Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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Li Keqiang's visit a good sign for the China-Australia relationship

  • Written by Tony Walker, Adjunct Professor, School of Communications, La Trobe University
imageChinese Premier Li Keqiang wears a Swans scarf at the AFL with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.AAP/Dean Lewins

Premier Li Keqiang nominally ranks number two in the Chinese hierarchy, behind President Xi Jinping, who holds the most powerful levers of the State and the Party.

His roles are General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Chinese...

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Millions of Australian adults are unvaccinated and it's increasing disease risk for all of us

  • Written by C Raina MacIntyre, Professor of Infectious Diseases Epidemiology, Head of the School of Public Health and Community Medicine, UNSW
imageFlu vaccination uptake rates are low in adults, including among those who work in health, aged care and childcare.from www.shutterstock.com

Public attention has recently focused on improving vaccination rates in Australian infants and children. But actually the largest unvaccinated group of people recommended for immunisation are adults.

Of 4.1...

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There are more useful questions to ask than whether Australia has 'too many' charities

  • Written by David Gilchrist, Professor, School of Accounting and Finance, UWA Business School, University of Western Australia
imageIt is an attractive proposition to say we would gain significant efficiencies if there were a limited number of major providers of government-funded human services.shutterstock

The question of how many charities Australia should have is a recurring topic of debate. But it is not necessarily clear that it is really the key question to be asking. A...

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Government behind 45-55% in Ipsos poll

  • Written by Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

The Turnbull government trails Labor 45-55% on the two-party vote in the Fairfax Ipsos poll, as the Senate prepares to drastically restrict the proposed company tax cuts and reject changes to 18C in parliament’s last week before the pre-budget break.

The Ipsos poll has found 44% support the government’s 10-year plan to reduce the...

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More Articles ...

  1. Drawings reveal the struggles and triumphs of child refugees in their first six months of high school
  2. Safe in the City? Girls tell it like it is
  3. Five golden rules to help solve your recycling dilemmas
  4. Recycling can be confusing, but it’s getting simpler
  5. Rising imports make the case for Trump's border adjustment tax in Australia
  6. Youth underemployment at four-decade peak: Brotherhood report
  7. Regression to the mean, or why perfection rarely lasts
  8. Estonia is putting its country in the cloud and offering virtual residency
  9. Why aren't more people using the My Health Record?
  10. Does everything and nothing change when a cyclist dies?
  11. Decoding the music masterpieces: Bach's The Art of Fugue
  12. How our species got smarter: through a rush of blood to the head
  13. Not-for-profits must adapt as one arm of government's 'three-sector solutions'
  14. VIDEO: Michelle Grattan on the backlash to the 18C changes
  15. Decriminalisation in the NT signals abortion is part of normal health care
  16. ASIC's CommInsure pass shows why badly behaving bankers will never fear jail time
  17. Sporting codes' deals with gambling companies force them into a Faustian bargain
  18. Friday essay: reading Germaine Greer's mail
  19. Capital gains tax concession is too generous: economists poll
  20. What languages should children be learning to get ahead?
  21. Australia could alleviate its youth justice crisis by importing the right ideas from the US
  22. Painkillers like ibuprofen can increase the risk of heart disease and should be restricted
  23. Vital Signs: if it looks like a bubble and sounds like a bubble...
  24. Three rivers are now legally people – but that's just the start of looking after them
  25. How we edit science part 5: so what is science?
  26. Grattan on Friday: Barnaby Joyce is telling the government to listen to politics in the pub
  27. The metapolitical long game of the European New Right
  28. Let me entertain you – that's how to get a science message across
  29. Australia's copyright reform could bring millions of books and other reads to the blind
  30. National Science Statement does little to bring industry and researchers together
  31. Research suggests motherhood has changed my brain.
  32. How 19th century fairy tales expressed anxieties about ecological devastation
  33. FactCheck Q A: Has confidence in the media in Australia dropped lower than in the United States?
  34. Despite escalating prescriptions, nerve pain drug offers no relief for sciatica
  35. Politics podcast: Michaelia Cash on union misconduct
  36. Terror in London: Western cities will always be vulnerable to these attacks
  37. Explainer: the financialisation of housing and what can be done about it
  38. NDIS housing rules for people with a disability could be life-changing
  39. Flying into uncertainty: Western Sydney's 'aerotropolis' poses more questions than answers
  40. Here's how much it would cost the government to pay everyone who takes care of family with mental illness
  41. It's harder for governments to tax their way out of rising inequality
  42. 'Empowerment' feminism is not working – we need a far more radical approach to gender equality
  43. Did Indigenous warriors influence the development of Australian rules football?
  44. Snowy hydro scheme will be left high and dry unless we look after the mountains
  45. How we edit science part 4: how to talk about risk, and words and images not to use
  46. The US just made flying harder for millions. Tips for dealing with the laptop ban
  47. National Science Statement a positive gesture but lacks policy solutions: experts
  48. Australia finally has crowd-sourced equity funding, but there's more to do
  49. Western Australia's welcome engagement in Asia has been a long time coming
  50. Swisse cheese: there are too many holes in complementary medicine regulations already

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If you’re in business, you might have seen it before. A team of capable and smart people just suddenly slows down, and things start spiraling out of control. On paper, everything looks perfect, but ...

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Across Australia, a lot of tradies are busy. There’s no shortage of demand in industries like plumbing, electrical, landscaping, and building. But being busy doesn’t always mean running a smooth or...

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Why Careers In The Defence Industry Are Growing Rapidly

The defence sector has evolved far beyond traditional roles, opening doors to a wide range of opportunities across technology, engineering, intelligence, and operations. This is where defense industry...

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