SESSION 1 - Saturday 2nd September - 9.30am to 10.30am (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38 Building S02, Room 6.37 Building S02 Room 3.30 Building S02, Room 3.31 Building S02, Room 3.12
1.1 PANEL DISCUSSION - Building the Network: lessons from overseas
partners
1.2 WORKSHOPS - 2 x 25 minutes
1.3 PRESENTATIONS – Cities in the New
Economy
1.4 PRESENTATIONS - Ecological Economics - growth and population
1.5 PANEL DISCUSSION - Community currencies
1.6 PRESENTATIONS - Subjective experience
Mike SANDMEL, New Economy Coalition, USA
(via Skype)
The Earth Charter’s Global Responsibility Challenge: radical implications for
economic order & integrity - Richard MOCHELLE
The Next Urban Paradigm: Cohabitation
in the Smart City - Marcus FOTH,
Queensland University of Technology
Understanding growth, de-growth and steady
state economics - Haydn WASHINGTON, CASSE
NSW
Currencies for Communities - Alison
BIRD, Anouk PINCHETTI, Annette LOUDON and
Jason LASKY (NENA Currencies Working
Group)
The relevance of the rivers and floodplains of
our subjective experience in NENA - Patricia
MORGAN, University of New South Wales
Jason NARDI, RIPESS International
Joyality Empowering the
New Economy – Rita
GYORFFY and Sara HICKS
Circular Economy Internet of Cities - Steven Liaros and Nilmini De Silva,
PolisPlan
After Growth: Reimagining Economies for the
Anthropocene - Kenneth MCLEOD, University of
Technology Sydney
VIA SKYPE - Buddhism, Contemplative Practice, and Commoning - Zack
WALSH, Claremont School of Theology
Joshua VIAL, ENSPIRAL, New Zealand
Is population growth a crucial focus, or a blame-
shifting distraction? - Jane O'SULLIVAN, Sustainable
Population Australia
Understanding Subjective Dimensions of Communication to Align our Values and the Way
We Work Together in NENA - Paulette BRAY-
NARAI
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 8
PARALLEL SESSION 2 - Saturday 2nd September - 11am to 12 noon (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38 Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31
Building S02, Room 3.12
2.1 PANEL – Municipal innovation in Towns and
Cities
2.2 FACILITATED GAME 2.3 PRESENTATIONS – Ecological Economics
2.4 PRESENTATIONS - Food Systems in the New
Economy
2.5 PRESENTATIONS - Currencies
2.6 WORKSHOP - Community Economics
Fearless Sharing, Networked Cooperativism
and Municipal Internationalism - Darren
SHARP and Stephen HEALY
The evolution of money for the new economy -
Kevin COX
“Living in the Doughnut”: Economic Freedom that
Leaves No-one Behind and Protects the Biosphere -
Mike DOWSON, Metascape
Food sovereignty in the new economy – Emma-
Kate ROSE, Food Connect
Leveraging Currency Models for Status Creating Sustainably, and it Effects
Locally and Globally - Frederick MALOUF,
Quality Status Economy
Practice Experiments and Prototypes in Just Transitions - Peter
WESTOBY, University of Queensland
Great Lakes Community Resources: A new
economy enterprise case study - Joanne MCNEILL,
Western Sydney University
Measuring what really matters: beyond GDP -
Sabrina CHAKORI, Brisbane Tool Library
Sustaining Food Activism - Joel ORCHARD, Byron
Region Food Sovereignty Network and Carol
RICHARDS, QUT
Ecology, community and finance: a new way now -
Liz ELLIOTT
Counting what matters –
Brett CONSTABLE
Transformation of Culture – The Role of Veganism in the New Economy - Scott
WALLACE
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 9
PARALLEL SESSION 3 - Saturday 2nd September – 12 noon to 1pm (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38
Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31
Building S02, Room 3.12
3.1 PRESENTATIONS - Housing and the built
environment
3.2 PRESENTATIONS - Challenging corporate
power
3.3 PRESENTATIONS - Ethics and the new
economy
3.4 PRESENTATIONS - Food Systems in the New
Economy
3.5 FACILITATED GAME - Currencies Trading Game
3.6 PRESENTATIONS - Law and Governance in
the New Economy
What the new economy means for engineering,
energy and the built environment - David HOOD, Beyond Zero
Emissions
Governance in the New Economy: Building
community democracies to overcome corporate
power - Anika STOBART
The role of ethics in the new economy - Haydn WASHINGTON, CASSE
From Commodity to Human Right: A Journey of True Cost Accounting
for a Local Food Business - Rob PEKIN, Food Connect
Trading Floor Game - Alison BIRD, Community
Exchange System and Anouk PINCHETTI
3D Printing and Open Innovation: Copyright
Law, the Creative Commons and the New
Economy - Matthew RIMMER,
Queensland University of Technology
Valuing Natural and Social Capital in Our Built
Environments - Jason TWILL, University of Technology Sydney
Sustainability through democracy – A case study
- Kade HAMALAINEN, Reverse Garbage
Queensland Cooperative Ltd
Buddhist economics and the role of ethics - Peter
DANIELS, Griffith Uni
‘Sharing economy’ approaches to Australian
food security - Denise NOGUIERA, Carol
RICHARDS and Robin MAYES, QUT
Joining up the ‘economic’ and ‘non-economic’ in
(EU) Law - Angela DALY, QUT
Perpetually Affordable Housing for Australian Communities - Andrew PAUL, CLT Associates
Salaries as Profit: can accounting reduce corporate focus on
growth? - Mario PAREDES CAMPANA
The New Economy and the Message of Pope Francis – Phil JONES,
CASSE NSW
Food Next Door: A model for changing local food economies - Deborah
BOGENHUBER, Sunraysia Local Food Future
** Lunchbreak – (1-2pm Sat 2nd) – QCA Lecture Theatre – screening of film “Stories of transformation: a video introduction to
individuals working at the nexus between subjective experience and the new economy” – Patricia Morgan
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 10
PARALLEL SESSION 4 - Saturday 2nd September – 2pm to 3pm (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38 Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31 Building S02, Room 3.12
4.1 PANEL DISCUSSION - First Nations perspectives
of the 'new' economy
4.2 PRESENTATIONS – Blockchain and the future of economic participation
4.3 PRESENTATIONS - Challenging
Consumption
4.4 WORKSHOP - BUILDING THE
NETWORK
4.5 WORKSHOP - How to Build a Cooperative
50 minutes
4.6 WORKSHOP – Cultural narratives in
the new economy
Ross WILLIAMS, Bindal/Juru Community
Cameron COSTELLO, Quandamooka Aboriginal Corporation, Stradbroke
Island
How Governments, Corporations and The Very
Nature of Organisations will be Fundamentally
Reshaped by Blockchain Technology -
Thomas MILLER, Blockchain Academy
Escalation in Consumption in the Growth Economy - Robert CROCKER,
University of South Australia
Building the Network - facilitated session - all conference delegates
invited to input to NENA strategy and future
directions
The Co-Op Builder workshop - Robyn
DONNELLY, Ann APPS and Lyb
MAKIN
What’s the story? Leading new cultural
narratives as foundations for new economies - David
POINTON and Tirrania SUHOOD,
InCollaboration
Anne POELINA and Ian PERDRISAT, Madjulla Inc
Job automation: the catalyst for a peer to peer
blockchain economy - Nathan WATERS, Peerism
Making planned obsolescence obsolete –
equitable product stewardship and
rethinking environmental
economics - Annabelle NILSSON, Australian Earth Laws Alliance
Facilitated by members of the NENA Steering
Group
Valentine NONA and Sue KENNEY, Palm Island
Sustainability Hub
Emerging models of digital civics and ethics in a globally distributed economy and their application in an
Australian context - Monique POTTS,
University of Technology Sydney
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 11
PARALLEL SESSION 5 - Saturday 2nd September – 3pm to 4pm (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38
Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31
Building S02, Room 3.12
5.1 PRESENTATIONS - The role of cooperatives
in the New Economy
5.2 PRESENTATIONS - Circular and regenerative economies
5.3 PANEL DISCUSSION – How do we redefine
progress?
5.4 WORKSHOP - 50 minutes
5.5 PRESENTATIONS - building indigenous
businesses and community enterprises
5.6 PRESENTATIONS - Subjective experience
New developments in the cooperative sector – Antony McMULLEN,
BCCM
The Real Circular Economy - Sharon EDE, Post Growth Institute
From the Consumer Machine to the New
Economy: How do we redefine progress and
transition to an economy based on quality rather than
quantity?
Just Transitions for Coal Communities - Ahri TALLON, Amanda CAHILL and Luke READE, Energetic
Communities
Chaired by Ross Williams, Bindal/Juru
Community
Training for the ‘new economy’: defining the local jobs of the future
and developing education and training for the jobs
‘on country’ - Anne POELINA and Ian
PERDRISAT, Madjulla Inc
Locating the female body in the New Economy -
Rebecca CONROY
The relevance of cooperatives principles in organising for change -
Anthony ESPOSITO, UCS (Union Cooperative)
The Economic Biomimicry of Pricing
Carbon: A New Economy for Regeneration -
Delton CHEN, Center for Regenerative
Community Solutions
– Chaired by Anthony JAMES, Rescope Project
– featuring: Michelle MALONEY and Stephen
BRIGGS Australian Earth Laws Alliance; Geoff WOOLCOCK,
USQ; Sabrina CHAKORI, Brisbane Tool Library
Incubating skills development and small businesses - Valentine
NONA and Sue KENNEY, Palm Island
Sustainability Hub
Cultivating Relational Awareness to Support the
Building of a New Economy - Andrew
GREEN
Drawing on Australian historical strategies for a new economy: economic,
industrial, political - Anthony TAYLOR, BCCM
A truly progressive policy proposal (raising
public funds through transaction costs) - Ian
DANIELS
International perspectives
on indigenous knowledge
and business - Eva
WILLMANN DE DONLEA,
1 Earth Institute
The PROSOCIAL process: a practical tool for growing
collaborative groups in the new economy – Paul
ATKINS, Australian Catholic University
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 12
PARALLEL SESSION 6 - Saturday 2nd September – 4.20pm to 5.20pm (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre
Building S05, Room 2.04 Building S02, Room 6.38 Building S02, Room 6.37 Building S02, Room 3.30 Building S02, Room 3.31 Building S02, Room 3.12
6.1 PRESENTATIONS - Supporting enterprises in
the new economy
6.2 PRESENTATIONS - Collaborative and
ethical consumption
6.3 FACILITATED GAME 50 minutes
6.4 WORKSHOP - Values based framing
6.5 PANEL DISCUSSIONS – Local and Indigenous initiatives in the new
economy
6.6 PRESENTATIONS - Linking theory and practice in the new
economy
Supporting social enterprises in Queensland - Amelia SALMON - Qld
Social Enterprise Council
DIY home renovation as a collaborative
consumption practice: the role of social media -
Aggeliki AGGELI, Swinburne University
Social Dilemmas Game - Jason LASKY
Values based framing: how to tell the new
economy story - Mark CHENERY, Common
Cause
Chaired by Ross Williams, Bindal/Juru Community
Building a new economy on Stradbroke Island -
Cameron COSTELLO Quandamooka Aboriginal
Corp
An Integral Meta-Framework: Finding our way out of Post-Truth
Politics - Jonas OGONOWSKI & Ahri
TALLON
Financing sustainable food systems - Carolyn
SUGGATE, ORIcoop
Rethinking clothing culture to reduce waste - Jane MILBURN, Textile
Beat
Aquaculture for Indigenous Industry - Thomas HANSON, Ancient
Innovative Solutions
Economy as Human
Creativity (EHC) - Ron
STANTON, Sirius-A
Incubating Coops for the New Economy – Andrew
WARD, Ethical Fields
Ethical Fashion - Susan BANHEGYI, Eco Diziynr
Pty Ltd
Sustainable resilient communities in Rural,
Remote and Aboriginal Australia - Tracy COOPER
and April CRAWFORD-SMITH, The Valley Centre
for Environmental Education & Research Inc
Insights from Machiavelli Regarding Ownership in
the New Economy - Duncan WALLACE
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 13
** Plenary Session – Sunday 3rd September – 9am to 10am – ‘Building the Network’ (repeat session) – QCA Theatre PARALLEL SESSION 7 - Sunday 3rd September – 10am – 11am (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38
Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31
Building S02, Room 3.12
7.1 PRESENTATIONS - government and public
policy
7.2 PRESENTATIONS – Environmental protection
in the new economy
7.3 WORKSHOP – 50 minutes
7.4 WORKSHOP - Energy - Solar Communities
7.5 WORKSHOPS 2 x 25 minutes
7.6 PRESENTATIONS – Trust and sharing in the
new economy
The role of Local Governments in the New Economy - Jonathan SRI,
Brisbane City Council
Australian environmental advocacy organisations and their contribution to
the creation of a new economy - Robyn
GULLIVER
Collaborative Conversations - Caresse
CRANWELL
Solar Gardens Community Cooperatives - Angela JOHNSTONE and Tom
NOCKOLDS, Community Power Agency
Participation income, alternative currencies
and the New Socioeconomy - Robin KRABBE,
University of Tasmania
The New Economy is Trust - Penny ELSEY,
joiningthedots
What role for politics in building a new economy? -
Tim HOLLO, The Green Institute
Environmental protection and the new economy in
Queensland – Liz MURPHY-FORRESTER
Queensland Conservation Council
Building a sustainable global economy starting
from a humble community bank - Gavin
TANG
Cultivating Trust and Building Communities -
Lou BECKERLING
No need for Greed or Hunger: reflections on the third verse of John
Lennon's Imagine - Michael BERNEY
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 14
PARALLEL SESSION 8 - Sunday 3rd September – 11.30am to 12.30pm - (various rooms, Griffith University South Bank Campus)
QCA Lecture Theatre Building S05, Room 2.04
Building S02, Room 6.38
Building S02, Room 6.37
Building S02, Room 3.30
Building S02, Room 3.31
Building S02, Room 3.12
8.1 PANEL DISCUSSION - Energy
8.2 PRESENTATIONS - Education in the new
economy
8.3 WORKSHOP - Law and Governance in the new
economy
8.4 WORKSHOP - BUILDING THE NETWORK
(REPEAT SESSION)
8.5 WORKSHOP – Power and value
8.6 WORKSHOP – New economy lab
Community Energy: Diversity and Democracy
at the Community and Energy Interface - Luke
READE, Energetic Communities, Ella Rose GONINAN, COREM and Will BOOTH, Brisbane
West Conservation Network
Data as a key commodity in the New Economy - Paul
BARNETT, Ethical Fields
New Law, Platform Cooperativism and Law
Careers in the New Economy - Bronwen
MORGAN, University of New South Wales, Ann APPS, Newcastle Law
School, Lyb MAKIN and Duncan WALLACE
Building the Network - facilitated session - all conference delegates
invited to input to NENA strategy and future
directions
Taking back control: Power and Value in the
New Economy: A discussion with Elsie L’HUILLIER, Amanda
CAHILL, Shane HOPKINSON and Sharon
EDE
New Economy Ecosystem Co-design - Anouk
PINCHETTI
The Steady State Economy and High School Education - Phil JONES, NSW CASSE
Facilitated by members of the NENA Steering Group
University of the Third Age: A model of the sharing economy for education - Martin
GELLENDER, University of the Third Age Brisbane
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 15
Map 1 – Overview of Conference Venues (South Bank) and Accommodation in South Bank and the City
NENA CONFERENCE PROGRAM 2017 – Page 16
Map 2 – Conference Venues for Days 2 & 3 (Saturday 2nd and Sunday 3rd September 2017) Griffith University South Bank Campus
Please note – all conference sessions on Saturday (all day) and Sunday morning are in the buildings highlighted in red.
For more information about South Bank, including public transport and eateries, please visit the NENA website: https://neweconomy.org.au/conference-venue/