Menopause has become a hot health topic, with experts debating the latest treatments and what’s appropriate for women who need them.
A unified approach from journalism scholars in the Global North and Global South is needed to promote more gender-sensitive, solutions-driven, and victim-survivor-centred reporting about violence against women.
Only a few Indigenous languages remain strong in modern Australia. On a new episode of Monash University's "What Happens Next?" podcast, linguists and human rights advocates outline what we've lost.
This week on Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, learn how emerging technologies are changing the way we think about soldiers, and the way soldiers think about their jobs.
A new episode of Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, examines what the future will look like if we don’t consider the moral and ethical quandaries presented by new technologies on the battlefield.
‘What Happens Next?’ is back for a sixth season featuring all-new topics and world-leading expert guests. Catch the trailer for this exciting new season now.
Sexual violence, a weapon of war recognised by many governments and international institutions, impacts thousands of people during and after conflicts. But how widespread and systematic it is largely remains a mystery.
Women aren’t just silent victims in war. Throughout history, they’ve frequently taken into their own hands the fight for the group cause, and the Ukraine-Russia conflict is no exception.
A new UNESCO report aims to start a global conversation about vital issues that need to be discussed by educators and political leaders.
Has Australia opened a new chapter in national selfhood with increased emotional articulation as a healthy response to the COVID-19 pandemic?
World Rugby’s proposed blanket ban on transgender women on safety grounds raises some awkward questions for the governing body.
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.
Some Australians are still uncomfortable with attempts to challenge the Anzac myth.
New research is examining the evolution of Australian fatherhood and family responsibilities over the past 100 years.
The so-called Moomba 'riot' and subsequent media sensationalism has had a detrimental effect on young South Sudanese in Victoria.
The recognition of post-traumatic stress disorder has played a part in the resurgence in the popularity of Anzac Day, But, even now, returned soldiers don't receive enough support.
We need to have conversations about gendered language and its role in fostering prejudice.
Playing the lead role of a terminally ill academic in Wit left Monash's Jane Montgomery Griffiths pondering the healing potential of theatre.
Shining a light on the struggle POWs faced when they returned to Australia – and the impact on their wives.
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