Professor Chris Lawrence’s passion for Indigenous achievement has come full circle.
On a new episode of Monash University’s “What Happens Next?” podcast, meet the healthcare providers and advocates working tirelessly to ensure that we don't lose ground in the global fight for reproductive rights.
With an unavoidable reduction in research output, women are forced out of science at earlier stages in their careers.
A new collection of essays describes a political arena in which the structural and cultural barriers facing women are contradictory and self-defeating.
We’re kicking off Series 4 of What Happens Next by looking back, way back. This time we’ll ponder what happens if we stop exploring natural history – what would we lose?
There's no evidence that the Rainbow Laces campaign or Pride Games helps stop homophobic language or make sport more inclusive. We need to refocus the campaign towards amateur sports.
Traces of drugs are increasingly being detected in waterways, and Dr Erinn Richmond is studying the potential harm posed to ecological environments and whether microplastics aid the transportation of drugs into the diets of aquatic creatures.
The economic and social consequences of the COVID-19 crisis have reinforced gender inequality across the globe – as shown in the medical research field.
A new advocacy group aims to address gender imbalance in science by helping map the career trajectories of early-to-mid-career researchers through promotion of their existing research achievements.
The genetic modification of twin baby girls before their birth has highlighted the ethical concerns raised by the use of gene-editing tool CRISPR in humans.
Times have changed, but the gendered stereotype that scientists are predominantly serious, professional, white men is one that persists.
New research shows that medicines have found their way into Melbourne streams – and the creatures that live in them.
As tough as gobies may be, the delicate environment in which they live is under threat from human activities.
A global program in which mosquitoes are implanted with a common bacteria is preventing the spread of viruses such as dengue, Zika and chikungunya – and could help tens of millions of people.
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