Artificial intelligence is a double-edged sword that can help enhance transparency, but also perpetuate false claims about sustainability efforts.
She arrived at Monash University 18 years ago, and now Wei Sue is one of many shining examples of the social and economic benefits international students can provide to Australia.
Data showed the view of the Indonesian government wasn’t prominent in news coverage of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
How far are Australians on the sustainability journey, and what are their attitudes and behaviours when it comes to engaging in sustainable practices and consumption?
From July this year, some psychiatrists will be able to prescribe psychedelics to some patients. Responses from experts working in the field are mixed.
Teacher retention is an ongoing issue. Actions to enhance respect will result in more positive and productive relationships between teachers and students, as well as with colleagues, and parents.
On a new episode of Monash University's 'What Happens Next?' podcast, Dr Susan Carland and expert guests discuss retaliation, the difference between call-outs and cancel culture, and how to be an ethical digital activist.
If our education system is truly committed to reconciliation, we must first actively support the acknowledgment of our past.
New research shows that those who witness hate crime express greater anger towards ethnic minorities.
Last year, despite closed borders, shuttered businesses, and their first recession in 26 years, Australians became more optimistic.
A study has exposed the yawning gaps in our society due to the removal of face-to-face interactions in schools, and the intense pressure on their leaders.
A study has highlighted the benefits of pet ownership in helping alleviate the loneliness of COVID-19 lockdown.
A study has explored how people online are feeling, and responding to, the emotional rollercoaster during the COVID-19 crisis.
We’re tackling a new topic on this episode of Monash podcast, What Happens Next?, looking at masculinity, and how its negative forms can be as damaging to men as women.
A new study examines the racial and cultural attitudes held towards minority groups by people across Melbourne.
The surging popularity of more emotive language regarding climate change is indicative of public sentiment, but context must play its part.
On “What Happens Next?”, host Dr Susan Carland talks to a campaigner who forced a major supermarket to reconsider sustainability, and discovers how marketing research can help organisations do it better.
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