By Narendar Manohar, Research Fellow in Workplace Mental Health, Black Dog Institute Hiroko Fujimoto, Research Officer in Workplace Mental Health, Black Dog Institute Peter Baldwin, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, Swinburne University of Technology; UNSW Sydney
Long-term data shows children are more likely to develop mental health issues when their parents experience financial stress and housing instability.
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By Daniel Binns, Senior Lecturer, Media & Communication, RMIT University Meg Thomas, PhD Candidate, The University of Queensland
The Academy has decided to ban AI actors and scripts from the Oscars. But machine learning systems are actually used in cinema more often than most people realise.
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By Vitomir Kovanovic, Professor and Associate Director of the Centre for Change and Complexity in Learning (C3L), Education Futures, Adelaide University
AI infractions could result in a year-long ban from the arXiv system, which is an essential communication channel in many fields of research.
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By Fiona Boylan, Senior Lecturer, School of Education, Edith Cowan University Amelia Ruscoe, Lecturer, School of Education, Edith Cowan University
Just when one child is ready, another can’t find a shoe, someone remembers homework and someone else starts crying because they want more breakfast.
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By Kate Cantrell, Senior Lecturer in Humanities, University of Southern Queensland
Periodic Bitch tells what it’s like to live with PMDD: an extreme, chronically understudied and widely misunderstood form of premenstrual illness.
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By Myra Williamson, Senior Lecturer in Law, Auckland University of Technology
Voter turnout in New Zealand elections has been sliding for decades. Research suggests compulsory voting could reverse the trend – so what are the objections?
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By Kristin Kanthak, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh
Despite Pennsylvania’s status as a fiercely contested swing state, many local and state primary races in the 2026 primaries draw little competition at all.
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By Amnesty International
Responding to the Dominican Republic assuming the presidency of the 79th World Health Assembly, Ana Piquer, Americas Director at Amnesty International, said: “As it assumes the presidency of the world’s leading global health forum, President Luis Abinader’s government in the Dominican Republic has the responsibility to demonstrate that its international leadership translates into real guarantees […] The post Dominican Republic: Global leadership in health requires domestic consistency and an end to racial discrimination appeared first on Amnesty International. ]]>
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By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image The Federal High Court premises in Abuja, Nigeria, on April 22, 2026. © 2026 Light Oriye Tamunotonye/AFP via Getty Images On May 5, a Nigerian high court ordered the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), a prominent local human rights organization, to pay 100 million naira (about US$72,000) in damages to two Department of State Services officials. The court also directed the organization to publish public apologies and pay litigation costs.The Department of State Services officials filed the civil case against SERAP following the latter’s…
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By Anastasia Pestova
Russian stories of civic resistance show that environmental justice often begins with a simple question: who has the right to decide the fate of the places people call home?
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