See how storytelling, not statistics, can inspire climate action by highlighting resilience and innovation across the Indo-Pacific on a new episode of “What Happens Next?”
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.
Research shows the vast majority of Australians aren’t opposed to the government introducing a range of stronger conservation-related policies.
So far, Israel’s war in Gaza hasn’t greatly disrupted global supply chains. But the situation could quickly shift along many fault lines.
A new survey finds Australians care deeply about the environment, but many aren’t aware of the full extent of biodiversity loss.
Publicly-available data on social media opens an avenue for studying the environment with “incidental citizen science”.
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.
Love him or hate him – and there are plenty in each camp – Daniel Andrews has become one of the most significant state premiers in modern history. This month, he may win yet another term.
Tapping into First Nations peoples’ deep understanding of, and connection to, water is vital to build more water-sensitive cities.
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?’.
Urban local governments take planetary health into their own hands by encouraging local and sustainable eating.
Cities and regions can capitalise on the benefits of the COVID-induced intercity and intracity migration, but it will require a pivot in planning and design policy.
Residents of flood-prone areas have been counting on local knowledge and community support to deal with floods for centuries. Can scientists work with them to mitigate the problem?
While the pandemic has been a blow to women’s rights, new forms of engagement are opening avenues for women to make their voices heard.
Although it was a century ago, there are parallels between the Spanish Flu pandemic and COVID-19. What was it like on the frontline for our healthcare workers this time around – and what have we learnt as a society?
Can architecture be a tool for acknowledging Australia’s original inhabitants?
Should the word apply to an application that’s difficult to use and doesn’t take human needs into account?
For many Australians, the bushfire disaster could represent a turning point: the moment they adopt new, long-term behaviours to help nature.
Can Indonesia solve the problems of overcrowded Jakarta by building a new capital on the island of Borneo?
Eco solutions may hold the answer to controlling the spread of the mosquito-borne virus in Malaysia.
The city's rapid growth presents some problems for its urban forest strategy.
Pressures of land management and poor waste management have reduced many of the world's rivers to waste dumping grounds.
Footpaths are a valuable space for everyday social activity and urban life, but their role is often overlooked in planning urban and public spaces.
Although Melbourne and Singapore are very different cities, they have much in common.
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