• Society

    Are people resigned to losing data privacy?


    Josh Widera |  November 8, 2025


    Governments and corporations are collecting ever more personal information on us all to control our lives and bombard us with advertising but most citizens and consumers don’t seem to care.


  • Neuroscience

    How genetics differentiates male and female brains


    Jenny Graves |  November 8, 2025


    As well as the obvious physical differences between men and women, a growing body of scientific evidence shows hundreds of genes act differently in the brains of the two sexes, and may be linked to brain disorders such as Alheizmer’s and Parkinson’s disease.


  • Defence and Security

    The case for civil defence


    Marc Ablong |  November 8, 2025


    The escalating geostrategic threats to Australia demand more than military might in response and a resilient, united and proactive civil defence framework could help safeguard citizens and build national resilience.


Latest Story

  • 50 years on from the ‘dismissal’

    Michelle Grattan     |      November 7, 2025

    The dismissal of Gough Whitlam as Australia’s Prime Minister 50 years ago remains seared in the memory of many Australians who were adults or even children at the time, and was a life-changing day for everyone in Canberra’s Parliament House.

  • Could a ‘grey swan’ sink AI?

    Cameron Shackell     |      November 7, 2025

    Could a ‘grey swan’ – a rare but foreseeable event such as the popping of an economic bubble – upset the current hype around Artificial Intelligence?

  • Plugging the ‘leaky pipeline’

    Jessica Borger     |      November 7, 2025

    The “leaky pipeline” has been used to justify the attrition of women from science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine, but the metaphor obscures the cultural, structural and institutional barriers that continue to obscure women’s career pathways in academic and industry STEMM.

  • Why we love – or hate – AI

    Paul Jones     |      November 6, 2025

    For all the promises of personal convenience and business optimisation, many people remain suspicious of AI tools. The answer may lay in human neuroscience rather than the technology itself.

  • Investing in the future of science

    Maggie Zhai     |      November 6, 2025

    If we want to lead in fields such as clean energy, advanced manufacturing and health technology, we must invest in our national research infrastructure.

  • Lonely? Me too

    Anastasia Hronis     |      November 6, 2025

    Loneliness is quietly emerging as one of the most significant health issues in Australia, affecting people of all ages, backgrounds and life stages, so what steps can we take to make friends?

  • Aged care in rural Australia needs digital health tech

    Open Forum     |      November 5, 2025

    Digital health technologies can help Australia’s rural health and aged care systems cut costs, increase efficiency and connect staff, residents and patients to other services.

  • Unlocking the potential of generative AI

    Open Forum     |      November 5, 2025

    Generative artificial intelligence can automate routine tasks, freeing employees to focus on more strategic and creative work, while reducing costs and accelerating time to market but new research from Edith Cowan University highlights the factors hindering its adoption.

  • Preventative care for productivity gains

    Open Forum     |      November 5, 2025

    As Australian health spending falls to pre-pandemic levels, increasing investment in prevention would be good for the economy, good for communities, and good for our overstretched healthcare system.

  • Unpacking Victoria’s Statewide Treaty Bill

    Max Thomas     |      November 4, 2025

    Despite the defeat of the Federal voice referendum, the State Parliament of Victoria has passed a Treaty Bill which will create a costly legal and bureaucratic tangle that is unlikely to improve the lives of Indigenous people.

  • AI’s ‘doorman fallacy’

    Open Forum     |      November 4, 2025

    CEOs are stampeding to replace staff with AI, but despite the lofty promises of the tech companies, many companies aren’t seeing the payoff. Data on productivity gains from AI use is murky at best, and many companies are suffering costly implementation failures.

  • The ballad of the feathered front

    Roger Chao     |      November 4, 2025

    While farmers successfully drove the Tasmanian tiger and many other native animals to extinction, the Great Emu War failed to eradicate emus from the wheatbelt of Western Australia in 1932, despite the best efforts of Royal Australian Artillery soldiers to mow down the flightless birds with lewis guns.