Cultural burning has enjoyed a strong resurgence in recent years. Now this cool burn technique is being used to ward off disastrous bushfires.
It’s time to ditch colonial thinking and listen to the wisdom of Indigenous peoples to advance health and wellbeing, and to forge a sustainable planetary future.
A study of purple-crowned fairy-wrens offers lessons for fire management along waterways in tropical savanna ecosystems.
Although First Nations peoples’ connections to land are now legally well-established, their connections to water are not.
How can we, personally, prepare for a future with not only more frequent natural disasters, but one that will also profoundly change the environment, communities and the economy?
Tapping into First Nations peoples’ deep understanding of, and connection to, water is vital to build more water-sensitive cities.
The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is failing to adequately conserve and protect threatened species, and its scope needs widening.
Royal commissions can deliver valuable outcomes to society through classic influence strategies.
With Australia in the grip of devastating bushfires, Indigenous people must be involved in prevention strategies.
Some of the claims regarding the blazes need to be put into context. It’s not the number of fires, but rather the cumulative destruction that rightly has the world worried.
Safe and clean access to water and sanitation is still not a right afforded to everyone, even in Australia.
Rock carvings dating back tens of thousands of years provide a window into the deep prehistory of indigenous Australia.
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