Jacinta Walsh’s great grandmother navigated oppressive policies her entire life, and didn’t have a public voice. Now, however, through the family’s storytelling, she does.
PhD student Aish Ravi was racially vilified in a recent football game, but her pleas for action have gone largely unheard.
Does Collingwood, and indeed the AFL, have a problem with women, or is it a case of “boys just being boys”?
An analysis of 82 million words has revealed that the relative attention Australia’s news and opinion pieces gave to First Nations peoples began to grow steadily from about 2005, with a huge peak in 2007.
Scott Morrison's remarks in response to a question about Will Smith’s Oscars’ slap risk being a dog whistle, fuelling and cultivating a culture of male violence.
We need to find ways to hold platforms responsible for the potential and actual abuses that take place in the online advertising world.
Amid the inner turmoil at the AFL club, what’s happened to the ‘Do Better’ report into systemic racism?
A new research paper examines how First Nations players worked with each other, and with AFL leadership, to fight racial vilification on and off the field.
Labor has long been seen as the party of bold policy platforms, while the Coalition has played more of a consolidating role. The next election will determine if those characterisations still hold.
Australia’s first female Indigenous ambassador, Julie-Ann Guivarra, is now focusing her diplomatic lens on gender equality.
The rideshare industry has been a public transport phenomenon. George McEncroe has disrupted the industry and taken it to a new level of service with Shebah – Australia's leading all-women rideshare service.
Rio Tinto’s apology for blowing up the Juukan Gorge rock shelters does little to satisfy the debt it owes the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura peoples, but it can make amends.
We need to have conversations about gendered language and its role in fostering prejudice.
A genuine partnership needs to be established between the government and Aboriginal people to get Closing the Gap targets back on track.
Financial services royal commissioner Kenneth Hayne is arguing for less and clearer law, and tougher corporate cops.
The banking royal commission has humiliated the banks, exposed dodgy financial dealings and shown the sector lacks a 'clear sense of moral purpose'.
There's still a lot to be done if we're to right the wrongs, five years on from the national apology delivered by Julia Gillard.
Kevin Rudd's apology to Indigenous Australians 10 years ago was a momentous, but ultimately futile, gesture.
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