By Sabrina Lenzen, Senior Research Fellow in Health Economics, The University of Queensland
Long wait lists are the latest symptom of the aged care crisis. But this issue seems to be anything but a political priority.
(Full Story)
|
By Bethany Butchers, Associate Lecturer in Law, University of Newcastle
The landmark case, known as Tickle v Giggle, has been going for years. Today the Federal Court found transgender woman Roxanne Tickle had been discriminated against.
(Full Story)
|
By Wesley Widmaier, Professor of International Relations, Australian National University
This week’s summit has revived a 20-year-old idea of the ‘Group of Two’ superpowers working together with global benefits. But we’re now living in a different world.
(Full Story)
|
By Jonathan Este, Senior International Affairs Editor, Associate Editor, The Conversation
The initial top line emerging from the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing was that while the two leaders had talked trade, technology and the US war in Iran, the most potentially hazardous issue was Taiwan. The Chinese foreign ministry reported that the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, told the US president, Donald Trump, that “the Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations”. Handled properly, China’s statement said, relationship between China and the US will remain stable. “If handled poorly”, Xi told the US president, “the two countries will collide or even clash, putting…
(Full Story)
|
By Gemma Ware, Host, The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation
Sociologist Art Jipson talks to The Conversation Weekly podcast about how clamouring for the release of the Epstein files grew on fringe spaces of the internet.
(Full Story)
|
By Alexandra Lourenço Dias, Camões Lecturer in Lusophone Studies, King's College London
At first glance, these look like sketches – the kind artists make on the way to something more finished. But that expectation doesn’t quite hold. The drawings assert themselves: restless, unresolved, and often more direct than the paintings they eventually lead to. This is Story Line, the latest exhibition of Paula Rego at the Victoria Miro gallery in London. Dame Paula Rego was born in Lisbon in 1935, grew up under the Estado Novo…
(Full Story)
|
By Lynsey Cowlishaw, PhD Candidate in History and Culture, Media and Creative Industries, King's College London
Ellizabeth I’s refusal to go to bed was a deliberate final act, shaped by a lifetime of political strategy, emotional restraint and unresolved reckoning.
(Full Story)
|
By David Harnesk, Associate Professor, Sustainability Science, Lund University
Political debates about the future of forests in Sweden and the EU are reaching an impasse. Producing more wood comes at the expense of nature and the storage of carbon within trees and soils. Conserving and restoring more forests may limit commercial wood production. But it is important for both economists and conservationists to recognise how these forests support reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus). This species evolved in conjunction with the natural dynamics of boreal forest ecosystems in northern Fennoscandia – an area covering the Scandinavian peninsula, mainland Finland,…
(Full Story)
|
By Alan Ruddock, Associate Professor of Sport Physiology and Performance, Sheffield Hallam University Mayur Ranchordas, Professor of Applied Sport Nutrition and Sport Nutrition Consultant, Sheffield Hallam University
Sebastian Sawe ripped open a carbohydrate gel sachet and slurped it five minutes before the start of the 2026 London Marathon. Sixty minutes later, he inhaled another one before smashing through the two-hour marathon barrier. Sawe might have been the first sub-two-hour marathon runner, but he’s certainly not the first to be powered by an energy gel. It’s estimated that over 70%…
(Full Story)
|
By Madeleine Pownall, Associate Professor in Psychology , University of Leeds
In the US state park of Robbers Cave, Oklahoma, Carolyn Wood Sherif is standing squinting up at the sun. The two wooden cabins before her rattle with shrieks and cries from excited 11-year-old boys. They have been split into two groups of 11 and encouraged to bond. Over three long, laborious weeks in the summer of 1954, Wood Sherif watches as these boys become enthusiastically dedicated to their allocated groups. When instructed to compete for resources, they grow hostile towards their opponents. The experiment descends into inter-group violence…
(Full Story)
|