The world has talked at great lengths about how climate change is an environmental crisis. But what about the human health effects that come from it?
It’s on the rise and affects people of all body sizes and genders, but binge-eating disorder is widely misunderstood and often ignored.
Low awareness of the link between heat and eco-anxiety in Indonesia requires a more comprehensive strategy in the campaign.
Complex and interconnected threats to global peace and security demands innovative and interconnected thinking by experts working across academic disciplines and industry sectors.
Housing affordability, employment and climate change are weighing heavily on young people, according to the 2024 Australian Youth Barometer.
It’s important to see food waste as a challenge for everyone, and use a holistic approach that can modify the entrenched beliefs regarding the practice.
Historically cut out from climate leadership, calls for more women at the table stands to benefit everyone fighting the climate crisis.
Despite signs that inflation is levelling off, Australians could feel the health impacts of high prices for some time.
What does the future hold for the millions of women left to work in Asia’s agriculture sector battling a climate in collapse?
Medical faculties globally have been slow to recognise the training needs of the next generation of doctors regarding the health consequences of a heating planet.
So far, Israel’s war in Gaza hasn’t greatly disrupted global supply chains. But the situation could quickly shift along many fault lines.
It was thought that after the pandemic, young people’s outlook for the future might have improved. But the latest Australian Youth Barometer survey shows it’s actually become worse.
If the world genuinely wants to reach some semblance of “sustainable development”, it needs to start listening more to the concerns of youth and marginalised populations.
Research estimates that 40% of students at Australian universities may be going without food, with the problem worst among international students.
This week on Monash University's “What Happens Next?” podcast, meet the change-makers on the front lines of food.
Season 7 of Monash University’s podcast returns from hiatus with an investigation into food security. How will we feed more people than ever on an ever-warming planet?
It's time for the chatter to stop, and for effective interventions to be put in place.
‘What Happens Next?’ is back for a seventh season featuring all-new topics and world-leading expert guests. Catch the trailer for this exciting new season now.
Gambling during homelessness is sometimes motivated out of desperation, and in the hope of financial gain.
Indigenous babies are still being removed from their parents and placed into out-of-home care at alarmingly high rates. A new alliance is hoping to change that.
The Australian Greens, rather than the Labor Party, have emerged as the champions of the contemporary Australian welfare state.
The 2021 Australian Youth Barometer, a survey of more than 500 young Australians aged 18 to 24, reflects the pressures young Australians have been under during COVID-19.
Girls and women experience climate change in unique ways. This includes being vulnerable to gender-based violence as climate change brings about forced migration, loss of housing and income.
Urban local governments take planetary health into their own hands by encouraging local and sustainable eating.
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