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Editor's note
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The Conversation’s annual donation drive wraps up at the end of June, and I just wanted take a moment to thank everyone who has supported us so far. To the 4,696 people who made a donation and became a friend of The Conversation, thank you. We will use the money to pursue our mission to better inform the public and share the insights of academics.
Thanks also to the authors and vice-chancellors who took the time to write thoughtful and passionate messages of support. You have painted a clear picture of why we need to hear the voices of real experts now more than ever.
A special thanks to everyone who contacted us to say how much they enjoy reading The Conversation. There are many ways to be a supporter, and your messages give us a kind of encouragement money can’t buy.
Finally, we still need to raise $66,000 before the end of the year to achieve our target. If you haven’t given yet there is still time to make a tax-deductible donation. Become a become a friend of The Conversation and support a better informed public discussion (here).
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Top story
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Eurydice Dixon was murdered in a busy Melbourne park - how can we make these spaces safer for women?
DAVID CROSLING/AAP Image
Nicole Kalms, Monash University
Australia has guidelines for designing safe parks, but the stories of many women show these are not enough. We must involve women in co-designing these shared public spaces.
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Business + Economy
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Louise Grimmer, University of Tasmania; Gary Mortimer, Queensland University of Technology
Several large retailers and supermarkets have announced they are going to downsize to smaller stores.
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Aleksandar Subic, Swinburne University of Technology
Working with organisations outside the business – universities, research bodies, other businesses – can greatly expand Australian firms' capacity to innovate and match larger rivals overseas.
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Science + Technology
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Hadeel Al-Alosi, Western Sydney University
We shouldn’t be telling victims of domestic violence to stop using technology. We should encourage them to use their digital devices to share their stories and seek the help they deserve.
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Michael Douglas, University of Western Australia
Google has lost a High Court appeal in defamation litigation brought by Michael Trkulja. It is time to consider that extending "safe harbour" to Google may be a good idea.
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John Long, Flinders University; Heather L. Robinson, Flinders University
The latest in the Jurassic World film franchise sees dinosaurs pitched as future weapons. So who's behind that monster idea?
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Arts + Culture
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Kate Isabel Booth, University of Tasmania
MONA could encourage more low-income visitors by making entry free for all concession card owners.
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Politics + Society
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Kate Galloway; Mary Heath, Flinders University
The author and academic makes some valid points about rape, but to decriminalise it, as she suggests, fails to recognise bodily autonomy as a key marker of humanity to which women are entitled.
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Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
It has been described as virtue-signalling to the base. I think it is rather more serious. It will reinforce the anti-ABC sentiment of some in government ranks - which has reached absurd levels.
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Steve Georgakis, University of Sydney
Interest in the sport is starting to wane as the Socceroos have struggled internationally and the A-League has failed to evolve.
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Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
Michelle Grattan speaks with Mark Evans about the week in politics.
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Bianca Fileborn, UNSW
Advising women to "stay safe" is problematic because it transfers the responsibility for men's violence onto women, and distracts us from more difficult conversations.
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Nick Bisley, La Trobe University
At this stage one can only judge the atmospherics and optics of the summit, and on that basis, Beijing and Pyongyang have plainly come out ahead, while Tokyo and Seoul seem to have been overlooked.
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Health + Medicine
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Carmen Pace, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute; Ken Pang, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute; Michelle Tollit, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute
New guidelines outline language practitioners should use when caring for transgender kids.
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Andrew Brown, UNSW
New research has discovered brain receptors that sense heat also play a hand in appetite.
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Environment + Energy
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Ruth Gamble, La Trobe University
For decades, China and India have clashed over their disputed Himalayan border. This clash is also playing out via a development boom that threatens the health of one of the world's biggest river catchments.
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Cris Brack, Australian National University
Wollemi pines have survived for hundreds of millions of years. Once covering Australia, they now survive in a few isolated spots – but they're coming back in a big way.
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Education
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Clemence Due, University of Adelaide; Sally Baker, UNSW
Difficulty with English language can mask other difficulties culturally and linguistically diverse students may have, such as Austism or dyslexia.
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Cities
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Somwrita Sarkar, University of Sydney
The largest cities in Australia and the US are both the richest and the most likely to push out low-income earners. Having cities of all sizes will increase people's choices of where to live and work.
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