A United Nations report details the violence that women and girls in sport face around the world – including Australia.
A blood test that accurately detects the ongoing effects of sport-related concussion has the potential to help pinpoint when a player can safely return.
Researchers have confirmed what most of us have long suspected: Home crowds give professional sports teams an advantage – at least in the NBA.
An investigation highlighting the failure of some medical journals to maintain rigorous processes amid the rush to publish during the pandemic should serve as a warning to all researchers.
In this episode, we look at what’s happening to change the culture in elite sport, and find out why calling out sexist, racist and homophobic language is helping tackle the toxicity.
To claim an equal future in sport, we have to shift the dial and support women leaders at all levels of the sport ecosystem.
For this year's International Women’s Day, we celebrate Monash Education's leading women researchers, highlighting the challenges they faced in reaching the top of their fields.
There's no evidence that the Rainbow Laces campaign or Pride Games helps stop homophobic language or make sport more inclusive. We need to refocus the campaign towards amateur sports.
A Monash research team studying head impacts at the elite level of Australian football says it's too soon to make a direct link between concussion in the sport and brain problems later in life.
World Rugby’s proposed blanket ban on transgender women on safety grounds raises some awkward questions for the governing body.
Footy returns this week, and with it will come an avalanche of alcohol advertising, with little protection for children.
Our post-coronavirus pandemic future will be very different to the one we anticipated, as it reshapes relationships, governments, business, and broader society.
Staying cool in the heat of competition will take on a new meaning at the Tokyo Olympic Games.
Friendships, marriages and business partnerships continue to be forged at Monash.
Thomas Ko is spearheading innovative technology that takes injectable medicines and transforms them into pills.
Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge's will need to find 15 seconds in his bid to break the mythical 2-hour marathon barrier in Vienna this week, analysis of previous world records suggests.
Young men's alcohol consumption is radically out of touch with recommended health guidelines.
Number-crunching the winning race time for marathon runners can tell us when the men are likely to break the two-hour barrier. But what about the target barrier for women?
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