Sometimes the only things scarier than China’s problems are Beijing’s solutions, says seasoned observer Dan Wang ...
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has long been a favourite. Tony Abbott, who one senses has been dreaming of a comeback for the past ...
Books & arts An exceptional life in the law Dean Ashenden 21 August 2025 Lawyer, educator, judge and royal commissioner Hal Wootten never lost sight of “those on whom the law bore harshly” ...
Sometime in 2017 a group of friends in Oxford, all with backgrounds in South Asia, were reflecting on their families’ memories of “the partition” and the exit of the British from their Indian empire ...
Labour was the first and greatest of modern social movements, revolutionary in its effects even when it pursued mere reformism, a melodrama of heroes and villains like any grand theatre, and so ...
Elizabeth Harrower (1928–2020) was known for a long time as a writer who didn’t write. Before the age of forty she had produced all five of her novels, but after the publication of her most powerful ...
National affairs On parade in a new age of wars Graeme Dobell 19 June 2025 As Iran and Israel wage war, big military parades are held in the United States and Britain Books & arts The journalist and ...
When I began my working life at the late and lamented Department of Trade and Resources I was still fresh from poring over The Crisis in Australian Capitalism by the economics journalist Peter ...
I suspect many readers knew little, if anything, about Charlie Kirk before his murder on the 10 September. But if you have teenage kids they probably did. For months my son has been being showing me ...
If you were diagnosed with cancer in Australia in the early 1990s, the chances you would survive for another five years were little better than 50–50 — a toss of the coin. Thirty years later, the most ...