Forced to cross the Sahara, migrants grapple with extreme heat and climate disasters. Amid EU-backed deportations, their plight reflects a global failure to safeguard human rights and dignity.
Vanessa Teague, Adjunct Associate Professor, College of Engineering and Computer Science, Australian National University Secret ballots have long been fundamental to democracy, ensuring the integrity ...
Recycling metals from e-waste will be critical as demand for raw materials is likely to outstrip supply in the near future.
Since Hamas launched its unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel, international links to the militant group have been placed under scrutiny. Some nations have tried to lessen or hide their previous ...
By Larissa Christensen, Senior Lecturer in Criminology & Justice, Co-leader of the Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit (SVRPU), University of the Sunshine Coast Isabelle ...
Maria-Carolina Zanette, Associate Professor of Marketing, Neoma Business School Despite its widespread use and significant impact, influencer marketing is surrounded by uncertainties, ambiguities and ...
Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) has recently approved a self-test kit for chlamydia and gonorrhoea for women and other people with a vagina. Reports indicate these at-home tests ...
By now it’s well established that meat and dairy are at least partly to blame for the climate crisis. And without coming off our addiction to animal products, we won’t be able ...
New research on New South Wales students shows many do not have access to computers and the support they need to use them. This means they risk falling behind.
New research examining how net-zero announcements from the US, UK, and China affected global financial markets could help forecast what the future may hold, if the US pulls back on its commitments.
A study shows president-elect Donald Trump’s promised tariffs on Chinese, Mexican and Canadian imports will be a case of economic snakes and ladders for New Zealand. But bigger threats still loom.
Conservatives say the U.S. immigration system is broken, but it was never fixed. More than 100 years ago, white migrants invaded Indigenous territory — but they had the power to change laws.