Blame, grief and responsibility after Bondi
George Browning

Blame, grief and responsibility after Bondi

In the aftermath of a devastating attack on Sydney’s Jewish community, political leaders must resist the urge to weaponise grief or assign blame.

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Australia’s teachers – undervalued and overburdened
Allan Patience

Australia’s teachers – undervalued and overburdened

As ATAR scores dominate headlines, the work of teachers remains largely invisible. They are central to education and social cohesion, yet underpaid, overworked and routinely taken for granted.

2025 in Review: ageing, policy failure and a year of misplaced priorities
Patricia Edgar

A year in review

2025 in Review: ageing, policy failure and a year of misplaced priorities

Looking back on 2025, a year marked by global turmoil, timid reform at home, policy failure on ageing and a rushed social media ban that mistakes gesture for solution.

How Sofronoff became a foot soldier in a war against woke
Jack Waterford

How Sofronoff became a foot soldier in a war against woke

Judicial findings have significantly undermined the credibility of Walter Sofronoff’s inquiry into the Lehrmann trial, raising serious questions about bias, process and the influence of media on judicial conduct.

Font of all knowledge? Of Rubio, Rupert and playing to type
Andrew Fraser

Font of all knowledge? Of Rubio, Rupert and playing to type

A curious US culture-war memo about typefaces becomes a sharp lesson in readability, newspaper craft, and how badly those lessons have been forgotten in Australian journalism.

A just transition can remake Australia if we choose to think bigger
Peter Hansford

A just transition can remake Australia if we choose to think bigger

Australia’s shift to renewable energy is a rare chance to redesign our economy and improve wellbeing, equity and social cohesion. A truly just transition would reshape much more than the energy system.

One UK journalist’s close access to Hitler carries a warning about Trump’s media restrictions
Alexander Howard

One UK journalist’s close access to Hitler carries a warning about Trump’s media restrictions

A notorious episode from the 1930s shows how access, proximity to power and the lure of influence can quietly corrode journalistic judgement – a warning that resonates uncomfortably today.

AUKUS meets reality – what's not in the AUSMIN Media Release (Part 1)
Peter Briggs

AUKUS meets reality – what's not in the AUSMIN Media Release (Part 1)

Despite official assurances, the US submarine program is falling well short of its own targets, raising serious doubts about whether Australia will ever receive the Virginia class submarines promised under AUKUS.

It's never too late to help students learn to read – even in high school
Callula Killingly

It's never too late to help students learn to read – even in high school

Many students with reading difficulties are missed after the early years. New evidence shows targeted, evidence-based support can still make a real difference well into high school.

A beginners guide to Australian aged care policy in 2025
Kathy Eagar

A beginners guide to Australian aged care policy in 2025

Stereotypes about wealthy baby boomers are skewing aged care policy. New fees, the shift to Support at Home, and pressures on community services risk leaving many older Australians without affordable, safe support. The consequences will be felt across families, hospitals and future generations.

Message from the Editor
Catriona Jackson

Message from the Editor

As we hurtle towards the chaos of Christmas, we are taking a moment to reflect on the high and lows of 2025, and what it all means for 2026.

Conflicts, corrections and confusion: pressure mounts on the NACC Commissioner
Sarah Russell

Conflicts, corrections and confusion: pressure mounts on the NACC Commissioner

The Inspector of the NACC has received 90 complaints since 1 July. Most of these complaints concern the NACC Commissioner’s conflict of interests with Defence.

Trump’s empire of hubris and thuggery
Jeffrey D. Sachs

Trump’s empire of hubris and thuggery

Donald Trump's latest National Security Strategy memorandum treats the freedom to coerce others as the essence of US sovereignty. It is an ominous document that will – if allowed to stand – come back to haunt the United States.



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