Facing a triple-planetary crisis, our ecological systems need a shift to circular economies. Youth can drive sustainable food systems through mindful choices.
Widely-available AI tools are supercharging cyber crime, which means we need to stay on top of our online security like never before.
While there have been moves to making voting optional in Australia, voters have consistently expressed their support for it being compulsory.
A new report recommends a shift to a more modern “push model” that emphasises proactive release, with reliance on FOI requests as a last option.
This is not the final exchange between the two nations, and escalation could step up yet another notch in the near future.
The PR industry is being rebadged, but the history it tells omits the key role women have played, and many of its milestones and missteps.
The artform’s multi-dimensional nature, combined with concepts of abstraction, can provide a powerful way to think differently about the complex problems affecting us today.
On a new episode of Monash University’s ‘What Happens Next?’ podcast, we examine whether mining and sustainability can go hand-in-hand as we transition to a decarbonised future,
Multiple expert assessments made in 2022 conclude the modern Azov Regiment is a fairly typical fighting unit, with little, if any, political bent.
This week on Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, learn how emerging technologies are changing the way we think about soldiers, and the way soldiers think about their jobs.
Unlike many politicians, Anthony Albanese doesn’t appear to harbour a sense of entitlement to the top job – and his journey towards it has been a long one.
A new episode of Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, examines what the future will look like if we don’t consider the moral and ethical quandaries presented by new technologies on the battlefield.
We should welcome all options that enable low-carbon hydrogen to play a role in decarbonising our energy systems, and stop focusing on colour-coding production methods.
The bill exposes the culture war within Australia’s biggest religious groups, and runs into constitutional problems.
Squid Game’s tentacle-like grip on global pop culture is unprecedented and now researchers have identified how it can be used to teach economics.
New research recommends Indonesia partner with Australia to develop resilient and responsive healthcare supply chains using modern digital technologies.
With more and more technology-driven crime, the tension between policing it and preserving the privacy of individuals is being writ large.
The Malka Leifer sexual abuse case galvanised Australia’s Jewry, but what have been the implications for child safety standards within Jewish organisations in Australia and Israel?
In this final episode about exploring our history, Monash alum Elizabeth Finkel AM explains why she tells the stories of how science works, and our experts offer their best tips and advice on where to dig deeper for knowledge.
On this episode, we’ll hear a more positive perspective – how masculinity is changing, and how men are being encouraged to change past patterns of behaviour.
As the pandemic wreaks havoc on supply chains, are companies losing sight of their social responsibility?
Many more households face financial hardship and discomfort at home this winter, as we physically self-isolate from work, family and friends due to COVID-19.
The rivalry between the US, China, Russia and Europe will continue amid the pandemic crisis, and beyond.
The long, hard slog to decide the US presidential nominees is about to begin.
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