No name

The Community and Public Sector Union is warning that Peter Dutton鈥檚 revised plan to cut public services would be devastating. Jim McIlroy reports.

Labor made a lot of promises to support Palestine, but it has failed on many fronts, not least in its unwavering support for Israel鈥檚 war.听Khaled Ghannam听argues that those who care about justice must vote for Palestine.

aerial photo of deforestation

In Indonesian-occupied West Papua, soldiers are enforcing the destruction of vast areas of rainforest to be replaced by the monoculture plantations of the government鈥檚 鈥渇ood estate鈥 program, reports Chris Lang.

protesting the treaty principles bill

The controversial Treaty Principles bill has been defeated after the people of Aotearoa New Zealand spoke out against it in record numbers, reports Zara Lomas.

Trade unions have led the fight for peace since the fight against conscription in World War I. Steve O鈥橞rien argues that we need to resist attacks on the trade union movement, because it will stymie the peace movement.听

warship with flags of Aus USA NZ and China in the crosshairs

After 500 years of almost incessant violence across the globe, Western countries are now rushing to increase military spending听鈥 Aotearoa New Zealand being the latest, writes Eugene Doyle.

woman standing in front of a stall

Latin America is in the grip of a cost-of-living crisis, characterised by rising costs and falling real wages, reports Ben Radford.

Protesters with banners

Workers in Peru鈥檚 Lima and Callao regions went on strike in protest over the Dina Boluarte government鈥檚 failure to combat rising violence and insecurity, reports Ben Radford.

About 60 people came out to learn more about the plight of Palestine at the screening of Palestinians Don鈥檛 Need Sidewalks. Kerry Smith reports.

Not-for-profit frontline mental health services are being forced to beg for small change as they manage the fall-out from the mental health funding model. Suzanne James reports.

In the lead-up to the federal election, calls to scrap or, at the very least, closely scrutinise the AUKUS military pact are growing, reports Pip Hinman.

In this election season, politicians will try to set the rules by which we must play so that they be taken seriously. Tony Smith argues that this is the way theyavoid being genuinely answerable.