Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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'Identity politics' have not taken over university history courses

  • Written by Paul Sendziuk, Associate Professor in History, University of Adelaide
imageAnzac Day, a celebration of the Anzac soldiers, pictured, has become a contentious issue in the "history wars".Shutterstock

The recent report from the Institute of Public Affairs on history teaching in Australian universities is the latest salvo in the “history wars”. Left-liberal “elites” have been accused for decades of...

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Australia's high rates of bladder cancer deaths show why blood in urine should always be investigated

  • Written by Shomik Sengupta, Professor of Surgery, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University
imageBladder cancer has a lower profile compared to other types of cancer such as breast, lung and prostate. from shutterstock.com

Bladder cancer affects almost 3,000 Australians each year and causes thousands of deaths. Yet it often has a lower profile compared to other types of cancer such as breast, lung and prostate.

The rate at which Australians...

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Swift parrots need protection from sugar gliders, but that's not enough

  • Written by Dejan Stojanovic, Postdoctoral Fellow, Australian National University
imageWithout help, Tasmania's swift parrots could be wiped out within three generations.JJ Harrison/Wikimedia Commmons, CC BY-SA

Swift parrots are icons of Tasmania’s old-growth forests, but they’re also pretty tricky to find. These highly nomadic birds settle in a different place each year to breed, leaving nesting sites deserted for years...

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Bringing back an old idea for smart cities – playing on the street

  • Written by Troy Innocent, City of Melbourne Knowledge Fellow 2017-18, Senior Lecturer in Games and Interactivity, Swinburne University of Technology
imagePlay activates cities and engages people, and by appropriating urban spaces it changes what these mean to people.Author provided

Smart cities promise efficiency and resilience in urban design to combat climate change, population growth, transport congestion and other wicked problems. The processes that run a city may be abstracted into algorithms...

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More Articles ...

  1. Vital Signs: economics can't explain why unemployment and inflation are both low
  2. New report shows compelling reasons to decriminalise sex work
  3. Friday essay: toxic beauty, then and now
  4. Grattan on Friday: The rift between Brandis and Dutton deepens as the behemoth of Home Affairs rises
  5. Jacinda Ardern to become NZ prime minister following coalition announcement
  6. Labour wins NZ election after backing from NZ First. Bankers' SA Galaxy: 31% Lib, 30% SA Best, 26% Labor
  7. By excluding Hannah Mouncey, the AFL's inclusion policy has failed a key test
  8. Politics podcast: Tiernan Brady and Cory Bernardi reflect on the marriage postal ballot
  9. #MeToo and Modern Consciousness-Raising
  10. Making voting both simple and secure is a challenge for democracies
  11. Let Google bill you for all your electricity, gas, phone and every other utility
  12. Childhood heart disease has a profound impact and is under-recognised
  13. Gift cards often end up in the bin, but extending their life might not help
  14. What businesses can learn from sports about using algorithms
  15. Rape is a plot device in western literature, sold back to us by Hollywood
  16. Rising dragon: China's carbon market exposes Australia's energy paralysis
  17. The off-topic Conversation #139
  18. Memo to the IPA: history teaching is driven by student demand, not 'identity politics'
  19. Designing suburbs to cut car use closes gaps in health and wealth
  20. Is Victoria's sentencing regime really more lenient?
  21. Hang ten (decades): Walter Munk, inventor of the surf forecast, turns 100
  22. Mount Agung continues to rumble with warnings the volcano could still erupt
  23. Why our brain needs sleep, and what happens if we don’t get enough of it
  24. How gig economy workers will be left short of super
  25. Politics podcast: Gareth Evans on being an Incorrigible Optimist
  26. Banded stilts fly hundreds of kilometres to lay eggs that are over 50% of their body mass
  27. X, Y and the genetics of sex: Professor Jenny Graves awarded the Prime Minister's Prize for Science 2017
  28. Was agriculture the greatest blunder in human history?
  29. Why the new banking laws won’t be the slam dunk the government is expecting
  30. Banking's new BEAR is a teddy bear not a grizzly
  31. Bob Brown wins his case, but High Court leaves the door open to laws targeting protesters
  32. The government's energy policy hinges on some tricky wordplay about coal's role
  33. Insurance changes not enough to drive real mental health reform
  34. Federal government unveils 'National Energy Guarantee' – experts react
  35. Ethics by numbers: how to build machine learning that cares
  36. Curious Kids: Why do so many animals seem to have pink ears, when their bodies are all different colours?
  37. Curious Kids: Where did the first person come from?
  38. Sex versus death: why marriage equality provokes more heated debate than assisted dying
  39. Some suburbs are being short-changed on services and liveability – which ones and what's the solution?
  40. Here's what's actually driving up health insurance premiums (hint: it's not young people dropping off)
  41. Share houses and women's liberation: a forgotten history
  42. Why craft beer is going corporate
  43. Newspoll 54-46 to Labor as Turnbull's ratings slump. Qld Newspoll 52-48 to Labor
  44. Household savings figures in Turnbull's energy policy look rubbery
  45. Let’s get this straight, habitat loss is the number-one threat to Australia's species
  46. Infographic: the National Energy Guarantee at a glance
  47. Strengthened Xi and Abe could help moves toward peace in our troubled region
  48. How the National Energy Guarantee could work better than a clean energy target
  49. Keeping mature-age workers on the job
  50. Come hide with us – bean counters raid big law firms

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