|
|
Author's note
|
My job is to help stop Australians falling ill from mosquito-borne disease. The best way to do that is to share safe and effective tips on preventing mosquito bites. If you don’t get bitten in the first place, hopefully you won’t get sick. Writing for The Conversation has been a game changer, both in the way I communicate these public health messages but also how I can engage with the community and learn what they want to know about mosquitoes and the prevention of mosquito-borne disease.
Since 2012 I’ve written over 40 articles for The Conversation. More than 3 million people have read my articles on mosquitoes, bed bugs, ticks, head lice and flies.
The opportunity provided by The Conversation is unique and your continued support to maintain this resource is essential. Without it, there would be few options for scientists to share their research directly with the community and foster an appreciation of the science behind these public health messages. If you have the capacity to contribute, please make a donation now.
|
Cameron Webb
Clinical Lecturer and Principal Hospital Scientist
|
|
|
Top story
|
In the short-run, the targeted migration program boosts workers in the target region.
Bread for the World/Flickr
James Giesecke, Victoria University; Nhi Tran, Victoria University
Even if policies could be found to bind new immigrants to regional areas, workers' movements would continue to weaken the long-run impact on regional populations and economies.
|
Environment + Energy
|
-
Ian Wright, Western Sydney University
The Bunya pine is a unique and majestic Australian tree that commands respect.
-
Madeleine De Gabriele, The Conversation
Are you stressed? Of course you are. Read about awesome plants instead.
-
Christine Cooper, Curtin University
Echidnas can survive quite low levels of oxygen.
|
|
Business + Economy
|
-
Yixiao Zhou, Curtin University; Rod Tyers, University of Western Australia
We modelled a number of scenarios showing all increases in US or Chinese trade protection would cause international trade, and the global economy more generally, to shrink.
|
|
Arts + Culture
|
-
John Attridge, UNSW
Race, empire, colonial exploitation: Conrad's Heart of Darkness captured all of the darkest energies of the European at the of the 20th century.
-
Huw Griffiths, University of Sydney
Nakiah Lui's Blackie Blackie Brown is an explosive collision of genres that executes Indigenous justice with extreme prejudice.
|
|
Politics + Society
|
-
James Chin, University of Tasmania
Malaysians voted for change in this month's election. Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's new administration now needs to deliver.
-
Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
As much as the Senate is unpredictable, this does look like the end of the government's chances of getting its company tax package through parliament before the election.
-
Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
Broadbent didn't use the term "doctors' wives", but these are the people he meant – Liberal supporters whose vote can be moved by particular causes.
-
Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
Western Australia Liberal Senator Dean Smith is a man of forthright opinions, not afraid to take on fights within his party.
-
Rick Sarre, University of South Australia
We need to ensure we do not sacrifice our liberty in the pursuit of a goal that is at best ineffective and at worst counterproductive.
|
|
Cities
|
-
Richard Hu, University of Canberra
Xiong’an is called China’s No.1 urban project. Orchestrated by President Xi Jinping, the mega-city to be built just over 100 kilometres south of Beijing is also very much a political project.
|
|
Health + Medicine
|
-
Deborah Bateson, University of Sydney
Unlike condoms, which need to be used every time with sex, or the pill, which must be taken every day, LARC doesn’t require any action after placement in the body and is immediately reversible.
-
Karin Hammarberg, Monash University
Excess weight affects fertility in men and women - the good news is weight loss can reverse the negative effects.
|
|
Science + Technology
|
-
Bronwyn Hemsley, University of Technology Sydney; Howard Shane, Harvard University; James T Todd, Eastern Michigan University; Ralf Schlosser, Northeastern University; Russell Lang, Texas State University
Facilitated Communication began in Australia in the 1980s to help people with disabilities communicate, but it has since been shown to replace the voice of the person with that of the facilitator.
-
Michael J. I. Brown, Monash University
With a little bit of knowledge and a few pieces of equipment you too can look at the night sky and see it as a cosmologist does.
|
|
Education
|
-
John Munro, Australian Catholic University
To assess problem-solving, creative and critical thinking skills on NAPLAN would fit with broader movements in education internationally, but there are some questions to address first.
|
|
|
Featured jobs
|
|
La Trobe University — Mildura, Victoria
|
|
Swinburne University of Technology — Hawthorn, Victoria
|
|
Charles Sturt University — Bathurst, New South Wales
|
|
Deakin University — Geelong, Victoria
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Featured events
|
|
Crawford School of Public Policy, 132 Lennox Crossing, Acton, Australian Capital Territory, 2601, Australia — Australia New Zealand School of Government
|
|
The Shine Dome, 15 Gordon Street, Acton, Australian Capital Territory, 2601, Australia — Australian Academy of Science
|
|
Charles Perkins Centre Auditorium, John Hopkins Drive, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, 2006, Australia — University of Sydney
|
|
Burwood Corporate Centre, 221 Burwood Hwy, , Burwood, Victoria, 3125, Australia — Deakin University
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|