Comments

From Vânia de la Fuente-Núñez on A call for more inclusive assistive technology
Thank you very much for sharing your experience, Stephen. It's heartbreaking to hear that your dad's hearing needs were neglected during his hospital stays. Your story underscores the urgent need for more inclusive assistive technology initiatives, ensuring that older people are not left behind. Hopefully, this piece will bring attention to the existing gap and inspire concrete actions to address these inequities.
From Terence Wood on Opposition is rising but most Australians still don’t want aid cut
Hi Clay, Thank you for the comment. We provide people with information on the size of the aid budget. We tell them aid/federal government spending. (Absolute aid amounts seem large, even though they are not. Most people don't understand GNI. So we use government spending as the denominator - it's pretty easily understood.) Here's our question wording. = Every year the Australian government gives aid money to poorer countries. Currently just under $1 out of every $100 of federal government spending is given as aid. Which one of the following options best reflects your opinion about aid spending? = Interestingly providing Australian's with accurate information on aid spending in experiments didn't seem to shift views much. See: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4249482 and https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2885536 Thanks Terence
From Clay O'BRIEN on Opposition is rising but most Australians still don’t want aid cut
The annual research continues to be interesting. However, other studies indicate that many people over-estimate the amount of Australia's foreign aid. Have you tried to control for that, ie to understand if people who say Australia gives too much aid actually understand how low it is compared to other countries?
From Stephen Howes on A call for more inclusive assistive technology
I really agree with this call. My Dad is quite elderly and in the last few years has had to have several hospital stints. In none of them has anyone cared whether his hearing aids are working and being used. Often, they are not. It's just discrimination and should be unacceptable. As you say an "often overlooked demographic".
From Elvita Aleixo Cardoso on Pacific Engagement Visa application factsheet 2024
Thank you for opportunity that has given to people Timor Leste and especially for me. I am a seasonal worker from East Timor. I'm very interested to apply for the PEV visa for work and school in Australia. In the name of the Jesus, I hope I will sucessful.🙏
From Bill Vistarini on Navigating informal institutions: supporting wetland management in Laos
Without maps and hard evidence, this jargon-filled, superficial account is less than credible. There’s no mention of dams, the forced sale of arable land, the lingering impact of wars. I have worked in Laos for many years and walked or driven across much of the lowland areas and find this Asia Foundation account unconvincing. More accurate reporting on Laos is needed.
From Jonathan Rumb on The Pacific Engagement Visa in PNG: a how-to guide
Hi Natasha, Do I need to put my wife's and my 5 children's passports to apply or myself can apply and later or after I receive my visa 192 ?
From Stephen Howes on Tuvalu’s amazing migration deal
Australia will run the ballot through Department of Home Affairs as it does for the PEV. I'm not sure when the ballot will open though.
From Stephen Howes on The Pacific Engagement Visa in PNG: a how-to guide
You need to wait till the ballot is closed at the end of July and then the winners announced presumably in early August.
From Leyla on Restricted visa pathways for Afghan women
Hello, I was born in Iran and now I am 33 years old, I have a diploma in mathematics, and I got married at the age of 23, and after seven years of living together, I separated from my husband due to infidelity. I have a 5-year-old son who is 2 months old. After the separation, my husband smuggled him to Turkey secretly and without my knowledge, and now they are in Germany, and I have not seen my child for three years. Because of our Afghan culture and the fact that a woman should not be present in society after a divorce, I am under pressure from my family and they want me to get married soon, but I cannot think about marriage. I started working as a secretary in a physiotherapy clinic due to the opposition of my family, but since Afghans do not have the right to work in Iran, I work secretly with a low salary. I want to be, to work, to have an income so that I can see my son one day, but life in Iran is so difficult and disappointing for me that sometimes I really have no motivation, I have a goal.
From Ronnie Magadi on The Pacific Engagement Visa in PNG: a how-to guide
I registered already...what will be my next step? What will I do next?
From Kate Lanyon on Unpacking the evidence on social protection in the Pacific and Timor-Leste
Hi Raphael, Thanks for your comment. The potential for biases in the evidence due to author representation was a real point of interest to us. To clarify, university affiliated authors (including individuals publishing through academic journals) were included in the 'independent authors' category in Figure 2.
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