A beautiful mosaic: celebrating multicultural Australia
Jocelyn Chey

A beautiful mosaic: celebrating multicultural Australia

Multicultural Australia has enriched the nation’s cultural life, creativity and global standing. These achievements deserve recognition and defence at a time of growing hostility to migration.

Recent articles in Politics

How gun ownership works in Australia – and what may change
Suzanna Fay

How gun ownership works in Australia – and what may change

In the wake of the Bondi shootings, attention has turned to how firearms are licensed and regulated in Australia, and whether proposed reforms would address the risks they are meant to prevent.

Conflicts of interest: defending the indefensible
Kerry Breen

Conflicts of interest: defending the indefensible

Evidence to a parliamentary inquiry has raised serious questions about conflicts of interest and how they are being managed.

The long consequences of forgetting
Robert Macklin

The long consequences of forgetting

As climate breakdown, war and institutional failure converge, the comforts of forgetting no longer shield us from the consequences of our own history.

Can AI help save local journalism without hollowing it out?
Kristy Hess,  Angela Ross

Can AI help save local journalism without hollowing it out?

As local news outlets shrink and news deserts grow, artificial intelligence could deepen the crisis or, if used carefully, help sustain public-interest journalism at the community level.

Prabowo’s first year: all power, no accountability
Duncan Graham

Prabowo’s first year: all power, no accountability

A year after Prabowo Subianto’s election, Indonesia’s democracy is under strain as power centralises, dissent is curtailed and the military’s influence grows.

AUKUS meets reality – UK ‘all in’ a mess (Part 2)
Peter Briggs

AUKUS meets reality – UK ‘all in’ a mess (Part 2)

Australia is betting on a British program plagued by delays, underinvestment and workforce shortages – a gamble that risks leaving the country without any sovereign submarine capability.

The market lie at the heart of public education policy
John Frew

The market lie at the heart of public education policy

Treating public schools as competitors in an education marketplace shifts blame downward, obscures chronic underfunding and corrodes the very purpose of public education.

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.

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.



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