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FactCheck Q A: are there laws to protect against 'revenge porn' in Australia?

  • Written by Anastasia Powell, Senior Research and ARC DECRA Fellow, Justice and Legal Studies, RMIT University
imageActor and presenter Faustina Agolley speaking on Q&A.ABC Q&A

The Conversation fact-checks claims made on Q&A, broadcast Mondays on the ABC at 9:35pm. Thank you to everyone who sent us quotes for checking via Twitter using hashtags #FactCheck and #QandA, on Facebook or by email.


Excerpt from Q&A, March 6, 2017. Quote begins at 3:10.

I...

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The Science of Leading

  • Written by News Feature Team



The definition of leadership is a relatively simple one that everyone seems to fully understand, yet never agree on. Although there is a textbook definition to leadership, there are so many possible interpretations, you never seem to get just one answer. One of my favorite definitions of leadership is by Kevin Kruse, who says, “leadership is the process of social influence, which maximizes the efforts of others, towards the achievement of a goal”. Using this definition, the ambiguity still remains as to what leadership competencies are needed to create this utopian environment in which the process of social influence can thrive. 

Some argue that the competencies are purely subjective and cannot be quantified. However, the process of effective leadership is in fact a social science. And where there is science, there is a method. Think of it as a formula. The values assigned to each letter may be different, however the formula remains the same. By using a formula: leader x efforts of others = quality of results, we can better isolate the three main factors in defining leadership.

Defining the needs of a leader

Every project and business is as unique as the team placed in the leader’s care. That means the personal and professional attributes needed may be quite different from one scope of work to the next. For instance, what motivates environmental volunteers is usually quite different from the motivational needs of marketing executives. Therefore, it is vital that leadership selections are carefully and specifically made. Promoting someone to a leadership role for the sake of seniority or simply for their knowledge on a subject, can be fatal to the quality of results. It is also important to understand the needs of the leader you choose. No leader is perfect, and when a leader is new to a role, there may be need of support, training and coaching. It is good practice to evaluate your leaders, not just before placing them, but also after, to ensure success.

Defining the needs of a team

Maximizing the efforts of others goes beyond motivation to include inciting action. Understanding the phycology behind this requires much thought and study. In some cases, a team who has been working together for quite some time, may have become complacent. The needs of this team are very different than say a team that was just recently placed together and has no systems or routines established yet. When evaluating the needs of a team, it is important to evaluate the individual needs of team members, but also the group needs.

Defining Success


For this topic, let’s use basketball as an example. When children join their first team, the goal is to learn how to cooperate with others and just have fun. You’ll hear the coach reminding the players of this as they suffer losses. As they get older, the team’s goals shift. The focus now becomes on understanding the rules, concepts, and strategies. Again, a shift occurs as they begin to develop their personal strengths and positions. What a 6-year-old basketball player, a high school coach, and an NBA MVP perceive to be success are all very different. It’s important to clearly understand the collective goal for every scenario.

There will always be a myriad of definitions for exceptional leaders, even amidst exceptional leaders. The trick is to utilize proper methods to identify and develop the right combination of leadership, team, and goal.

 

The fragility of women's rights: how female guilds wielded power long ago

  • Written by Susan Broomhall, Director, Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, University of Western Australia
imageSpinning, Warping and Weaving the Wool (1594-1596) by Isaac Claesz. van Swanenburg. By permission of the Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden

Today is International Women’s Day. The first was held in 1911, after activists Clara Zetkin and Luise Zietz pushed for a day that would bring attention to women’s rights — especially the vote and...

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Unconscious bias is keeping women out of senior roles, but we can get around it

  • Written by Melissa Wheeler, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Melbourne
imageGood luck getting a job if you don’t share the same characteristics as the person hiring you.shutterstock

Most people would not consciously decide to hire candidates based on whether they remind them of themselves. But one unconscious bias – affinity bias – may lead people to favour candidates who are like themselves, research...

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  2. Contested spaces: you can't stop the music – the sounds that divide shoppers
  3. Speaking with: Peter Green on saving the Christmas Island red crab
  4. The eyes have it: how vision may have driven fishes onto land
  5. Snapchat's share price already fading as fast as one of its user's photos
  6. Politics podcast: election report from the West
  7. Is there a test your child can take before getting vaccinated, as Pauline Hanson said?
  8. ABC restructuring: leaner, but hopefully not meaner
  9. Explainer: what are chemical weapons and how do soldiers guard against them?
  10. Why do specialists get paid so much and does something need to be done about it?
  11. Why women make the best stock traders
  12. Australia's almost a world leader in home building, so that isn't a fix for affordability
  13. Five-yearly environmental stocktake highlights the conflict between economy and nature
  14. How to protect your private data when you travel to the United States
  15. Millennials in the workplace: not as different as you think
  16. Hidden fees and the lowdown on Macquarie's latest way to make money
  17. Explainer: what are blood groups and why do they matter?
  18. Company results: how competition is transforming Australia's retail sector
  19. How clergy became scapegoats of the sex abuse crisis in the Anglican Church
  20. The Nintendo Switch breaks convention but lacks a killer app
  21. Please don't do your own research on immunisation; you'll get it wrong
  22. Fake news – a user's guide
  23. The case for renationalising Australia's electricity grid
  24. Love meat too much to be vegetarian? Go 'flexitarian'
  25. Betroffenheit, when the mind and body get stuck
  26. Contested spaces: who belongs on the street where you live?
  27. Colonoscopy: nothing to fear from the 'silver stallion'
  28. How new hepatitis C drugs could tackle liver cancer, too
  29. Tax laws are not keeping up with our globally mobile workforce: new research
  30. Barrie Kosky's Saul: a masterpiece of operatic staging
  31. Trump and Brexit won't kill globalisation – we're too far in
  32. Barnett government looks set for defeat as One Nation looms large in WA election
  33. Contested spaces: we shall fight on the beaches...
  34. Four cultural clashes that are holding East Asian employees back
  35. 'Claim the sky': a new climate movement for the Trump era
  36. The role of pharmacists should be overhauled, taking the heat off GPs
  37. Pop with purpose: in defence of Justin Bieber
  38. Driverless cars, just imagine how we could use them
  39. Scott Morrison says budget will remember the renters
  40. Turnbull rounds on Pauline Hanson
  41. Election fever doesn’t grip WA
  42. The Secret River exquisitely illuminates the unspeakable under the stars
  43. In places where it's legal, how many people are ending their lives using euthanasia?
  44. Former ambassador Jeffrey Bleich speaks on Trump, disruptive technology, and the role of education in a changing economy
  45. WA ReachTEL: Labor leads 52-48, One Nation down, Greens up
  46. A survival guide for the coming AI revolution
  47. Now for some good news: regular sex benefits your mental health, too
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  49. Foreign policy white paper should reflect the uncertainty of our times
  50. Explainer: where to from here on penalty rates?

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