Seven Monash University academics share their unique journeys with us to celebrate International Women’s Day 2024.
How far are Australians on the sustainability journey, and what are their attitudes and behaviours when it comes to engaging in sustainable practices and consumption?
There’s really no such thing as one global internet – it all depends on your perspective. But the internet is poised to fracture even more.
Professor Chris Lawrence’s passion for Indigenous achievement has come full circle.
The world’s collective failure to adequately address climate change alters “the rules of the parenting game”.
While each city building is part of an overall urban composition, its individual impacts are also important. Here are eight of Melbourne’s best.
In what is the first COP since Labor took office in May this year, there are positive signs of Australia picking up its game on climate policy.
Drongos, dickheads and ning-nongs: Why Australia is a nation of nongs, but mightn’t be for long.
The teeth of the tammar wallaby don’t grow in the way you’d expect – and scientists want to know why.
A long-term global assessment of reptiles has revealed 21% are threatened, but an upside is that others have benefited from the conservation efforts put into other animals such as birds and mammals.
Unlike many politicians, Anthony Albanese doesn’t appear to harbour a sense of entitlement to the top job – and his journey towards it has been a long one.
With marginal seats in play, and the outcome of the previous election to remind us, it’d be foolhardy to write off the Coalition from recording another unexpected result.
Engineer Jeff Walker has been on a relentless search to find new and better ways to measure our planet’s health.
A by-product of above-ground nuclear testing in the 1950s is helping forensic scientists determine an unidentified person’s time-of-death.
Severe coastal flooding inundated islands in the Pacific last week, including the Marshall Islands, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands. It’s a taste of things to come.
They cover more than 70% of our planet, so why aren’t oceans more central to climate talks?
Wasting food feeds climate change, but relatively small changes can make a big difference. Here are six to try,
Monash University Architect Shelley Penn AM’s commitment is to enrich society by refining the built environment.
The French celebrate Quatorze Juillet, not Bastille Day. In fact, the English-language name hides much of the surprisingly complex history of the day.
The Tasmanian tiger's superficial appearance was so similar to a wolf's that European colonists assumed it was a threat, and hunted it to extinction.
A new study shows Palorchestes azael had unique elbows unlike any other mammal – which may have contributed to its extinction.
Research shows that soils filter trace gases from the atmosphere significantly more than previously believed.
There are clear opportunities in Australia to transform food waste into more valuable products.
Justice Kevin Zervos reflects on a remarkable law career, forged by early experience as a student in a community legal service, and inspired by his alma mater to equip himself for life.
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