By Sahanika Ratnayake, Postdoctoral Researcher, Evidence Synthesis, University of Manchester
Why the NHS keeps offering you the same therapy. And why the science behind that decision is shakier than you think.
(Full Story)
|
By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image A passenger train from Pyongyang upon arrival at Yaroslavsky Railway Station in Moscow, following the resumption in June 2025 of passenger rail service between the capitals of North Korea and Russia. © 2025 Pelagiya Tikhonova / Sputnik via AP A new report from Global Rights Compliance details the toll of state-imposed forced labor on North Korean workers, serving as a reminder that the products of this labor often enter global supply chains, including those flowing through the European Union. More than 100,000 North Koreans are estimated to work…
(Full Story)
|
By Muhammed Bello Buhari
The digital landscape is becoming increasingly dangerous for vulnerable groups. Technology-facilitated gender-based violence is a growing epidemic that most legal frameworks fail to address adequately.
(Full Story)
|
By Donovan Castelyn, Senior Industry Fellow - Taxation and Director of the UTAS Tax Clinic, University of Tasmania
Yes, some people may try to qualify for a pension payment before selling an asset. But the loophole is far narrower and better defended than some headlines suggest.
(Full Story)
|
By Amnesty International
States attending the June Climate Meetings next week in Bonn, Germany must use the talks to turn climate commitments into a concrete actionable rights-centric agenda for November’s COP31, Amnesty International said today. What happens in Bonn matters because it will shape the negotiations, priorities and level of ambition that governments carry into COP31 in Antalya, Türkiye later this year. These meetings are an important chance for governments to show they are ready to translate climate commitments made in the recently adopted United Nations […] The post Global: Governments heading to…
(Full Story)
|
By Joel Robert McGregor, Senior Lecturer, Criminology, Swinburne University of Technology Xanthe Weston, Criminologist, CQUniversity Australia
At a time when vehicle theft claims are falling across most of Australia, Victoria is heading in the opposite direction.
(Full Story)
|
By Human Rights Watch
Two journalists affiliated with the YouTube channel Imbarutso ya Demokarasi are facing charges for reporting on Kwa Kabuga or the Kigali Transit Center, an unofficial detention facility where authorities hold people deemed “undesirable,” and one of the capital’s worst kept secrets. Augustin Nsanzimana, a cameraman and editor, and Emmanuel Niyonshuti, a broadcast journalist, are currently being held in pre-trial detention, which was confirmed by a judge on June 2. At a May 26 court hearing, the prosecution accused the two of “publish[ing] rumors that may incite fear,” a criminal offense vague…
(Full Story)
|
By Jennifer Parker, Adjunct Professor, Defence and Security Institute, The University of Western Australia; UNSW Sydney
Following news of Australia acquiring used Virginia-class submarines from the US, AUKUS has been in the headlines again, but how much of what you’ve heard is true?
(Full Story)
|
By Steve Urlich, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Management, Lincoln University, New Zealand
As an overhauled rulebook for commercial forestry comes into force, there are concerns it could weaken safeguards as climate risks intensify.
(Full Story)
|
By Andrew Cullen, Senior Research Fellow, School of Computing and Information Systems, The University of Melbourne
Artificial intelligence (AI) giant Anthropic has expanded access to a highly advanced model deemed too dangerous for public release, including Australia in the select handful of users. The large language model, known as Claude Mythos, is now being rolled out to an additional 150 organisations across 15 countries, including the Australian government and several local businesses,…
(Full Story)
|