By Hien Tran, Associate Professor, Telfer School of Management, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Research tracking Canadians through marriage, childbirth, divorce and widowhood finds that entry into self-employment can be shaped as much by household circumstances as by individual ambition.
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By Toni Patricia Brackin, Professor of Accounting and Deputy Head of School - Business, University of Southern Queensland
Unpaid super costs Australians around $6 billion. So how much is ‘payday super’ likely to boost your balance? And where can employees or employers get more help?
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By Saman Gorji, Associate Professor, Renewable Energy and Electrical Engineering, Deakin University Alireza Ganjovi, Researcher, Energy Systems and Applied Physics, Deakin University
Three hours of free power isn’t a giveaway – it’s meant to help the grid use floods of cheap solar. To succeed, the new scheme has to be fair.
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By Amit Arora, Associate Professor in Public Health, Western Sydney University Hannah Dahlen, Professor of Midwifery, Associate Dean Research and HDR, Midwifery Discipline Leader, Western Sydney University Jessica Appleton, Senior Lecturer, School of Nursing and Midwifery Lynn Kemp, Director of the Translational Research and Social Innovation group, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University
A single dot on a growth chart doesn’t mean much in isolation. Here’s what your nurse is looking for when checking your baby’s growth – and how they’ll support you.
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By Melissa Black, Honorary Research Fellow, The University of Western Australia
Tracing the history of this emotion can help us understand how it came to be empowering for LGBTQIA+ people – even as certain groups try and hijack it.
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By Natasha Yates, General Practitioner, PhD Candidate, Bond University
A GP reflects on the lessons of Eric Schlosser’s ‘muckraking’ classic. A necessary health check on the world we’ve built, it urges us all to take back our agency.
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By Carrie Leonetti, Associate Professor of Law, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
Stopping judges from considering “good character” references when sentencing sexual offenders – as New Zealand’s National Party has pledged to if re-elected – may sound like a niche legal reform. But it targets a real and longstanding issue in the country’s criminal justice system – and one that has drawn renewed…
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By Jean Poitras, Professeur titulaire en gestion de conflits, HEC Montréal
Megalomaniacal leaders thrive when a group’s collective uncertainty is coupled with the leader’s narcissism and reinforced by a culture of conformity that suppresses critical thinking.
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By Judy Ingham, Newsletter Producer, The Conversation
On One Nation targeting Andrew Hastie, plus the changing use of words such as ‘trauma’: an edited selection of your views.
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By Barrie Llewelyn, Senior Lecturer in Faculty of Business and Creative Industries, University of South Wales Adrian Paterson, Lecturer in English, University of Galway Dominic O'Key, Teaching Associate, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge Ludivine Broch, Lecturer in History, University of Westminster Magnus Marsden, Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Sussex Michaela Benson, Professor in Public Sociology, Lancaster University
The Women’s prize for non-fiction celebrates excellence, originality and accessibility in narrative non-fiction written by women. This prize acknowledges that while great gains have been made in representation for women in fiction, their voices remain systemically underrepresented in non-fiction. In only its third year, the 2026 shortlist covers a diverse range of topics, examining themes from creativity and wellbeing to conflict and family ties. Here we have enlisted…
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