Discover the urgent climate challenges facing the Indo-Pacific and the power of storytelling to drive meaningful climate action in this new “What Happens Next?” episode.
We need to explore solutions to the challenges that culturally-diverse musicians face navigating the Australian music industry.
Many artists are expected to organise their own ticket sales and event promotion. This is coupled with low pay from venues and having to juggle music with other full-time jobs.
Until crucial steps are taken, the current “system” of payment of academic casuals or sessional staff will continue to be an unproductive source of contestation.
Afghan women have resisted the discriminatory policies imposed on them, and actively advocated to reclaim their shrinking space to practise their rights. In this, music plays a role.
Think tank A New Approach claims the federal government spent more than $4 billion supporting the arts and culture in 2020 alone. Sadly for the arts, the figure is too good to be true.
New research indicates women think more public funding is needed to help access egg freezing, regardless of whether it’s sought for “medical” or “non-medical” reasons.
Social entrepreneurship is on the rise, and so are rates of burnout, but a new toolkit is helping to address the alarming trend.
If you're thinking about homeschooling because your child seems to do better at home, but are unsure if it's the right thing to do, There are some factors to take into account.
Developing specialist youth mental health hubs is vital if we’re to address the growing mental health emergency of young people’s depression and anxiety.
Amid sharp fees increases for HASS subjects, there's one glimmer of light – the study of languages has been recognised as vitally important to Australia’s future.
The news that Foxtel received a speedy funding boost as the ABC faces another round of damaging cost cuts will raise eyebrows – and questions about how we spend taxpayers' money.
The Australian government can’t afford to neglect music and arts as an important tool in the classroom.
The federal government’s changes to university funding, making some arts and humanities courses more than twice as expensive, is misguided.
So what can you do to save us all from a world without art? In this podcast episode of What Happens Next?, our experts share all their best tips for finding art in new places.
Live streaming of theatrical performances on platforms such as Zoom, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook has exploded in popularity.
In our last episode, we pondered a world without art and now we hear from two people who push the boundaries in fields you wouldn't normally consider creative.
During the COVID-19 crisis, we need the arts more than ever to feel connected, but it's also exposed the fragility of the sector.
The COVID-19 pandemic is having a devastating effect on Australia's screen industry, but also offers a chance to finally address some of its longstanding issues of diversity and inclusion.
The cancellation of cultural events will be devastating for artists and arts workers. A $186 million stimulus package could help stem the damage.
Pokies clubs and other gambling operators have had their charitable contributions exposed by new research.
More money is being invested in the arts, but per-person funding is down, and the federal government's contribution is exposed, according to cultural think tank A New Approach.
In Australia, as in the UK, we see considerable public discussion around higher education. More recently we have seen elements of that discussion turn to debate centred on the very heart of a university’s purpose.
Two alumni have forged careers devoted to protecting the environment.
Dummy text