Researchers champion better behaviours at Change 2018
The two-day conference will highlight a range of research aimed at engaging people and organisations to deliver change for the better.
The two-day conference will highlight a range of research aimed at engaging people and organisations to deliver change for the better.
The service innovation helps hosts change guests’ behaviour to conserve resources and have a better stay experience.
The Tourism and Climate Change Stocktake 2023 is the first report of its kind to assess the state of tourism worldwide.
Young Australian adults aged 18-24 years are more likely to binge drink than any other age group.
Griffith University’s annual Change Conference is back and fast becoming a signature event as an instrument for making change happen.
Online betting companies in Australia now use new messages instead of the ambiguous 'gamble responsibly' in advertising. The seven new 'gamble responsibly' taglines aim to encourage consumers to pause and consider the consequences of losing a bet or question their behavioural choices. However, whether the messages will be effective in influencing behavioural choices is still debated writes Griffith University’s Dr Marie-Louise Fry.
Youth crime is on the rise in Queensland. Recent media stories demonstrate the high cost of youth crimes for victims - financially, through serious or permanent injury, or leaving loved ones to try and pick up the pieces after senseless and tragic deaths. Victims and the wider community are understandably outraged and demand the government hold offenders accountable and protect the community by making these behaviours less likely in the future. Dr Troy Allard looks at how offenders can be held to account and address the root cause of their behaviour.
Data spanning 25 years explores impacts climate and land-use change have on bat behaviour and Hendra spillover.
Behaviour experts will converge on Griffith University’s South Bank campus as the Change Conference makes its in-person comeback.
Climate change is one of the most pressing issues of our time. It’s also one of the most complex, and scientists are still learning new things about it all the time. One thing that is becoming increasingly clear, however, is that climate change impacts humans and the way we live. This is true today, as it was in the past. However, a key question remains. How did climate change impact early humans?