Educational practices are being redefined so students and teachers can build global interconnectivity and cultural diversity.
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.
With the major awards season over, 2024 is becoming the year for women in music, but a lack of information and knowledge about sexual violence in music spaces and other creative places can dampen this newfound visibility.
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.
Loneliness isn’t a universal occurrence in later life, but tends to affect older people who live alone or in care homes. We must work collectively to destigmatise loneliness, and create a safe space to talk about it.
Instilling values of respect and tolerance can contribute to fostering a more joyful, inclusive, and equitable school environment.
Cities are starting to restore natural systems such as waterways, wetlands and bushland. But restoration on the scale these systems need to function properly calls for a rethink of urban planning.
We all face it – whether we invite it in or not. From our workplaces to the societies within which we live, uncertainty is everywhere.
On a new episode of Monash University’s “What Happens Next?” podcast, meet the healthcare providers and advocates working tirelessly to ensure that we don't lose ground in the global fight for reproductive rights.
Children’s books implicitly shape the minds of young readers – and are covertly censored in many ways. But revising occasional words won’t usually shift the values regarded as outdated in the text.
A quick sustainability guide to help you be a little bit greener this year.
On a new episode of Monash University’s ‘What Happens Next?’ podcast, we delve into the world of non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and the associated legal ramifications.
For Dr Anton Isaacs, initial thoughts of surgery specialisation turned into a 20-year journey that’s taken him into the heart of vulnerable communities in Australia and India.
Only a few Indigenous languages remain strong in modern Australia. On a new episode of Monash University's "What Happens Next?" podcast, linguists and human rights advocates outline what we've lost.
Some foreign officials promoting central bank digital currencies want to be able to track and limit transactions in real time, raising privacy concerns.
Loneliness must be regarded as a public health priority. Find out some of the surprising ways we can tackle it in Monash University’s podcast, ‘What Happens Next?’.
A controversial exhibition in Amsterdam could represent another step towards enhancing friendship between two former foes, but highlights how the violence of the past can neither be completely erased from public memory.
Researchers estimate about half of the adults who end up in prison are parents, but what happens to their children?
Biometrics technology offers to cut the Gordian knot of passwords, usernames, PIN and QR codes, as well as passports and vaccine cards – but at what cost?
Building more welcoming communities takes work. Meet the experts at the coalface of making immigration and diversity work in Australia in this episode of the University's podcast, "What Happens Next?".
Australian fatherhood remains closely tied to “breadwinning”. History helps us to understand why.
With COVID-19 continuing to curtail historians’ global work, the call has gone out for the valuable cultural artefacts lying closer to home.
Monash University Architect Shelley Penn AM’s commitment is to enrich society by refining the built environment.
The English astronomer and navigator Thomas Harriot died in 1621, leaving behind 8000 pages of notes containing a trove of unpublished scientific discoveries.
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