The first case of H5N1 bird flu was reported in Australia last week. Is the world prepared for what could lead to the next pandemic?
From producing a transmedia digital hub to launching an internationally-touring immersive exhibition, Associate Professor Tony Moore’s Conviction Politics points to the importance of leading with an enterprising mindset in academia.
The PR industry is being rebadged, but the history it tells omits the key role women have played, and many of its milestones and missteps.
In the aftermath of a disappointing Voice referendum, Indigenous politicians are looking to the United Nations Declaration for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a potential way forward.
Authority and governability on both sides has become a central factor feeding the escalation that might reach new heights very soon.
Although First Nations peoples’ connections to land are now legally well-established, their connections to water are not.
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.
The high level of poverty in affluent Australia is a national disgrace, and its prevention should be a priority for all political parties. But it’s not.
With an election imminent, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has splashed out billions in his “cost of living” budget, but is it enough to buy your vote?
Global private equity company Blackstone is in the box seat to pick up a battered Crown – but it’s hardly getting a bargain.
Embedding First Nations content into the national curriculum is a discussion that needs to go beyond the spotlight of Australia Day.
Victoria’s Labor Party flipped and flopped in its support of Melbourne’s first medically supervised injecting room, depending on what was politically expedient and popular at the time.
A day that is meant to bring everyone together to reflect on national identity, draws us down a dark alley of division.
William Cooper was in a league of his own, fighting for an Aboriginal voice in parliament and a treaty in the 1930s.
Eco solutions may hold the answer to controlling the spread of the mosquito-borne virus in Malaysia.
Indigenous activist William Cooper has motivated a new generation to make change in their communities by improving public health.
In the wake of the UN's groundbreaking drug policy commitment, the time is right for drug laws reform.
Nick Xenophon has backed away from the “no pokies” policy that characterised his earlier approach to gambling reform.
Most of those fighting the Nazi regime from within were everyday Germans and Austrians with blue-collar jobs.
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