The New South Wales Police Force put out an appeal for information about a string of recent vehicle thefts that are alleged to have taken place on Wiradjuri land in the western New South Wales town of Warren.
The initial incident involved officers from the Orana Mid-Western Police District being called out to the Oxley Highway in Warren, after ...
The Australians Greens have renewed their call for a toughening up of the procurement rules in government, after PwC Australia was again mentioned in dispatches in the sealed section of the robodebt royal commission report. That sealed section detailed the range of recommendations for further investigation or prosecution, but they
Net-zero transition plans are fast becoming more popular across government and industry. But the roadmap towards a low-carbon future stands to fail unless it also manages the human rights risks present in the green energy supply chain. While governments and large companies are increasingly developing net-zero transition plans for emissions,
Plus the media continues to analyse Donald Trump's apoplexy, and AUSTRAC's CEO gets matter-of-fact on gambling's embedded risks. The post Rita’s date with Rita, scabby Sloane, and is this
Artists and rights holder groups have been defiant about the need to change copyright law in meetings with the office of Assistant Minister Andrew Charlton, who has been spearheading the
With One Nation fracturing the right and embracing elements of left-wing policies, are 'left' and 'right' even useful anymore or do we need a different spectrum? The post Are ‘left’
'The assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei and the attack on Iran launched on February 28 by the U.S. and Israel may well prove to be this Century’s "Sarajevo Moment",' writes Dr John Jiggens. read now...
Are the Liberals just not right-wing enough for their voters? A near decade of consistently bad results for the Liberals in Australia give us plenty of evidence to test that
Last month at the University of Sydney, Andrew Leigh launched The Shortest History of Innovation, framed around “tinkering, teams, and trade”. That is a useful lens for agriculture. Farmers and land managers have always improved through observation, adjustment, and practical experimentation under pressure. But innovation in agriculture has never been
Eliza CrosbieWhile most Australians embrace multiculturalism, migration remains a contentious topic in Australia. Negative opinions, often unsubstantiated, are regularly aired in public debate. Our new report, Settling well in regional Australia: experiences of people from refugee backgrounds, uncovers a different picture. Our team surveyed 628 people ...
Watching three hours of Fox and Friends last night felt like 2003 and the Iraq invasion all over again. The post Rupert Murdoch strikes again: Just like Iraq, his fingerprints
How are senior people and culture leaders in Australia’s leading public and private sector organisations responding to massive disruption caused by artificial intelligence (AI)? According to new research, many are muddling through in the face of extreme ambiguity created by four “powerful forces”: technology and AI, geopolitical and economic ...
The New South Wales Police Force put out an appeal for information about a string of recent vehicle thefts that are alleged to have taken place on Wiradjuri land in the western New South Wales town of Warren.
The initial incident involved officers from the Orana Mid-Western Police District being called out to the Oxley Highway in Warren, after ...
The Australians Greens have renewed their call for a toughening up of the procurement rules in government, after PwC Australia was again mentioned in dispatches in the sealed section of the robodebt royal commission report. That sealed section detailed the range of recommendations for further investigation or prosecution, but they
Net-zero transition plans are fast becoming more popular across government and industry. But the roadmap towards a low-carbon future stands to fail unless it also manages the human rights risks present in the green energy supply chain. While governments and large companies are increasingly developing net-zero transition plans for emissions,
Plus the media continues to analyse Donald Trump's apoplexy, and AUSTRAC's CEO gets matter-of-fact on gambling's embedded risks. The post Rita’s date with Rita, scabby Sloane, and is this
Artists and rights holder groups have been defiant about the need to change copyright law in meetings with the office of Assistant Minister Andrew Charlton, who has been spearheading the
With One Nation fracturing the right and embracing elements of left-wing policies, are 'left' and 'right' even useful anymore or do we need a different spectrum? The post Are ‘left’
'The assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei and the attack on Iran launched on February 28 by the U.S. and Israel may well prove to be this Century’s "Sarajevo Moment",' writes Dr John Jiggens. read now...
Are the Liberals just not right-wing enough for their voters? A near decade of consistently bad results for the Liberals in Australia give us plenty of evidence to test that
Last month at the University of Sydney, Andrew Leigh launched The Shortest History of Innovation, framed around “tinkering, teams, and trade”. That is a useful lens for agriculture. Farmers and land managers have always improved through observation, adjustment, and practical experimentation under pressure. But innovation in agriculture has never been
Eliza CrosbieWhile most Australians embrace multiculturalism, migration remains a contentious topic in Australia. Negative opinions, often unsubstantiated, are regularly aired in public debate. Our new report, Settling well in regional Australia: experiences of people from refugee backgrounds, uncovers a different picture. Our team surveyed 628 people ...
Watching three hours of Fox and Friends last night felt like 2003 and the Iraq invasion all over again. The post Rupert Murdoch strikes again: Just like Iraq, his fingerprints
How are senior people and culture leaders in Australia’s leading public and private sector organisations responding to massive disruption caused by artificial intelligence (AI)? According to new research, many are muddling through in the face of extreme ambiguity created by four “powerful forces”: technology and AI, geopolitical and economic ...