Fukushima Power Plant meltdown inspires career change
The 2011 Japanese tsunami and subsequent Fukushima Power Plant meltdown destroyed many lives but for one Gold Coast man it was a turning point in his career.
The 2011 Japanese tsunami and subsequent Fukushima Power Plant meltdown destroyed many lives but for one Gold Coast man it was a turning point in his career.
Griffith University School of Engineering graduate Dinindu Yatawarage has grown accustomed to personal challenge and the unpredictable nature of change....
Griffith Business School celebrated industry partners, alumni and the wider business community at their Better Business Dinner on Friday, 3...
Where there’s a will, there’s a way. For Dr Indigo Willing, that volition saw her take up skateboarding at age...
Project to develop catchment gully erosion model for healthier Great Barrier Reef.
It is possible for a introverts to progress in an extroverted career. Overwhelmingly, the literature of 'success' has long indicated that extroverts are best-placed for success due to their confidence and exuberance. This view is both dated and untrue. You don’t have to change your fundamental personality to thrive says Dr Carys Chan.
Four Griffith research projects secure ARC funding.
Professor Caitlin Byrne suggests that leaders on both sides of this bilateral relationship will be carefully considering next steps in the context of their shifting domestic narratives and global ambitions.
As we head into the third year of the pandemic, debates continue to rage over the ethics of vaccine mandates, restrictions on civil liberties, the limits of government power and the inequitable distribution of vaccines globally. With so much disagreement over questions like these, has the pandemic fundamentally changed the way we think about ethics?
An impressive final year Griffith student, who overcame a cancer diagnosis at 15 before embarking on a medical degree, has been awarded a prestigious 2022 Australia-At-Large Rhodes Scholarship.