A Nordic Approach to Affordable Housing | Andrew Scott on ABC News TV Breakfast

"Public housing doesn't have to be high-rise, it doesn't have to be rundown, it can be high quality housing, and is in very many countries in the world, including in major cities like Oslo in Norway and Copenhagen, Denmark."

This interview originally aired on 1 May, 2022. 

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Australia can learn from Nordics on tax: report

Nordic nations deliver high quality services and reduce income inequality by taxing people more and Australia could learn from them, a report says.

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This woman leads the happiest nation on Earth. What will Albanese ask her?

The leader of the nation ranked as the happiest in the world arrives in Australia on Thursday, and it presents a great opportunity.

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Norway leading pack to electrify all car sales in five year

The Norwegian Government’s recent commitment to phase out all new fossil fuel vehicle sales by 2025 is the most ambitious in the world.

Research by the Australia Institute’s Nordic Policy Centre shows Norway’s 2025 goal is bolstered by a package of incentives that reduce the upfront and operating costs of electric vehicles. In comparison, Australia lacks a single national incentive and a national electric vehicle strategy.

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Nordic Countries Show Free Childcare Key to Economic Recovery

The Government’s decision to end free childcare come July is at odds with its own economic goals, as new research by The Australia Institute’s Nordic Policy Centre reveals policies that make it easier for women to choose to go back to work will see the country recover faster from the COVID-19 economic crisis while also reaping billions in benefits for all Australians over the long-run.

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Opinion: Canberra's plan to 'Copenhagenise' city is a good one


by Ebony Bennett
[Originally published in The Canberra Times, 05 October 2019]

Every spring I fall in love with Canberra all over again. After the biting cold of a perfect Canberra winter - which I enjoy until the last month or so - it's uplifting to see the naked trees become leafy and green again, and to watch the cherry blossoms bloom and the days become lighter and longer. When daylight saving begins, I start making promises to myself to ride my bike to work every day.

On Friday nights, I'd sometimes stop for a cheeky glass of wine by the lake.Picture: Jamila Toderas
Picture: Jamila Toderas

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How Iceland encouraged fathers to take Parental Leave

Visiting Icelandic academic Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds on ABC Radio Sydney, discussing her new research on Icelandic paid parental leave – and in particular the importance of fathers/paternity leave.

LISTEN NOW: Ásdís Arnalds on Parental Equity with Fathers Leave, ABC Radio Sydney

Most crucially, this research shows a correlation between the length of leave taken by fathers and their involvement in care after the leave is over. Iceland has enacted a leave scheme providing both parents with three months of non-transferable leave in 2000 (a so-called mother’s and father’s quota).

Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds is visiting Australia as a guest of the Australia Institute Nordic Policy Centre, to present her new research on Icelandic paid parental leave.


Parental Equality with Fathers Leave

Nordic countries have a long history of placing emphasis on policies providing both mothers and fathers with the opportunity to work and care

Visiting Icelandic academic, Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds, spoke on ABC Canberra about how Icelandic laws on paid parental leave encouraged fathers to take paid parental leave and created greater parental equity.

LISTEN NOW: Ásdís Arnalds on Parental Equity with Fathers Leave, ABC Canberra

Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds is visiting Australia as a guest of the Australia Institute Nordic Policy Centre, to present her new research on Icelandic paid parental leave.


Iceland Shows the Way to Parental Equality with Fathers Leave

MEDIA RELEASE | 26 August 2019

New research presented in Sydney today looks at how Nordic countries have a long history of placing emphasis on policies providing both mothers and fathers with the opportunity to work and care.

Visiting Icelandic academic Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds is in Sydney today, as a guest of The Australia Institute Nordic Policy Centre, to present her new research on Icelandic paid parental leave – and in particular the importance of fathers/paternity leave.

The crux of her research most crucially shows a correlation between the length of leave taken by fathers and their involvement in care after the leave is over. Iceland has enacted a leave scheme providing both parents with three months of non-transferable leave in 2000 (a so-called mother’s and father’s quota).

As Iceland has the longest experience of equal quota rights for both parents, it serves as an excellent test-case for whether the law has met its aim of ensuring children care from both parents.

The research focuses on:

  • How the Icelandic law on paid parental leave encouraged fathers to take paid leave which then had an impact on their participation in care of their children.
  • The emphasis on fathers’ quotas, how Iceland encourage fathers to take leave, and why it is important to encourage fathers to take leave.
  • How Iceland went very far when the fathers’ quota was introduced in Iceland in 2000, for many years Iceland had the longest fathers’ quota in the world.
  • The literature strongly supports how encouraging substantial fathers’ leave use is very beneficial for both parents and children, and therefore should now be considered for Australia.

“Australia could readily do what Iceland has so dramatically done, as just revealed in the inspirational evidence from visiting academic Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds. To double to nearly 80% the proportion of parents who report an equal division of care between mothers and fathers for their three year old children is extraordinary,” said Professor Andrew Scott, from the Australia Institute Nordic Policy Centre.

“Australia could do this now by exploring similar policies to expand its current minimal paid 18 weeks maternity leave provision, and by expanding its minimal two weeks’ ‘Dad and Partner Pay’, towards the 3 months leave which is required of fathers in the early stages of their child’s life in Iceland.

“The Nordic countries’ provision of extensive paid parental leave is part of the public investment which is made in the early years of all children’s lives and leads to huge social benefits and lesser inequality, as well as long-term dollar savings later.”

Icelandic Academic Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds is presenting her research at a roundtable event in Sydney today as a guest of the Australia Institute Nordic Policy Centre. The research, ‘The Fathers’ Quota in Iceland for 19 Years: Impact on Work and Care,’ is attached.

 


Employers want trade skills not BAs - Financial Review

The number of people going into public TAFE or private skills training is falling but by 2023 the demand for workers with skills will continue to outstrip demand for workers with university degrees.

Read the full article in the Financial Review