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Keynote Address
15 July 2008

Keynote Address delivered to Greater Brisbane Region Languages Education Conference, 13 October 2008.

Keynote Address
27 June 2009

Keynote address delivered to Language Policy and the Dialogue of Cultures, 7th National Community Languages Schools Conference, Asia Education Centre, University of Melbourne – 27 June 2009. The conference was attended by over 350 teachers from some twenty communities.

Lecture
7 October 2014

First Lecture: Are we entering a new Cold War?

PowerPoint presentation may be viewed here the_new_cold_war.ppt

Lecture
7 October 2014

A series of 4 lectures presented by Emeritus Professor Joseph A.

Speech
7 November 2014

A public forum to consider Australia’s World War I commemoration and whether it pays appropriate respect to those who died believing in a better world.

World War I brought death to approximately 61,000 Australians and shattered the lives of countless others. Globally, a generation was virtually lost.
The legacy of the war continues to this day. A century on, does our commemoration stop short of asking the hard questions such as how such a cataclysmic event could occur, what we learnt from it and whether that responsibility to learn has been lost amid the flag-waving?

Keynote Address
27 October 2014

Tasmanian Peace Trust Annual Lecture, Hobart

The lecture was published by the Tasmanian Peace Trust.

Lecture
14 October 1984

Lecture:  'The Australian Context: Role and responsibilities'

The lecture was part of a one-day seminar sponsored by the Council of Adult Education

Speech
21 November 2013

Address delivered to a Community Leaders Forum organised by Australians for Democracy and Human Rights in Egypt

Speech
19 March 2015

A Presentation to the Medical Grand Round, Royal Melbourne Hospital, 19 March 2015

The PowerPoint presentation may be viewed here Filez_presentation_rmh.pptx

Keynote Address
12 December 2014

Professor Camilleri launched the book on 12 December 2014 at RMIT  University.  

He described it as an elegantly written, clearly presented and insightfully convceived book. Though intended primarily as a text for students, the book would be of much wider interest, for it offered an unusualy holistic view of the future, arguing for a prudential aporach to uncertainty and risk.

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