• Society

    Financial reform for development goals


    Isabella Massa |  September 20, 2024


    The world is at a crossroads as progress on the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals falters. A drastic but necessary overhaul of the credit rating system could help.


  • Media

    Reclaiming the internet


    Wonsun Shin |  September 20, 2024


    Once a brave new frontier of individual expression, the internet is now dominated by a handful of massive tech oligopolies, scammers, intrusive advertising and AI generated spam, so is there any hope for its redemption?


  • Society

    Climate disclosure laws will accelerate decarbonisation


    Open Forum |  September 20, 2024


    New laws requiring larger companies to disclosure a wide range of climate-related information will come into force at the start of 2025, and will be rolled out to smaller firms over time.


Latest Story

  • Aligning commercial technology with AUKUS Pillar II

    Sophie Mayo     |      September 19, 2024

    The Australian and US Governments must focus on becoming more attractive customers to industry by strengthening the economic incentives for the defence market to participate in AUKUS pillar II.

  • The costly path to universal childhood education

    Michelle Grattan     |      September 19, 2024

    A new report from the Productivity Commission charts the costly path to universal early childhood education.

  • After Trump

    Christopher Pollard     |      September 19, 2024

    Donald Trump’s narcissistic, self serving and moronic cult of personality has captured what was once a proud Republican party, so what are the alternatives?

  • Asylum seekers: what now?

    Michael Liffman     |      September 18, 2024

    In the face of the continuing controversies and hardships in Australia’s refugee and asylum seeker policies and practices, Michael Liffman proposes consideration of an initiative he first suggested over ten years ago. It is not, he notes, an entirely novel idea, and has much in common with the ill-fated Malaysia policy that received such lamentable treatment by Australia’s political processes in 2011.

  • Will your face be your fortune?

    Sasha Wang     |      September 18, 2024

    You used to pay for everything by cash, then came cheques, credit cards and taps of a mobile phone, but would you be willing to pay for your supermarket trolley by just showing your face?

  • Rounding up the e-scooters

    Hiruni Nuwanthika Kegalle     |      September 18, 2024

    Dumped E-bikes and e-scooters litter our pavements, while in use they menace pedestrians and cause danger on the roads, but a new survey of their use in Melbourne offers some strategies to at least minimise the parking problem.

  • Sports diplomacy

    Andrew Horton     |      September 17, 2024

    Sports diplomacy can be a potent weapon in the Pacific to improve ties with democratic nations and resits China’s coercive grasp for political power and social influence.

  • Great ‘techspectations’

    Open Forum     |      September 17, 2024

    Though Australians like to embrace new technologies, concerns over security, privacy, and the loss of human interaction remain.

  • The high price of loyalty

    Katie Miller     |      September 17, 2024

    Customers were once rewarded for loyalty to a firm’s products and services, but more unscrupulous operators now offer discounts to new consumers at the expense of long-standing ones.

  • The holy creed of Carbonus Rex

    Roger Chao     |      September 17, 2024

    65 million years ago, a natural act wiped out the dinosaurs, but today it’s the dinosaurs of the fossil fuel industry who imperil life on Earth.

  • What the experts say on…social media restrictions

    Open Forum     |      September 16, 2024

    The Australian government has committed itself to imposing an age limit on social media before the next election, but is this a desirable or workable solution?

  • Tech bros and media barons

    Andrew Dodd     |      September 16, 2024

    Is the world better off with “tech bros” like Elon Musk who demand unlimited freedom to brazenly assert their influence, or old-style media moguls who spin fine-sounding rhetoric about freedom of the press but exert influence under the cover of journalism?