The future of women’s work is not simply about participation rates or automation forecasts. The Creative Women’s Association Verified Cultural Workforce Registry connects skilled women practitioners in cultural, craft, and manufacturing fields with real, paid work — making high-skill labour visible, trusted, and workforce-ready across Australia.
Tag: Workforce Infrastructure
Australia Signed the Treaty.
JAustralia ratified the UNESCO Convention on Intangible Cultural Heritage — but never built the systems required to uphold it. This article explains what a treaty obligation actually is, why Australia remains absent from UNESCO heritage lists, and how the Creative Women’s Association is establishing the missing cultural safeguarding infrastructure.
Provenance as Economic Infrastructure
Employment in the Harris Tweed industry grew by 570% following the introduction of certification and protected provenance. This data-driven case study demonstrates how provenance operates as economic infrastructure, enabling workforce growth, regional stability, and long-term productivity in creative sectors.
When Did Art Stop Being a Trade
What does “creative” actually mean — and when did art stop being a trade? This article explores how arts shifted from skilled, trade-based practices into performative spectacle, and how that transition reshaped value, labour, and women’s work in the creative economy.
Why We Built Trades for Boys
Australia has spent decades building trade pathways for boys while leaving women’s creative labour without workforce infrastructure. This article examines why the creative economy emerged from women’s historical trades — textiles, design, and cultural production — and how the failure to formalise these as certified professions has created systemic economic insecurity for women.