How do we enable people to make evidence-based, health and life-protecting choices in a pandemic?
A new UNESCO report aims to start a global conversation about vital issues that need to be discussed by educators and political leaders.
The new phase of the pandemic will come with a period of uncertainty as we adjust to “living with the virus” and a see-sawing of some restrictions.
When we live in society, we give up our “natural freedom” to do whatever we like, and we gain a new “civil freedom” to enjoy the benefits of common life.
The Japanese government would bear the lion’s share of the financial costs should it cancel the Olympic Games, but that doesn’t mean it cannot or should not.
This episode explores the age of surveillance we live in, how it can help humanity – and how it can be used to hurt us.
Addressing the health, social and economic inequities in our communities is crucial in the COVID-19 recovery.
There are a few things we should do in Victoria to ensure the number of people getting tested for COVID-19 remains high.
In the shadow of the COVID-19 crisis, migrant workers in Malaysia are likely to be even more vulnerable to exploitative labour systems, and the law must keep up with the times.
Depicted as selfish and reckless, people in their 20s and 30s have been blamed for spreading COVID-19, but perpetuating negative stereotypes of a selfish generation is wrong and disingenuous.
As the pandemic wreaks havoc on supply chains, are companies losing sight of their social responsibility?
Governments need to assess the consequences of their actions against the wellbeing of the most at-risk from the social and economic costs of the policy response to the pandemic.
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