A better symbol
Sara Dowse

A better symbol

After the Bondi massacre, grief was swiftly overtaken by politics. Public mourning and the misuse of symbols raise hard questions about solidarity, power and what genuinely brings light.

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Pearlcast: a year that overturned the old certainties
Catriona Jackson

A year in review

Pearlcast: a year that overturned the old certainties

As 2025 draws to a close, the temptation is to look for neat summaries and settled conclusions. But in the latest episode of our podcast Pearlcast, that impulse is firmly resisted.

Radar lock or editorial block? The ABC's China-Japan report has blind spot
Fred Zhang

ANTI-CHINA MEDIA WATCH

Radar lock or editorial block? The ABC's China-Japan report has blind spot

A story published by the ABC framed a military encounter as an act of aggression. But subsequent details told a more complicated story that Australia’s public broadcaster never revisited.

MYEFO leaves the hard work on inflation, debt and budget repair undone
Saul Eslake

MYEFO leaves the hard work on inflation, debt and budget repair undone

The latest MYEFO shows only marginal improvement in the budget outlook, while deficits persist and fiscal settings continue to complicate the Reserve Bank’s task.

2025 in Review: Palestine, international law and Australia’s silence
Paul Heywood-Smith

A year in review

2025 in Review: Palestine, international law and Australia’s silence

In 2025, the crisis in Palestine brought international law to a breaking point. Australia’s response, marked by caution and inaction, raises hard questions about responsibility, principle and moral leadership.

Storms expose Gaza’s humanitarian collapse
Stephen Prager

Storms expose Gaza’s humanitarian collapse

Heavy rains and gale-force winds have turned life-threatening for Palestinians in Gaza, where the destruction of housing and restrictions on aid have left millions without shelter.

Australia’s school attendance crisis needs urgent national action
Amy Haywood,  Jordana Hunter

Australia’s school attendance crisis needs urgent national action

School attendance has been sliding for more than a decade, with more than a million Australian students now missing significant classroom time. Governments have set ambitious targets to reverse the trend, but meeting them will require a fundamental shift in approach.

The Bondi Beach massacre: exploiting tragedy
Stefan Moore

The Bondi Beach massacre: exploiting tragedy

The tragic massacre at a Hanukkah celebration in Bondi was followed by a rush to assign blame, inflame fear and curtail dissent.

Looking for the wrong things: peace, power and the meaning of Christmas
George Browning

A year in review

Looking for the wrong things: peace, power and the meaning of Christmas

As another bruising year ends, Christmas offers a reminder that peace is not found in power, wealth or spectacle, but in inner integrity, humility and care for others.

Climate hot takes for 2025
David Spratt

A year in review

Climate hot takes for 2025

Scientific evidence in 2025 showed global warming accelerating faster than expected, while emissions continued to rise and climate policy lagged dangerously behind physical reality.

What Australia’s gun law response means for New Zealand
Alexander Gillespie

What Australia’s gun law response means for New Zealand

Australia is moving toward its biggest overhaul of firearms regulation since Port Arthur. For New Zealand, the lessons may be uncomfortable – and unavoidable.

India and China in deep water over Himalayan hydropower
Jianli Yang

India and China in deep water over Himalayan hydropower

India and China are racing to build vast hydropower projects in the Himalayas. Framed as clean energy, the dams are also about territorial control, data sovereignty and strategic power in an AI-driven world.

Cutting the Internet in Afghanistan is gender-based violence
Bree Benbow,  A Mira Gunawansa,  Isabelle Zhu-Maguire

Cutting the Internet in Afghanistan is gender-based violence

The Taliban’s September Internet blackouts were not a technical disruption but a deliberate act of control. By cutting digital access, Afghan women were stripped of education, income, connection and voice – extending gender apartheid into the online realm.



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