By Samantha Thomas, Professor of Public Health, Deakin University Hannah Pitt, Senior Research Fellow – Institute for Health Transformation, Deakin University
More than 1,000 days after the release of the Murphy report, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has finally announced decisive action on tackling gambling advertising in Australia. In mid-2023, the late Labor MP Peta Murphy presented a report that recommended a ban on gambling advertising due to the harms caused…
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By Scott Dwyer, Research Director, Energy Futures, University of Technology Sydney
There’s been a surge of interest in EVs as the oil crisis hits – and secondhand EVs are especially in demand
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By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image (Clockwise, from top left): Burkina Faso President Capt. Ibrahim Traoré. © 2025 Stanislav Krasilnikov/RIA Novosti via AP; Iyad Ag Ghaly, JNIM supreme leader. © 2012 ROMARIC OLLO HIEN/AFP/Getty Images; JNIM fighters in Barsalogho, Sanmatenga province, Burkina Faso, August 24, 2024. © Private; Burkinabè military forces in Baraboulé, Sahel region, Burkina Faso, during Operation "Tchefari 2," December 2023. © 2024 RTB The Burkina Faso military with its allied militias and an Al Qaeda-linked armed group have killed more than 1,800 civilians and forcibly displaced…
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By Amnesty International
In response to the massacre that took place on 29 March 2026 in Petite-Rivière de l’Artibonite, in the Artibonite department, Astrid Valencia, Deputy Director for Research for the Americas at Amnesty International, said: “The massacre, reportedly carried out by ‘Gran Grif’, one of Haiti’s most violent gangs, is yet another tragedy in a long chain of crimes that the […] The post Haiti: New massacre highlights widespread failure to protect the population appeared first on Amnesty International. ]]>
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By Jack Janetzki, Lecturer in Pharmacy and Pharmacology, Adelaide University Lisa Kalisch Ellett, Research Fellow, Quality Use of Medicines and Pharmacy Research Centre, Adelaide University
As the conflict in the Middle East disrupts fuel, shipping and food supplies, many are starting to ask if they will be still be able to get their medicines if the war drags on. Australia’s medicine supply chain is built to handle short disruptions. So you shouldn’t have problems accessing most common medicines in the short to medium term. But it isn’t designed for prolonged global instability. What’s in place to protect our medicine supply? Since July 2023,…
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By Christiane Kehoe, Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne Elizabeth Westrupp, Associate Professor in Psychology, Deakin University
Long weekends often bring family and friends together in a mix of generations. Somewhere between the egg hunt and hot cross buns this weekend, there might be a moment where another adult steps in to “parent” your child in ways that don’t sit well with you. Maybe they are too sharp or too bossy. Or it’s just not how you do things. These situations are often less about those involved “behaving badly” and more about emotions running high. This goes for kids and adults. What can you do about it? What’s going on? It can be uncomfortable when…
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By Peer Ebbesen Skov, Associate Professor in Economics, Auckland University of Technology Lars Højsgaard Andersen, Senior Researcher in Sociology, Rockwool Foundation Livvy Mitchell, Research Affiliate, Motu Economic and Public Policy Research
New Zealand’s shift to community-based sentences has cut costs, helped offenders to retain work and higher earnings, with no major change to substantive reoffending.
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By Farid Zaid, Senior Lecturer, Psychology, Monash University Daniel Heller, Kronhill Senior Lecturer in East European Jewish History, Monash University
When we lose the ability to politely disagree, it narrows the space for thinking out loud. Here are 5 tips for conversations that allow constructive disagreement.
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By Martin Kear, Sessional Lecturer, Department of Government and International Relations, University of Sydney
The war in the Middle East is a huge political book for the Israeli prime minister in an election year – but it may come at a great cost.
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By Andres Fielbaum, Lecturer in Transport, University of Sydney
Picture this: you’re competing in a time-trial cycling race along a route that’s not known in advance. Instead of following a marked course, you receive instructions via notifications on your mobile phone. Looking at your phone while cycling is extremely dangerous. But to stay on track, you must consult it nearly continuously. If such a race took place on the streets of a busy, car-oriented city like Sydney, you would likely opt out. Yet food-delivery riders face precisely this situation every day: they receive order notifications while riding, and if they don’t check them,…
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