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Arts & Culture Blogs Creative Business & Leadership Creative Capital Creative Spark Creative Survival Creativity Economic Independence & Women's Enterprise Field Notes, Observations & Case Studies Health Historical Contributions & Women's Science In Real Life | IRL. Innovation & Ideas Insight Intermission Legacy & History Play Popular Culture, Women & the Creative Economy Power & Privilege Science & Research Scientific Illustration & Sketches Scientific Notes and Sketches Smart News Stories The Almanac The Future of Women's Work: Creative, Economic & Cultural Power The Gazelle The Power Source: Women’s Mental, Sexual & Creative Health The Reading Shelf Work & Money

Our Sunburnt Country

Australia’s “sunburnt country” identity must move beyond imagery and into enforceable economic architecture. Without national provenance, certification and workforce standards, Australian craftsmanship remains fragmented and economically underutilised. The Creative Women’s Association proposes Cultural Work & Provenance infrastructure to formalise craft, land-based production and manufacturing capability as recognised national workforce systems.

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Arts & Culture Blogs Creative Business & Leadership Creative Capital Creative Spark Creative Survival Creativity Economic Independence & Women's Enterprise Field Notes, Observations & Case Studies Health Historical Contributions & Women's Science In Real Life | IRL. Innovation & Ideas Insight Intermission Legacy & History Play Popular Culture, Women & the Creative Economy Power & Privilege Science & Research Scientific Illustration & Sketches Scientific Notes and Sketches Smart News Stories The Almanac The Future of Women's Work: Creative, Economic & Cultural Power The Gazelle The Power Source: Women’s Mental, Sexual & Creative Health The Reading Shelf Work & Money

What If Women’s Cultural Work Was Treated as National Infrastructure

What if women’s cultural and creative labour was built into Australia’s economic systems instead of treated as invisible or free? A new structural model could transform careers, income stability, and skills transmission.

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Arts & Culture Blogs Creative Business & Leadership Creative Capital Creative Spark Creative Survival Creativity Economic Independence & Women's Enterprise Field Notes, Observations & Case Studies Health Historical Contributions & Women's Science In Real Life | IRL. Innovation & Ideas Insight Intermission Legacy & History Play Popular Culture, Women & the Creative Economy Power & Privilege Science & Research Scientific Illustration & Sketches Scientific Notes and Sketches Smart News Stories The Almanac The Future of Women's Work: Creative, Economic & Cultural Power The Gazelle The Power Source: Women’s Mental, Sexual & Creative Health The Reading Shelf Work & Money

Australia Once Made Its Own Cloth.

Australia produces world-class wool yet imports most finished textiles. The Commons Exchange proposes a fibre-to-cloth revival, rebuilding domestic textile manufacturing through verified origin, regional production and place-based standards.