1975 was a time of change in global politics. There was the horror of the Pol Pot genocide, the end of the Vietnam War - while in Australia there was the dismissal of the Labor Whitlam government. It was also a time when Australia was rapidly changing into the multicultural society we see today, coinciding with the birth of the nation's multilingual broadcaster: SBS.
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SBS News In Depth Folgen
Hear the story behind the headlines. In each episode, we’ll help you make sense of the news stories that matter to you from Australia and the world, with reports and interviews from the SBS News team.
Folgen von SBS News In Depth
1394 Folgen
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Folge vom 02.06.202550 years of SBS: More than simply sexy movies and soccer
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Folge vom 01.06.2025Prime Minister defies calls from the US for Australia to hike defence spendingPrime Minister Anthony Albanese has defied calls from the US for Australia to hike defence spending. It comes as Australia seeks reprieve from recently doubled US tariffs on steel and aluminium.
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Folge vom 01.06.2025Growing alarm over China's expanding military posture dominates Shangri-La DialogueRising alarm over China’s growing military posture and nuclear ambitions dominated the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, where defence leaders from Australia, the US and France stressed the need for stronger alliances, renewed arms control frameworks, and coordinated regional deterrence.
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Folge vom 01.06.2025INTERVIEW: WA Stolen Generations survivors welcome redress schemeQueensland now remains the only Australian state or territory without a redress scheme for survivors of the Stolen Generations, after Western Australia announced one this week. Survivors will be eligible for individual payments of $85,000, with the scheme to be open by the end of the year. Under government policies, more than half of all Aboriginal people in Western Australia were taken from their families - or are related to survivors. The Healing Foundation has been advocating on behalf of Stolen Generations survivors. In this episode of Weekend One on One, the group's CEO, Shannan Dodson, told Biwa Kwan, it means a lot to survivors to receive this acknowledgment - and it advances the healing process.