After COP26 what’s next for business?
Given the failure of governments to raise the level of ambition needed to avert the climate crisis, what have businesses done in response and what can businesses do to compensate for the failure of governments?
Given the failure of governments to raise the level of ambition needed to avert the climate crisis, what have businesses done in response and what can businesses do to compensate for the failure of governments?
Griffith University academics unpacked what was achieved at the Glasgow climate change summit and whether COP26 was failure.
Initiative harnesses climate action expertise acrossdisciplines todevelop practical pathways towards a climate-ready Australia.
This is the critical decade for climate action and all foreign policy interventions will be judged against this global challenge. To meet this challenge, it is time for Australia to adopt the focus and techniques of feminist foreign policy.
In 1973, the world’s post-war boom hit the rocks. Oil producers restricted supply, sending prices soaring. In the aftermath of...
Inequalities, based on issues such as gender, disability, age, race, income and opportunity, persist across the world — both within and between countries. Beyond the very real impacts that inequalities have on people’s day to day lives, they limit social and economic development, and reduce our ability to effectively address global crises.
Griffith students dominated the2021Minister’s Planning Awards, winningtwo offourcategories, includingmost prominent Female Student in Planning.
Griffith Business School’s MBA program has achieved top ranking in the Corporate Knights 19th annual Better World MBA Ranking, for the second year in a row.
Australia’s first longitudinal national survey captures changing societal perceptions about climate change and climate action.
Griffith University is hosting a series of cutting-edge discussions around the Difficult Conversations we need to have about climate justice during COP26.