Anthony Dillon : On Aboriginal Deaths in Custody
Deep Trouble PODCAST
with Dr Mark Halloran
In conversation with Dr Anthony Dillon who is a post-doctoral research fellow at the Institute of Positive Psychology & Education at ACU. His teaching and research interests include alternative conceptualisations of mental health, statistics and psychometrics, applied psychology, and Indigenous health. Dr Dillon identifies as a part-Aboriginal Australian, and we discuss his criticisms of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement and the research from The Australian Institute of Criminology, which shows that Indigenous people are now less likely to die in prison custody than non-Indigenous people.
Listen to all of the podcasts we’ve run to date at troublemag.com or look for us on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Mixcloud, etc.
Sponsored by
Merran Esson : Standing Still and Silently Balancing
June 7, 2020 | troublemagThe Western Sydney University Sculpture Award & Exhibition has been postponed until 2021 due to COVID-19, but the finalists have been announced. Congratulations to: Mark Booth, Jennifer Cochrane, Chris Edwards, Harrie Fasher, John Fitzmaurice, Jim Flook, Martin George, Akira Kamada, … Read More
Hey COVID-19 Thanks for the Good Times
June 1, 2020 | troublemagCallum R. Scott
One afternoon you rock up to your hospo job with a hangover, only to find that it’s closed its doors indefinitely and suddenly you’re unemployed again. With fuck all in your savings account, you decide to drown … Read More
Head On Photo Festival
April 7, 2020 | troublemag1 – 17 May 2020
This year the festival will stage an online version of the event, accompanied by a program of online seminars and events throughout the Festival period. The festival will then work to present a scaled-back physical … Read More
Dear Tree
April 7, 2020 | troublemaga listening experience created by Rose Turtle Ertler
“Dear tree,
Thank you for being here today for me and for everyone,
casting shade and giving a fresh breath
with deep and bold colours and gentle stillness.”
– by a contributor … Read More
Love in a Time of Coronavirus
April 7, 2020 | troublemagby Callum R Scott
And just as the zombie apocalypse kicked in, I quit my job. I’ll tell you why later in the piece. So, now I find myself unemployed at 50, in the middle of a pandemic. This is … Read More
Synthetica : art, technology & us
February 12, 2020 | troublemagDr Cameron Rose
Art and technology are by definition divorced from nature. Art is the product of human creativity and technique; it is an object, image, sound or movement that exists as a unique manifestation of our imagination. Technology comes … Read More
CAN’T DO TOMORROW
February 11, 2020 | troublemagAustralia’s largest showcase of urban & street art
20 – 29 February 2020
This inaugural festival will see over 100 street artists and musicians take over Melbourne’s iconic multi-level warehouse, The Facility, transforming it from top to bottom with paintings, … Read More
The Road to Darwin
December 14, 2019 | troublemagChapter 4 – The Alice
Rolled into Alice Springs, literally: a strong head wind burnt up all the petrol. As the sun set in the west (I presume it was the west because that’s where the sun sets where I … Read More
Terminus : Jess Johnson & Simon Ward
December 8, 2019 | troublemagHeide Museum of Modern Art presents
a mysterious universe of alien architecture populated by humanoid clones and cryptic symbols, explored via a network of travellators and gateways.
2 November 2019 – 1 March 2020
IMAGE CREDITS: … Read More
Arthur Boyd : Landscape of the Soul
December 6, 2019 | troublemagby Alexandra Sasse
Have you had any lessons? The enquiry came from a woman and her friend who had been loitering behind me as I painted en plein air in a local park. It seemed a particularly stupid question, especially … Read More