Existing research evidence suggests the hegemony of neoliberal measures within Australian welfare policy has resulted in higher, not lower, levels of social and economic injustice.
The world’s collective failure to adequately address climate change alters “the rules of the parenting game”.
It's time for the chatter to stop, and for effective interventions to be put in place.
This week on Monash University’s ‘What Happens Next?’ podcast, a live panel of experts in Australian politics and gender discuss the issues around gender equality and women's safety.
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) has kept poverty and inequality on the policy agenda.
Indigenous babies are still being removed from their parents and placed into out-of-home care at alarmingly high rates. A new alliance is hoping to change that.
The high level of poverty in affluent Australia is a national disgrace, and its prevention should be a priority for all political parties. But it’s not.
Researchers estimate about half of the adults who end up in prison are parents, but what happens to their children?
Girls and women experience climate change in unique ways. This includes being vulnerable to gender-based violence as climate change brings about forced migration, loss of housing and income.
The pandemic is likely to intensify the harmful effects of child marriage, increasing exposure to violence, and decreasing access to healthcare and support networks.
A UNICEF report paints a bleak picture of Australian children's mental health, happiness and life satisfaction.
Remote learning has made it even harder to implement the principles of inclusive education, but there is a way forward.
So what can you do to save us all from a world without art? In this podcast episode of What Happens Next?, our experts share all their best tips for finding art in new places.
In developing and conflict-affected countries, support systems for children’s protection in times of the pandemic risk being overlooked.
Sharman Stone has worked to advance the rights of women for more than 20 years, in Parliament and as Ambassador for Women and Girls, but her work isn't finished yet.
Pope Francis is working to overturn centuries of tradition in the Catholic Church, unlike his predecessor, but his reformation project is a double-edged sword.
We need to think about the problems that men and women face not as competing priorities but as part of the same toxic social problem.
Unable to satisfy her desire to help people through medicine alone, Naba Masad Alfayadh founded a social enterprise that empowers young people through education.
The frank but sweet discussion of childbirth in the BBC's Call the Midwife has much in common with fairy tales.
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