Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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Lessons that can be learnt from dockworkers who helped bring apartheid to its knees

  • Written by The Conversation
imageDockworkers in Australia, pictured here alongside other trade union members in a march through central Melbourne, acted in solidarity with South African workers in the 1980s.Reuters

Today’s complex global economy has brought new forms of worker exploitation. And globalisation has made workers ever-more precarious. For example, factory workers...

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South Africa's health sector is leaking money: what can be done about it?

  • Written by The Conversation
imagePeople wait to be treated at the Jane Fures Hospital in South Africa's Northern Province.Reuters

New research, the first of its kind, has found that corruption is a problem in South Africa’s health sector. The nature of corruption, defined as the abuse of resources, power or connections for private gain, makes it difficult to assess. But an...

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More Articles ...

  1. What do children and young people have to say about safety in institutions?
  2. Huffington Post success will rely on fresh voices
  3. How the Federal Reserve keeps the US economy from bonking
  4. Damned Lies, Minister Hunt and Climate Models
  5. Explainer: Dyson Heydon and claims of 'apprehended bias'
  6. Huffington Post is coming – but will Australians care?
  7. Quick fixes aren't the answer, alcohol and violence have a complex relationship
  8. Book review: Santamaria, A Most Unusual Man
  9. 2015-16 is shaping up to deliver a rollercoaster from strong El Niño to La Niña
  10. Ten dos and don'ts for thinking about arts funding and the NPEA
  11. How fatherhood is changing for the better
  12. Protecting the rights of the digital workforce in the 'gig' economy
  13. Mass grave reveals organised violence among Europe's first farmers
  14. Fossils suggest an aquatic plant that bloomed underwater was among first flowering plants
  15. Tianjin explosion could be a turning point in China's corruption crackdown
  16. Tianjin: China's cities have made history, now it's time to make them safer
  17. The treatment of Yazidi women highlights a historical issue: what makes someone human?
  18. Will the elderly rely on the Internet of Things to look after them?
  19. How Canada's Conservative Party is brazenly playing the terrorism card
  20. Four problems the revamped Google should tackle now it's free to innovate
  21. Heydon's email trail for Barwick dinner made its Liberal connections clear from the start
  22. Shift work causes breast cancer in mice, according to a new study – so what does this mean for humans?
  23. Why American academics are building ties with Cuba
  24. What does it take to become an elementary school teacher? Not just passion
  25. Damaging electric currents in space affect Earth's equatorial region, not just the poles
  26. From the Sumerians to Shakespeare to Twain: why fart jokes never get old
  27. No, Kim Kardashian's pregnant selfie is not a work of art
  28. Politics podcast: Clare O'Neil and the future of progressive politics in Australia
  29. Same-sex marriage, like the movements that surround it, is nothing new
  30. Mike Baird is right, culling sharks doesn't work – here's what we can do instead
  31. Why British universities should rethink selecting students by academic ability
  32. Our 'Rosetta Stone' gene could unlock the secrets of schizophrenia
  33. Obama’s climate plan is another half-baked carbon trading scheme
  34. What the Netherlands can teach the NHS about cutting cost but not quality
  35. The obvious and not-so-obvious problems with Hockey's bank deposit tax
  36. Open access is a development issue – the status quo needs to be challenged
  37. How quantum physics is opening new frontiers for data safety
  38. What it takes to make community health workers better at servicing the poor
  39. Mick Fanning changes his surfboard colour from 'yum yum yellow'
  40. Canning byelection test set for September
  41. When bail causes outrage, don't just blame the courts
  42. Health Check: here's what you need to know about protein supplements
  43. As Indonesia marks 70 years of independence, young scientists look ahead to the 100th
  44. Abbott makes clear timing of popular vote on marriage is call of captain, not cabinet
  45. Playing the woman: Healy and Kyrgios expose sport's sexism problem
  46. Forget the polls, News Corp is not happy with Abbott … again
  47. The off-topic Conversation #56
  48. Response from Assistant Treasurer Josh Frydenberg
  49. Bill relies on legal fiction of self-executing law to revoke citizenship
  50. Australians are undergoing unnecessary surgery – here's what we can do about it

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Melbourne is running on change. Rooftops are filling with solar, carports are getting charge points, and older switchboards are being rebuilt so homes and shops can carry smarter, heavier loads. If yo...

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Key Takeaways: Designers notice structure, typography, and colour choices before the content itself Consistency across all collateral strengthens brand recognition and builds trust Overly bu...

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