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.
Women from climate-vulnerable countries face devastating impacts and are disproportionately affected by disasters, which is why they must be included in the UN’s Loss and Damage Fund.
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?
Complex and interconnected threats to global peace and security demands innovative and interconnected thinking by experts working across academic disciplines and industry sectors.
Why have successive Australian governments found it so difficult to truly embrace the country’s potential to become a clean energy superpower?
Recently, more than 150 first-year Monash University students travelled to Fiji for two weeks of deep cultural immersion and learning.
As Indonesia’s election looms, young people want action on climate change, but research shows the country’s political class isn’t listening.
From natural seawalls to mangroves, countries are starting to combat climate change with nature-based solutions. COP28 might drive more of these efforts.
From the hottest global average day, to the highest average sea surface temperature and the lowest Antarctic sea ice extent – here’s why so many climate records are breaking, all at once.
Fijian youth are combining modern science with traditional knowledge to develop innovative responses to the immediate threat posed by climate change.
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?
The Antarctic ice sheet has advanced and retreated over the past 10,000 years. It holds stark warnings, and possibly some hope, for the future.
They cover more than 70% of our planet, so why aren’t oceans more central to climate talks?
Limiting global warming to 1.5°C is increasingly the “new norm”, but what does it mean for Australian state, territory, and corporate climate commitments?
If the federal government won’t take appropriate climate change action to save the planet, Australians will use their collective power to do so.
Mapping the previous melting of glaciers in the Antarctic is helping researchers predict what lies ahead for the ice giants – and the wider consequences.
A rare fossil tooth discovery has shed light on an extinct group of seals from Australia’s deep past.
A new report says policymakers need to address the impact of environmental changes on health in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region.
Pacific climate migration patterns challenge the role of national governments as intermediaries for policy action.
A deeper examination of gender is sorely needed to try to prevent further acts of violent extremism and terrorism.
ClimateWorks Australia has developed a tool to help Pacific Island countries design pathways for the future through sustainable, climate-resilient, net-zero-emissions development.
Despite our reliance on digital technologies in the classroom, there are too few natural resources to produce and sustain them at the levels we expect.
A worldwide study shows that while wetlands are under increasing threat from global warming, rising sea levels and human population density, they're remarkably resilient – and Australia's are faring better than most.
The exploitation of gender in populist politics is no more starkly illustrated than in the Philippines.
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