provides an opportunity for leading thinkers around the world to discuss key economic and social challenges.
The two-day event (20 鈥 21 May) brings together high-level government representatives, CEOs, leaders from civil society and trade unions, and prominent members of academia and media. This year the University of Sydney is a partner and sponsor for the event.
Students who are in Paris undertaking a with the University of Sydney and Sciences Po in France will be attending the forum and six academics have been invited to present at this year鈥檚 event.
鈥淭he future of work debate has been very disappointing in its failure to analyse gender difference or to understand the hopes and fears of women workers for their own future of work. Where robots take centre stage, women are at best minor parts in the narrative about the development of occupations, professions and industries.鈥
鈥淏y increasing awareness in the structural and discrete issues faced by women in all spheres, especially within STEMM and academia, we have made it easier for our community to own these problems and further the process of change. The importance of getting this right goes beyond our staff and the culture of our organisation.
鈥淎t the University of Sydney, we educate around 67,000 students per year from across Australia and around the world. We have an opportunity to not only educate our students in their speciality areas, but also to create global citizens that have a thorough understanding of the importance of diversity and inclusion to support innovation and progress and to improve our societies by empowering women and girls to achieve their full potential.鈥
鈥淭he OECD in my view is at its most powerful when 鈥榮peaking truth to power鈥. The work on issues such as banking regulation or international tax behaviours may seem esoteric but they are critical examples of work where someone needed to be the anchor in the debate. Developments in higher education, such as the need to promote and shape true mobility of qualifications in the so-called micro-credentials space, could benefit greatly from the role the OECD could play as an arbiter of sorts.鈥
鈥淲hat we have is a new logic of inequality 鈥 a new class structure 鈥 of which the effects are particularly visible when we look at the millennial cohort. In a recent , my colleagues and I have proposed a new class scheme based on assets rather than employment to capture the effects of this in the case of Sydney.鈥
鈥淥ECD Governments will need to radically rethink their model of human capital investment and learn to identify the areas of investment with the highest returns. We听need a discourse on which and whose skills to build, keeping in focus the radically changing labour markets, skill demand, and tight government revenues. It is my utter conviction that more money would need to be spent on skill development before the age of five, parenting, and children at risk of harm. These are areas where the largest gains to investment can be made.鈥
Professor Adkins will talk about her book, .
鈥淪peculation is often associated with financial practices, but in The Time of Money听I make the case that it not be restricted to the financial sphere. The expansion of finance has created a distinctive social world, one that demands a speculative stance toward life.
鈥淩eplacing a logic of extraction, speculation organises our social worlds to maximize the productive capacities of populations around flows of money for finance capital. Speculative practices have become a matter of survival, and defining features of our age are hardwired to their operations鈥攕tagnant wages, indebtedness, the centrality of women's earnings to the household, workfarism, and more.鈥
Photo: OECD/Herv茅 Cortinat
听
The partnership with the OECD Forum was led by the University of Sydney鈥檚 and
The OECD signed听听with an Australian university in 2013, to offer University of Sydney students a number of internship opportunities with the OECD.