The OECD Skills Outlook 2025 confirms what many already know: skills systems are failing not because people lack talent, but because workforce structures ignore care, health, and real-life complexity. The Creative Women’s Association is moving beyond commentary to build the missing infrastructure — transforming skills recognition, creative labour, and economic participation through measurable, standards-based reform.
Tag: future of work
What We Choose to Protect Says Who We Are
Intangible cultural heritage reveals what societies choose to protect. As UNESCO frameworks show, nations that safeguard living practices—craft, making, and cultural knowledge—build stronger economic and cultural futures. Australia’s absence from global intangible heritage listings raises a deeper question about maturity, provenance, and the value of creative labour.
We Care Alot.
Certain forms of work sustain people, culture, and place — yet remain undervalued in modern economies. This article explores why restoring status, security, and recognition to care, teaching, and cultural labour is essential to a liveable future.
Creative Excellence Program
The Creative Women’s Association has launched the world-first Creative Excellence Program, a 10-month leadership initiative certifying women as creative authorities and reshaping the global creative economy.