By Aung Zaw Zaw Phyo, Research Fellow in Chronic Diseases and Ageing , Monash University Joanne Ryan, Professor, Chronic Disease and Ageing, Monash University
Growing old is a fact of life. But thanks to improved health care and innovative technology, more of us are living longer and healthier lives. However, ageing isn’t always easy. That’s because your body and mind decline as you get older, and become more vulnerable to various diseases such as diabetes, dementia and some cancers. In our new…
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By Yuki Keith, Postdoctoral Researcher, Immunology, Garvan Institute Tri Phan, Program Director – Precision Immunology / Laboratory Head, Garvan Institute
For the past 15 years or so, a class of drugs called immune checkpoint inhibitors have been used to treat melanoma – the most dangerous kind of skin cancer. For many patients, they produce remarkable results. For others, they do nothing. We still don’t really know why. But in new research published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, we observed immune cells called macrophages attacking melanoma cells in real time – which may offer clues about how we can make those therapies work for all patients, not…
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By Marina Yue Zhang, Associate Professor, Technology and Innovation, University of Technology Sydney
It’s been a significant month for Australia’s ambitions to become a critical minerals superpower, while balancing its relationships with China and the United States. Last Monday, Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced he had ordered six investors with links to China to sell off shares in Northern…
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By Dominic D Ahiaga-Dagbui, Director of Deakin Megaprojects Research Group and Senior Lecturer of Construction and Project Management, Deakin University
From Snowy Hydro to Inland Rail, projects get announced early, then costs soar tens of billions higher. Yet there are proven ways to stop that happening.
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By Peter McDonald, Honorary Professor of Demography, Centre for Health Policy, The University of Melbourne
There are growing tensions in Australia’s migration policy. So far, the Albanese government has not tackled it - but the Liberals’ approach will not solve it either.
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By Linda J. Graham, Professor and Director of the Centre for Inclusive Education, Queensland University of Technology Callula Killingly, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Inclusive Education, Queensland University of Technology
New data shows more than one quarter of Australian students receive a disability adjustment. This is up from 18% in 2015.
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By Tracy McEwan, History Fellow, Australian Catholic University; University of Newcastle
Catholic nuns and religious sisters are gaining new visibility in digital spaces. These contemporary self-representations are connected to a complicated history.
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By Dennis Altman, Vice Chancellor's Fellow and Professorial Fellow, Institute for Human Security and Social Change, La Trobe University
Most of Errol Flynn’s films now seem B-grade at best – but Patricia O'Brien’s biography of this Tasmanian devil is compulsive reading.
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By Revti Raman Sharma, Associate Professor of International Business, Head of the School of Marketing & International Business, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
Despite the promise of “1.4 billion potential customers”, India is a vast and complex market. No pan-India strategy can substitute for careful, focused planning.
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By Kylie Gwynne, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies, UNSW Sydney; Macquarie University Katrina Ward, PhD Candidate in Nursing and Midwifery, RMIT University Vita Christie, Senior Research Officer, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney
Indigenous people have a far higher risk of early stroke than non-Indigenous people. It’s often caused by atrial fibrillation, which may not have any symptoms.
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