• Politics and Policy

    Learning the lessons from “robodebt”


    Yee-Fui Ng |  March 14, 2026


    If we want to avoid another Robodebt, the government needs to look at broader reform on automated government decision-making and measures to strengthen the public service.


  • Society

    Building social cohesion


    Keiran Hardy |  March 14, 2026


    Social cohesion is a social process that emerges from policies and programs, information flows and everyday interactions and requires intentional investment from all levels of society.


  • Artificial Intelligence

    What’s the point of a PhD now?


    Toby Murray |  March 14, 2026


    Why should bright young students work for years to get a PhD if senior academics won’t engage them for research projects as its cheaper and easier to autogenerate slop with ChatGPT?


Latest Story

  • Boosting rural resilience

    Robyn McNeil     |      March 13, 2026

    Psychological readiness for rural Australians can be just as vital as emergency kits in weathering the risks from fires and floods.

  • Zero stars

    Jason Harris     |      March 13, 2026

    The scathing inquiries into the money laundering, organised crime, large-scale fraud and foreign interference activities within Star Casinos should offer a wake up call for Australian executives across the economy.

  • Australia is right to help defend Gulf states

    Jennifer Parker     |      March 13, 2026

    While the outcome of the conflict remains far from certain and few people would pretend to know how a war of this scale will unfold, Australia is right to support the US and the defence of the Gulf states under attack from Iranian drones and missiles.

  • The changing face of terrorism

    Alexander Howard     |      March 12, 2026

    The Iranian revolution installed an Islamic regime which funded and transformed global terrorism, replacing left‑wing radicalism with religious fundamentalism.

  • Into the manosphere

    Steven Roberts     |      March 12, 2026

    Louis Theroux’s new Netflix documentary explores the world of ‘manosphere’ influencers and podcasters and their appeal to young men in a world which not only doesn’t seem to need them, but actively despises them.

  • Beware of zombies

    Seth Robinson     |      March 12, 2026

    Zombie fiction imagines a world that has been changed forever, but also offers hope that individuals can still resist and repel despair and assimilation, rather than one than succumb to it without a fight.

  • Don’t let AI do your thinking for you

    Misia Temler     |      March 11, 2026

    It’s tempting to offload your thinking to artificial intelligence but cognitive science shows why that’s a bad idea. For a successful relationship with AI, we need to exercise all our mental skills – otherwise we really do risk losing them.

  • USA-Iran war highlights Australia’s fuel vulnerability

    Raelene Lockhorst     |      March 11, 2026

    Rather than treating fuel security purely as a stockpiling problem, Australia should think about distributed fuel resilience, including larger northern storage facilities, greater redundancy in import terminals and expanded capacity to move fuel across the continent during disruption.

  • The Milky Bar kid

    Bernard Paul Corden     |      March 11, 2026

    Kevin Rudd was seen as a breath of fresh air after replacing the long serving John Howard as Australia’s Prime Minister in 2007 but leadership battles with Julia Gillard and a failure to embrace radical reform doomed his premiership to failure.

  • Bridging the great divides

    John Coyne     |      March 10, 2026

    Maintaining social cohesion is a crucial factor in preserving Australia’s security but policy makers shouldn’t make it a national-security issue.

  • The sea, the sea

    Sean Andrews     |      March 10, 2026

    The current conflict in the Middle East highlights the importance of maintaining Australia’s naval and commercial fleets and improving home grown oil refining capacity.

  • This is my truth, now tell me yours

    Bernard Paul Corden     |      March 10, 2026

    British Labour icon Nye Bevan popularised Friedrich Nietzsche’s phrase “This is my truth, now tell me yours” 80 years ago, but the challenge remains as aposite as ever.