Low awareness of the link between heat and eco-anxiety in Indonesia requires a more comprehensive strategy in the campaign.
Ambitious home energy upgrade programs aimed at improving energy efficiency face several key questions and challenges if they’re to succeed.
Why have successive Australian governments found it so difficult to truly embrace the country’s potential to become a clean energy superpower?
While virality holds values, state actors still hold responsibility for sensing and understanding the inherent problems, and recognising the urgency to address it through differing policy capacities.
Vietnam is poised to play a significant role in the Indo-Pacific region’s decarbonisation. Now is the time for Australia to strengthen its strategic relationship with the country, and the broader Southeast Asia region.
Australians want government to act on climate change, but not necessarily now, or in their neighbourhood. How can governments resolve this dilemma?
Medical faculties globally have been slow to recognise the training needs of the next generation of doctors regarding the health consequences of a heating planet.
A suite of tools is helping scientists “taste” the properties of Antarctica’s Southern Ocean to better-understand why more heat is seeping towards the icy continent.
Young people are getting a dose of social media-driven eco-anxiety, but there are ways we can help them beat it.
Monash University’s Amelia Pearson has set sail with a team of scientists who want to find out why Earth’s strongest current is “leaking” more heat towards Antarctica.
Among the intricate tapestry of issues on the table at COP28, there are some pivotal ones that demand our attention.
You can’t save the planet on your own. Take a deep breath, take some notes from these leading experts – and then take action.
Can legislated obligations improve the way governments consider climate change in their decision-making?
Hotter, drier conditions associated with El Niño can be detrimental to our health. These tips may help.
Publicly-available data on social media opens an avenue for studying the environment with “incidental citizen science”.
New research shows if we know more about what groups of people think, real science can be communicated in better ways, and more will accept the facts.
We all face it – whether we invite it in or not. From our workplaces to the societies within which we live, uncertainty is everywhere.
Now that the TGA approved promising medicines, it’s important we get the rollout right to ensure those suffering have access to what could be an important ingredient in solving the mental health crisis.
This week on Monash University's “What Happens Next?” podcast, meet the change-makers on the front lines of food.
Season 7 of Monash University’s podcast returns from hiatus with an investigation into food security. How will we feed more people than ever on an ever-warming planet?
Before teaching about climate change, it’s important to understand how people connect with the issue.
How can we, personally, prepare for a future with not only more frequent natural disasters, but one that will also profoundly change the environment, communities and the economy?
Our ability to adapt our way out of the climate crisis will soon be beyond us unless we rapidly decarbonise to limit global warming.
Research suggests one of the greatest assets following a disaster is the people who experience them. But this asset is hugely under-utilised.
Dummy text