• Defence and Security

    Learning from Ukraine


    Clive Williams |  April 19, 2026


    Land wars of the recent past were shaped primarily by the industrial-scale production of tanks and artillery but today’s wars are now being determined by the capacity to produce and deploy large numbers of unmanned systems at relatively low cost.


  • Artificial Intelligence

    When AI knows you better than you know yourself


    Grant Blashki |  April 19, 2026


    AI systems can detect your patterns across time, synthesise the data you provide it and present a distilled portrait of who you are which may feel clearer than your own recollection but we can’t let AI define who we are.


  • Society

    Global citizens in a divided world


    Alison Francis-Cracknell |  April 19, 2026


    A global citizen is “someone who is aware of and understands the wider world and their place in it” according to Oxfam, and building global citizenship has never been more important than today.


Latest Story

  • In praise of curiosity

    Nicola Redhouse     |      April 18, 2026

    The violent, chaotic state of the world today increases our craving for certainty but its opposite, curiosity, might be what we really need.

  • Reforming the NDIS

    Sam Bennett     |      April 18, 2026

    The government wants to curb NDIS spending as the $50 billion a year programme continues to spiral out of control, so here’s how it might succeed.

  • Australia’s aged care algorithm comes under fire

    Open Forum     |      April 18, 2026

    The way Australians are assessed for home-based aged-care funding is being investigated by the Commonwealth ombudsman.

  • Making people

    Roger Chao     |      April 17, 2026

    Early childhood educators do some of the most important work in the country and our failure to honour them and pay them properly is undermining our future in the name of short-term thrift.

  • What do political think tanks do?

    Nathan Fioritti     |      April 17, 2026

    The revamping of the Green Party’s “Institute” prompts examination of what party think tanks do and their value to Australia’s party system.

  • AI is already driving people out of work

    Clinton Free     |      April 17, 2026

    As long-standing jobs disappear and opportunities for young people dwindle, there is a growing need for a national conversation on policies to navigate the impact of artificial intelligence on entry level, white collar and professional jobs.

  • War at the speed of light

    Malcolm Davis     |      April 16, 2026

    For decades, notions of laser weapons have been the stuff of science fiction. Now they are becoming military reality, as directed-energy weapons, including high-energy lasers and high-power microwave weapons, open new approaches to counter swarms of cheap drones.

  • Tackling teacher burnout

    Pamela Patrick     |      April 16, 2026

    Teachers are often described as the backbone of our education system. But what’s less visible is the emotional load they carry every day, and how that load is quietly shaping whether they stay or leave the profession.

  • Medicare’s mental health check

    Peter Baldwin     |      April 16, 2026

    Medicare Mental Health Check In doesn’t offer the instant back-and-forth of a chatbot. But it does offer something a chatbot can’t: an evidence-based program designed by experts and supported by a caring human.

  • The sky’s not the limit

    Akshit Tyagi     |      April 15, 2026

    Artemis II has returned humans to deep space for the first time in fifty years but the forces that brought us back are the same ones that kept us away and until scientific discovery displaces geopolitics and profit, the next fifty years will look just like the last.

  • Send in the drones

    Michelle Grattan     |      April 15, 2026

    Expanding Australia’s fleet of autonomous and uncrewed defence and weapon systems will help the ADF keep the nation safe, support local jobs and harness Australian innovation.

  • Looking through glasswing

    Stan Karanasios     |      April 15, 2026

    If AI models like Mythos can scan the hidden plumbing of the internet – operating systems, browsers, routers, and shared open-source code – at an unprecedented scale, then what is now specialised hacking could become a routine and automated process.