Friday, November 30, 2018

Address World Needs To Hear

My motto is never to hold on to anything. I accept and then let go: not just the negatives, but the praise, too. Or it'll get to my head. 
~Nargis Fakhri 


The Liberal brand is damaged, but Berejiklian has to wear some blame

The Premier's troubles started well before her federal colleagues managed to cause themselves incredible damage.

Geraldine Doogue, Marian Wilkinson, Andrew Olle, and Maxine McKew join previous ABC inductees to theAustralian Media Hall of Fame including Alan McGilvray, Mark Colvin, Phillip Adams, Caroline Jones, Chris Masters and Kerry O'Brien.
Deb Richards the Silent Achiever


EXCLUSIVE: Chinese scientists are creating CRISPR babiesTechnology Review

Free Software Messiah Richard Stallman: We Can Do Better Than Bitcoin Coindesk. Stallman: “We need a state to do many vital jobs, including fund research, fund education, provide people with medical care – provide everyone with medical care – build roads, maintain order, provide justice, including to those who are not rich and powerful, and so [sic] the state’s got to bring in a lot of money. I wouldn’t want perfect privacy because that would mean it would be impossible to investigate crimes at all. And that’s one of the jobs we need the state to do.”



'Secret murderers' handshake': Putin and Saudi leader's G20 greeting goes viral

If Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince was worried about getting the cold shoulder from world leaders at the G20 summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin gave him a warm welcome.



As we prepare to celebrate Thanksgiving in our angry and divided country, let us travel back 150 years, to the Thanksgiving of 1868, a time when the country was far angrier and more divided. Just three years had passed since the end of the Civil War, and resentments still smoldered. The Pulaski Riot in Tennessee and the Camilla Massacre in Georgia were fresh in the nation’s memory. In the victorious North, meanwhile, anti-immigrant sentiment was rising.

That’s what makes the Thanksgiving address of a certain Dr. Marcus Jastrow, rabbi of Philadelphia’s Congregation Rodeph Shalom, so extraordinary. His stirring message still resonates, and if we take it seriously, we will be the better for it.

Jastrow took as his text the 100th Psalm ...

[Shout for joy to the Lord, all the earth.
Worship the Lord with gladness;
come before him with joyful songs.
Know that the Lord is God.
It is he who made us, and we are his;
we are his people, the sheep of his pasture.
Enter his gates with thanksgiving
and his courts with praise;
give thanks to him and praise his name.
For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his faithfulness continues through all generations.]

which he interpreted as a call for national unity:

The principle of freedom and equality to all, the principle on which American institutions are based, calls upon every American to obliterate all differences, both political as well as religious, at the moment of celebrating a national idea. ...



Government says corruption watchdog must protect public servants
INTEGRITY REFORM: The Coalition government has rejected the idea of a powerful federal anti-corruption commission over concerns about the rights of Commonwealth staff but is running out of time and space to respond to mounting pressure for integrity reform with its own proposal.


APS is ageing fast, and its older employees most want to stay
2018 CENSUS: Today’s average federal public servant is female, 43-year-old, an APS 6 in a service delivery role in Canberra. She’s been working for the APS for 11 years and never moved from her starting agency.




Turnbull, Keating team up to rejuvenate the birthplace of bureaucracy
HERITAGE: Lucy Turnbull and Paul Keating will work together to develop a long-term vision for the historic Macquarie Street East precinct, home to some of Australia's earliest public buildings.


ANAOputs the spotlight on measuring efficiency
PERFORMANCE AUDIT: Federal agencies put a lot of effort into measuring effectiveness but "rarely develop indicators of efficiency" these days.


Solving the participation problem for parenting support
RESEARCH: Parenting support programs can reduce the impact of socio-economic disadvantage on children, but only if the parents participate, and often there is no funding for encouraging them.


APS diversity and gender equality contributions honoured at 2018 awards


Critical systems: how will Australia adapt in the future?
FREE BREAKFAST SEMINAR: Join Roland Pittar, Head of Transport Technologies Taskforce and GM Strategy, Geof Heydon, Chair IoT Platforms and Interoperability, and others in Canberra this Thursday. (Partner event)


NSW Treasury to speak at Outcomes Based Approaches conference
Hear from San Midha on understanding outcomes framed thinking and outcomes budgeting in government. Download the conference program here. (Partner link)

Improving the future of service delivery
Take the fear out of 'Big Data'. Cut through the red tape. Alleviate privacy fears.
Join the Data Management and Security Summit to drive future service delivery and optimise departmental performance outcomes. (Partner link)


Why politicians privilege 'real' interactions with the public


Carolyn M Hendriks & Jennifer Lees-Marshment

The call for politicians to ‘get real’ and ‘go public’ is more than just about winning elections. Officials can design engagement spaces to better suit those needs.





Six lessons for a rewarding public service career



Martin Bowles

The Australian Public Service’s valedictory orations of departing secretaries hold a treasure trove of helpful wisdom for all levels of public servants.