Monash's award-winning podcast, “What Happens Next?”, returns for an eighth season that explores pressing global issues.
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.
Some Australians are still uncomfortable with attempts to challenge the Anzac myth.
William Cooper was in a league of his own, fighting for an Aboriginal voice in parliament and a treaty in the 1930s.
One of Monash's first female Aboriginal law graduates, Virginia Robinson, is working tirelessly with the Aboriginal community on issues of social justice and empowerment.
Inspired by the Monash spirit, Charis Wong co-founded a platform to connect and empower fellow alumni, particularly women, in Malaysia.
Sometimes, who you know plays a major role in where you end up.
In 2019, more than 180 people from the Monash community were recognised with an Australian honour.
Monash Country Lines archive founder John Bradley is 38 years into a journey tracing and recording vanishing oral traditions in an Indigenous heartland.
There’s a range of mentoring programs at Monash University. Here, recent participants discuss the benefits of being involved.
Paul Barton is on a mission to make Monash University the greenest university in the land.
Hear how artist, Prudence Flint has seen her career take off by trusting her own impulses and the straightforward ambition of investigating figurative painting.
He’s suffered his share of setbacks, but Phil De Young’s passion for his football club, Monash Blues, knows few bounds.
Artist, writer, military man, engineer, lawyer, aesthete, designer and a leader. Former Victorian premier Ted Baillieu regards him as the greatest Australian of all time.
By the 1920s, the man after whom Monash University was named was broadly regarded as “the greatest living Australian” .
Despite the Coalition coming off second-best for the 30th consecutive Newspoll, PM Malcolm Turnbull is unlikely to face a leadership challenge.
The secrecy surrounding the details of the Whitlam government's removal exemplifies "our arcane and subservient status as constitutional monarchy".
Dummy text