Ambitious home energy upgrade programs aimed at improving energy efficiency face several key questions and challenges if they’re to succeed.
Paying for a tattoo and then paying again to have it removed may be expensive, but living with regret is enduring.
If we’re to effectively tackle the critical challenge of climate change, we urgently need a better and more coordinated global transformation to environmentally-friendly economies.
While capital skills don’t necessarily translate into job offers for international students, research shows they improve key wellbeing, sustainability, and professional growth aspects.
Virtual mobility is part of the “new” normal in higher education, but to capitalise on this potential, we need to ensure students are fully on board.
For employers to feel confident hiring individuals who graduated from their course in the 2020s, they need to be convinced of their job-worthiness.
Gang rape, sexual assaults at gunpoint, and rapes committed in front of children were among some of the accounts emerging from Ukraine’s capital Kyiv last month.
Western commentary on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine trivialises the horrendous suffering of Ukrainians, and does nothing to amplify their voices.
Why terminology matters when discussing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Find out how privilege and disparate levels of access to basic resources such as education are contributing to social inequality in Australia – threatening the egalitarian ideals of 'the land of the fair go’.
The new peer-reviewed Journal of Beatles Studies aims to navigate and map the meanings of the Liverpool music icons, and how they’ve been investigated and narrated.
Dr Harry Al-Wassiti is now part of a Monash research team striving to find a COVID-19 vaccine, but his path has been far from easy.
Deferring to AI to give us what we like further diminishes culture at a societal scale, and cultural difference globally.
In our last episode, we pondered a world without art and now we hear from two people who push the boundaries in fields you wouldn't normally consider creative.
During the COVID-19 crisis, we need the arts more than ever to feel connected, but it's also exposed the fragility of the sector.
Forget the finger-pointing – public communications that promote collective action will make our pandemic-clouded lives a little easier.
Solving climate change would involve only a fraction of the interventions into civic, business and organisational life that we're seeing now.
The cancellation of cultural events will be devastating for artists and arts workers. A $186 million stimulus package could help stem the damage.
Leadership changes might bring quick fixes, but until we address rusted-on cultural practices, toxic masculinity will continue to manifest itself in these "boys' club" environments.
Encouraging migrants to move to regional areas could be a 'win-win' scenario, as long as policymakers pay attention to five key factors.
The gruesome origins of Valentine's Day are a far cry from today's rampant commercialism that's now facing a growing backlash.
Brexit and the 'yellow vest' protests in Paris are symptoms of a growing discontent among people economically abandoned by globalisation.
Although Melbourne and Singapore are very different cities, they have much in common.
Creative manufacturing is surviving in urban areas, but the redevelopment of inner-city industrial zones threatens its existence.
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