Essays & reportage
27 April 2026
How Bunnings’s facial recognition technology clashed with the privacy regulator
National affairs
24 April 2026
Can Anthropic be trusted to regulate its own high-risk creations?
Books & arts
23 April 2026
Gisèle Pelicot finds “my words, the thread in my history, an old story, deeply anchored in me”
National affairs
20 April 2026
Could the Liberals’ Deakinite dilemma reshape the party system?
Books & arts
18 April 2026
A pair of legendary movies emerged from another of Hollywood’s turbulent eras
National affairs
20 March 2026
Different events have shifted voters in different ways, but Labor’s two-party-preferred figures have barely changed
National affairs
4 March 2026
What’s really driving the assault on Iran, and what does it mean for America’s allies?
National affairs
23 February 2026
The latest surveys are challenging our understanding of the swinging vote
National affairs
19 February 2026
Economist Alan Manning shows why Angus Taylor is about to find out that immigration policy is hard
National affairs
13 February 2026
It’s possible, but will that impress the rest of the electorate?
Essays & reportage
22 April 2026
In the footsteps of Beatrice Grimshaw, bestselling author, and her biographer
Essays & reportage
17 April 2026
What happens when AI takes on jazz?
Essays & reportage
18 February 2026
Just as our correspondent was wishing she had chosen a different edition of the Hobart Mercury, her eyes fell on page nine
Essays & reportage
18 February 2026
Terry Hughes and his team’s maps brought the threat to the Great Barrier Reef into sharp international focus
Essays & reportage
13 February 2026
How teacher education went off the rails
Books & arts
20 April 2026
A son of two nations combines optimism and pessimism
Books & arts
17 April 2026
A political scientist argues that democratic institutions need to stand up to authoritarians. But does that simply kick the can down the road?
Books & arts
20 March 2026
A new account of Australia’s brutal first world war occupation of German New Guinea
Books & arts
11 March 2026
Two novelists fill in some of the gaps
Books & arts
11 March 2026
Romantic love gets all the headlines, says writer Andrew O’Hagan, but just as often it is friendship that describes the shape of our lives
International
22 April 2026
Despite dire poll figures, the Republican Party still can’t stand up to its unhinged leader
International
3 March 2026
Sanae Takaichi smashed Japan’s election. Now comes the harder part
International
3 March 2026
One technique for sequestering carbon is firming up as a possible winner
International
10 February 2026
The White House’s efforts to suppress the Democratic vote are having little success
International
6 February 2026
A new report documents France’s abuses of human rights during 2024’s unrest in the Pacific territory
Other Voices
24 April 2026
Are Americans finally ready to acknowledge its successes?
Other Voices
14 March 2026
America and Israel might have bitten off more than they can chew
Other Voices
22 January 2026
Except for the damage, nothing Trump is doing will last
Other Voices
21 January 2026
Much can be learnt from how Wikipedia constructs shared knowledge about what’s happening in the world right now
Other Voices
17 December 2025
A vast country can be seen in different but not necessarily contradictory ways