Artificial intelligence is a double-edged sword that can help enhance transparency, but also perpetuate false claims about sustainability efforts.
Despite being on other sides of the planet, Jakarta and Iowa are staring down similar issues regarding water hygiene and supply.
Liars and fake news merchants are profiting from misinformation and disinformation in Indonesia. Can it be fixed?
What are the implications of the Internet of Behaviours for tourism stakeholders in a hyper-connected and data-driven world?
Taiwan's “humour-over-rumour” approach is an example of how to effectively counter misinformation in the digital age.
Amid enforced online learning, talk of teachers' 'digital understanding' shouldn’t be taken to refer only to their knowledge of the technological aspects.
Monash's most recent cohort of Fulbright, Rhodes and Schwarzman scholars share their passions and plans for the future.
Public servants are eager to become innovative public problem-solvers, but their leaders are standing in their way.
Don’t worry, your self-driving car won’t kill you – as long as research focuses on people and society, too.
There's a fundamental shift occurring in consumer behaviour, from conspicuous consumption to conscious consumption.
A sudden funding change plunged a youth service into an existential crisis. To survive required a radical shift in how it operated.
As governments around the world try to curtail the global obesity crisis, do Australia’s Health Star ratings encourage people to choose healthy options?
How simple acts of kindness can significantly improve the experience and outcomes for cancer patients.
Private mediation has been a roadblock to advances in anti-discrimination law in Victoria. Could a new corporate watchdog be the answer?
A power imbalance is leading to many patients negotiating with doctors and medical staff as if they are being held hostage.
Eureka Prize-winning data mining techniques are being utilised in areas as diverse as drug use research and medicine.
Bankruptcy rates among franchisees can be a dirty little secret for franchises, but there may be a simple fix.
When it comes to the highest court in the land, Australians are guilty of ignorance.
In 1637, a mania for tulips fanned the world’s first speculative asset bubble. In 2018, Bitcoin looks a lot like this.
Telling people that stocks are low on popular brands triggers purchase impulse.
Most of those fighting the Nazi regime from within were everyday Germans and Austrians with blue-collar jobs.
It might seem a grand adventure, but the arduous conditions and isolation send most people packing.
The World Bank has claimed a significant decrease in global poverty. But has it set the measurement bar too low?
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