05/27/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 05/26/2025 18:35
27 May 2025
If you love tuning into podcasts that make driving, cleaning and grocery shopping way more interesting, here is a brief recommendation list for you. And if you haven't jumped on the podcast train yet, this is where you can get onboard!
Please note that the views expressed on the following podcasts do not necessarily represent the views of Amnesty International - they are just excellent Indigenous productions to get you listening, laughing, learning and growing. Enjoy and share.
This collection is part of our Reconciliation Week Toolkit, where, in honour of this year's Reconciliation Week theme, Bridging Now to Next, we are sharing a rich array of resources to celebrate the talent, truth, traditions and enterprises of First Nations people across the continent today, while remaining focused on embedding a fairer future.
A podcast from the NITV News Online team, exploring the stories behind the news.
'TalkBlack the podcast unpacks news, stories and politics from a First Nations perspective and is hosted by GetUp's First Nations Justice Campaign Director Larissa Baldwin.'
'Sharing cultural knowledge & bringing people together to create change for Australia.'
'Yarning Up showcases rich and raw conversations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander leaders, thinkers, creators, business owners, activists and more.'
'Frontier War Stories is a podcast dedicated to truth-telling about a side of Australia that has been left out of the history books.'
'A podcast about Blak Sovereignty. A space for us to listen up to our mob, our First Nations voices across the country, and explore what Blak leadership and decolonisation mean.'
'Coming out, Blak is a podcast dedicated to supporting and celebrating First Nations mob in the LGBTQ+ community. We've developed this podcast to share stories, and we want you to join us for these conversations!'
Blacademia is a podcast of yarns with First Nations academics, here on the lands now commonly referred to as Australia.
'The diverse languages of black Australia from Anmatyerre to Arrernte, from Bidjara to Bundjalung, from Nyungar to Ngaanyatjarra, from Yankunytjatjara to Yorta Yorta - one word at a time.'
'Colonisation is not the end of the story. What we see now is that all the bloodlines are here - so we can allow the story to play out the way it has been, or we can take control of the story. We're not able to change the past but we can own the future and there's wisdom in this for all of us.'
For more resources including must-see films, music, books and more, check out our Reconciliation Week 2025 Toolkit.
Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 10 million people who take injustice personally. We are campaigning for a world where human rights are enjoyed by all - and we can only do it with your support.
Act now or learn more about our work on Indigenous Justice.