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Public enthusiasm is one thing, but road geometry, fatality data and cost-benefit maths all stack up against it. Governments ...
Murray Watt and Gayle Tierney splash $23.8 million on pipes and plants to secure drinking water for a parched and growing regional Victoria.
Grant Dooley hopes detailing his traumatic experiences will help colleagues and the public understand the realities of foreign service.
There's $50 billion owing to Tax since COVID, but hey, who's counting? Well, Rob Heferen, for one, as he draws a line under pandemic leniency.
Queensland director-general joins CFMEU inquiry, former chief judge to chair QSAC, deputy public service commissioner to Blavatnik professor.
Conformity rewards silence and punishes insight. In public institutions, clear-eyed dissent is often the first casualty.
Alarms, cameras and screens fail staffers, Leonie McGregor finds. Parliamentary offices remain unsafe, under-resourced, and underreported.
Windeyer referred three senators to the firm’s change in governance structure, as well as the ethical and cultural reforms that in part arose from the Switkowski report that was released in September ...
One of the world's leading AI experts lays out how to use AI for the public good. It starts with an idea more than 2,000 years old.
Michael Daley introduces legislation for an independent victims commissioner with new powers, replacing the advisory board and reshaping oversight.
Racial literacy, cultural safety, and truth-telling aren’t wish-list items, says the race commissioner, they’re baseline requirements.
South Africa got the minerals deal. Australia got the photo-op. That’s what happens when strategy lags diplomacy.