Episodes
-
As the world continues to face the ongoing challenge of climate change and the pandemic, the involvement of women in STEM has never been more crucial.
-
This week's backyard caller is the Little Wattlebird
-
Episodes manquant?
-
This truckie's photos of remote Australia have a global audience and he's using their success to help people who are homeless, as he was in his teens.
-
A hundred years after the first full edition of James Joyce's Ulysses was published, a new book suggests the Irish have not always warmly embraced Joyce and his works.
-
For months the NSW government assured the public that its hospitals were coping through the pandemic.
But frontline staff are now speaking out about the barely controlled chaos behind the scenes.
Reporter Mayeta Clark investigates what really happened during Omicron's peak.
-
The iconic Bollywood playback singer, Lata Mangeshkar, known as the India’s Nightingale, has died at the age of 92 a month after contracting COVID-19
-
Each year, in hundreds of Australian towns, the annual highlight is the country show.
For Kathryn Bowden, showtime isn’t just about checking out the stock and produce. It’s a reminder of the generations of farming knowledge that have been passed down through her family, and the ability of Australian farmers to adapt to the changing world around them.
-
Sherrill Roland is an American artist whose projects are inspired by the 10 months he spent in prison for a crime he was later exonerated for.
-
This week Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen mistakenly reported that jailed Australian economist Sean Turnell had been freed but a year on he awaits trial in Myanmar for allegedly violating the official secrets law.
-
As Aotearoa/New Zealand celebrates Waitangi Day, 182 years since the signing of the Waitangi Treaty on 6 February 1840, what are the prospects for treaties with Indigenous Australians?
-
Child psychiatrist Dr Essam Daod co-founded an organisation devoted to making mental health support a fundamental component in humanitarian crisis responses.
-
A new book that reveals who might have led the Nazis to Anne Frank and her family has been widely criticised by experts as 'full of errors'.
-
What children experienced inside Tasmania's youth detention centre for a long time remained out of sight, out of mind.
But as Mahmood Fazal discovered, the centre's secrets are coming out now, as more former detainees come forward to tell their stories for the first time.
-
What’s the most important human invention from history? The wheel? Fire? How about… language and culture?
This week, archaeologist Sam Lin takes us on a tour of very early human history, featuring an item that crops up too regularly to be an accident: an almond-shaped piece of sharpened stone.
-
Thousands of people in Washington DC rely on the state's tunnels on a daily basis but the full extent of the underground network remains undocumented.
One researcher has set out to complete that picture through an online website, which took a surprising turn last year in the lead up to the January 6 US Capitol insurrection.
-
The future of the controversial Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to supply natural gas from Russia to Europe, is directly linked to the Ukraine crisis.
-
This week's caller picks insects and nectars from gardens in the West and North – the Brown Honeyeater.
- Montre plus