Respectful Dialogues is a single, three-hour intensive that helps students recognise and practise respectful, psychologically safe debate while building political literacy. Using Australian parliamentary discourse as a live case, the session covers circle-based ground rules, Deep Listening, “observing self”, and moving beyond right/wrong binaries.
Students then explore harmful vs respectful debate and practise a “deep-democracy” viewpoints activity using the Plastic Pollution Treaty scenario, preparing them to observe a Senate sitting and translate these skills back to campus life. This work supports student mental health and cultural safety by foregrounding care, curiosity, and dignity in disagreement. Student will be required to complete all reading on the Plastic Pollution Treaty in order to participate effectively in this KNOT.
The intensive aims to:• BBC News. (n.d.). [Article on UN plastic pollution talks]. BBC News. Retrieved September 15, 2025, from https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgpddpldleo
• DW News. (n.d.). How realistic is a global plastic treaty? [Video]. YouTube. Retrieved 15 September 2025, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSaWQ3dpfFg
• Global Plastic Laws. (n.d.). UN Plastics Treaty. Global Plastic Laws. Retrieved September 15, 2025, from https://www.globalplasticlaws.org/un-global-plastics-treaty Global Plastic Laws
• Helbig, K., & Norman, M. (2023). The psychological safety playbook: Lead more powerfully by being more human. Page Two Books.
• Nussbaum, M. C. (2013). Political emotions: Why love matters for justice. Harvard University Press.
• United Nations Environment Programme. (2025, August 15). Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on plastic pollution. UNEP. https://www.unep.org/inc-plastic-pollution UNEP - UN Environment Programme