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      • Health & Personal Development
        September 2020

        My Year of Living Mindfully

        by Shannon Harvey

        Overwhelmed with insomnia and an incurable autoimmune disease, Shannon Harvey needed to make a change.   But while the award-winning health journalist found plenty of recommendations on diet, sleep and exercise, when she looked for the equivalent of a 30-minute workout for her mental wellbeing, there was nothing. Also worried for the future mental health of her kids, who were growing up amidst critical levels of stress, anxiety, depression and addiction, Shannon enlisted a team of scientists to put meditation to the test. Could learning to quiet our busy minds be the simple solution the world so desperately needs?   During her year of living mindfully Shannon was poked, prodded, scanned and screened. After a 30,000 kilometre journey from Australia to the bright lights of Manhattan and the dusty refugee camps of the Middle East – interviewing the world's leading mindfulness experts along the way – what began as a quest for answers transformed into a life-changing experience.

      • True stories
        October 2020

        Witness

        by Louise Milligan

        Throughout her career charting the experiences of people who have the courage to come forward to police and then look to find justice in court, Milligan has watched how witnesses are treated (or, too frequently, mistreated) in the courtroom. They have described to her how they relive the associated trauma, often years later. Then, she saw this first-hand, when she became a witness and was cross-examined herself in the trial of the decade, R v George Pell.   Never-before-published court transcripts expose widespread systemic flaws. And through a combination of extraordinarily candid interviews with defence counsel, prosecutors and even judges, and the heartbreaking stories of witnesses in high-profile cases, the brutal reality of the system is laid bare.   Revealing the devastating effects of an adversarial legal system that can be sexist, callous and too often weighted towards the rich and powerful, Milligan also highlights its failure to protect the wellbeing of the most vulnerable. In detailing these flaws and the ongoing human cost, Witness is a compelling call for change.

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