Why the trauma community must break its silence on Gaza
Annabel McGoldrick

Why the trauma community must break its silence on Gaza

As Gaza reels from unimaginable physical and psychological harm, the global trauma healing community has remained largely silent. Breaking that silence is essential if therapeutic work is to remain honest, ethical and grounded in the reality clients bring into the room.

Recent articles in Politics

Why Australia’s pro-globalisation consensus endures
Shiro Armstrong,  Liam Gammon

Why Australia’s pro-globalisation consensus endures

Australia’s post-pandemic politics may look more divided, but fears of a rising populist backlash are overstated. Demographics, institutions and economic geography still anchor the nation’s long-standing consensus in favour of openness, migration and global integration.

Without peer in Australian media – Geoff Raby
Geoff Raby

Without peer in Australian media – Geoff Raby

Former Australian Ambassador to China and senior diplomat Geoff Raby commends Pearls and Irritations

Western Australia is rich, but it's not the economic powerhouse it claims to be
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Western Australia is rich, but it's not the economic powerhouse it claims to be

Western Australian politicians claim the state is the “powerhouse” of the national economy and deserves an outsized share of GST revenue. The ABS State Accounts for 2024–25 tell a different story, revealing a decade of weak growth, falling per capita output and a system that rewards WA despite clear under-performance.

Ukraine and Europe’s weakness exposed as US and Russia again negotiate behind Kyiv’s back
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Ukraine and Europe’s weakness exposed as US and Russia again negotiate behind Kyiv’s back

Ukraine now faces military pressure, political scandal and wavering Western support – a mix that could trigger a dangerous self-fulfilling crisis.

Why multicultural aged care is the key to meeting Australia’s ageing challenge
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Why multicultural aged care is the key to meeting Australia’s ageing challenge

Australia’s ageing population is growing faster than the systems built to support it, especially for culturally and linguistically diverse communities. A co-designed, public–private aged care model offers a practical, humane and economically sound path to meet this challenge before crisis overwhelms the system.

Conservatism, denial and the climate crisis: why short-term thinking is holding us back
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Conservatism, denial and the climate crisis: why short-term thinking is holding us back

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Making First Nations prisoners visible in Labor politics
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Making First Nations prisoners visible in Labor politics

Despite Western Australian Labor’s rhetoric on equality and Closing the Gap, incarcerated First Nations people remain politically invisible. Without formal representation and lived-experience voices in party deliberations, meaningful reform is impossible. The 2027 State Labor Conference is the moment to change that.

Self-interest is now the main driver of Britain’s Asia policy
Bill Hayton

Self-interest is now the main driver of Britain’s Asia policy

There are a great many reasons why the UK government should pay more attention to the Asia-Pacific, but that does not mean that it will.

Why Indonesia’s new criminal rules matter
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Why Indonesia’s new criminal rules matter

Indonesia’s overhaul of its Criminal Procedure Code could modernise justice – or entrench a system where police power expands, judicial oversight shrinks and civic life becomes riskier. With the clock ticking towards implementation, the choices made now will shape Indonesia’s democratic identity for decades.

Our politicians continue to fail us on immigration policy
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Our politicians continue to fail us on immigration policy

As One Nation rises by recycling anti-immigration rhetoric, both major parties are fumbling their response – missing the chance to offer a clear, credible and principled long-term plan.

Losing the democracy sausage vibe
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The last federal election saw a sharp rise in harassment and aggression at polling places, according to submissions from around the country. From death threats to deception, the once-peaceful ritual of casting a vote is under threat – and Australia needs to act.

Will there be Liberals around to take power in 2034?
Jack Waterford

Will there be Liberals around to take power in 2034?

The Liberal Party’s rejection of net-zero and its lack of compelling leadership or clear policy vision has left it floundering with key voter groups. Without a coherent plan to make a difference, it risks a long spell in opposition.



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