Marles’ Defence overhaul raises an awkward question: why AUKUS at all?
Robert Macklin

Marles’ Defence overhaul raises an awkward question: why AUKUS at all?

Australia’s new Defence Delivery Agency may finally expose an uncomfortable truth – that Australia already has formidable deterrent capabilities through the Royal Australian Air Force and emerging drone systems, making the AUKUS submarine commitment both risky and unnecessary.

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Message from the Editor
Catriona Jackson

Message from the Editor

Sometimes we run a piece that is much longer than our usual 1000 word upper limit because it is worth it.

The 2026 budget is Labor’s real reform test
Aruna Sathanapally

The 2026 budget is Labor’s real reform test

The 2026 federal budget offers a rare opportunity to begin rebalancing tax, lifting productivity and tackling long-term pressures on living standards.

Friends and frenemies: Australia’s China policy is stuck in a four-tier mindset
David Higginbottom

Friends and frenemies: Australia’s China policy is stuck in a four-tier mindset

Australia’s stabilisation of relations with China is welcome, but the old adversarial mindset remains intact. Institutional biases, selective outrage and context-free media narratives still shape how Australia sees China, limiting any genuine foreign policy reset.

The quiet collapse of ‘plant-based’ fashion materials
Anne Hurley

The quiet collapse of ‘plant-based’ fashion materials

For years, plant-based fashion materials were promoted as a sustainable breakthrough. Their rapid collapse tells a more sobering story – not about plants, but about hype, scale and transparency.

Australia’s trust deficit is a failure of governance
Tom Sinkovits

Australia’s trust deficit is a failure of governance

Public trust in Australian politics is wearing dangerously thin. Restoring it will require clear standards, real accountability and decisions that can be traced, justified and owned.

Australia’s human rights report has been quietly buried
Kym Davey

Australia’s human rights report has been quietly buried

The world marks Human Rights Day this Wednesday 10 December. But a comprehensive parliamentary report calling for a national Human Rights Act remains unanswered. Its silence speaks volumes about the gap between rhetoric and action in Australia’s human rights commitments.

‘Bazball ’has revolutionised English cricket – Australia should be nervous
Ronnie Das

‘Bazball ’has revolutionised English cricket – Australia should be nervous

England’s ultra-aggressive “Bazball” approach has transformed its Test cricket record. Historical data suggests it could also give England its best chance in 15 years to reclaim the Ashes in Australia.

Bill Gates knows the climate and poverty facts but misses the politics
Peter Sainsbury

Bill Gates knows the climate and poverty facts but misses the politics

Bill Gates downplays climate catastrophe, wolves are blamed – or credited – for ecosystem repair, and China’s energy surge defies Western narratives.

History, memory, and pain: Fifty years after the Indonesian invasion of East Timor
Ivo Mateus Goncalves

History, memory, and pain: Fifty years after the Indonesian invasion of East Timor

On 7 December 2025, fifty years since Indonesian troops invaded East Timor, survivors and their descendants continue to live with the legacy of occupation, violence and loss – and to insist that remembrance, truth and justice still matter.

When machines make the art, what’s left for human creativity?
Raghid Nahhas

When machines make the art, what’s left for human creativity?

As AI and automation take over more of the labour once central to artistic practice, creativity is shifting from making to selecting. The question is whether human expression survives that shift – or slowly withers.

China’s challenge is explaining why it succeeded
John Hopkins

China’s challenge is explaining why it succeeded

china politics usa world

Western commentary often dwells on China’s problems while overlooking the cultural and historical foundations of its extraordinary achievements. Understanding both is essential to informed judgement.

P&I provides a moral compass, keeps hope alive and spurs on action
Catriona Jackson,  John Menadue

P&I provides a moral compass, keeps hope alive and spurs on action

'Let me also take this opportunity to say thank you for what you are doing for Australia. P&I provides a moral compass, keeps hope alive and spurs on action. Dr Jane Anderson Adjunct Research Fellow – Population and Global Health The University of Western Australia



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