Sessions
All sessions
These events are all free to attend, however you may need to reserve tickets beforehand.
Sessions
These events are all free to attend, however you may need to reserve tickets beforehand.
Workshop,
11.30am - 1.30pm | Sunday 15 July
Achieving change on the issues we care about doesn’t happen by accident. It takes planning and strategic decision making so that when we act together, we have the greatest possible impact.
Panel,
1pm - 1.50pm | Sunday 15 July
Once existing only in science fiction, driverless cars are now a reality and here to stay. What does this mean for our future mobility? And how are we going to shape our lives, industries, cities and neighbourhoods to accommodate them?
Solo event,
1pm - 1.50pm | Sunday 15 July
One in five Google searches is now done via voice. But what do we humans get back from the machine? If you type, you receive pages; if you speak, you get, er, singularity. What does this mean for journalism, for media plurality, diversity and, ultimately, for democracy? Let’s talk.
Panel,
1pm - 1.50pm | Sunday 15 July
We all suffer from it, don’t we? But does it make us better parents or produce questionable behaviours? Join a scientist, musician and psychiatrist for this no-holds-barred discussion peppered with amusing anecdotes and some proper science!
Solo event,
1pm - 1.50pm | Sunday 15 July
Marnie led a ground-breaking experience for creatives, thinkers and the general public in the lead-up to the Adelaide Festival of Ideas 2018. Framed as a dinner party, it was a social art project with interventions. Were the participants sustained?
Oration,
1pm - 1.50pm | Sunday 15 July
Climate change is the biggest threat facing humanity. Melting glacial ice is one of the clearest indicators of this complex issue. Nowhere is it more apparent than where you’d least expect to find ice – at the equator, where there are only 25 mountains with glaciers. Within a quarter of a century, these glaciers will be gone. Put simply: 25 mountains. Zero latitude. 25 years. Zero ice. 25 zero. Tim Jarvis was the recipient of the Bettison and James award in 2017.