Griffith community honoured in King’s Birthday List
The Governor-General has announced the King’s Birthday 2025 Honours List, with several members of the Griffith University community recognised. The...
The Governor-General has announced the King’s Birthday 2025 Honours List, with several members of the Griffith University community recognised. The...
Griffith projects win $4,579,244 from $92.9 million funding round.
As part of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) Australian Awards Fellowship, members of the Griffith Asia Institute...
Increasing climate variability has been implicated as a driving force for the origins of our species (Homo sapiens) over 300,000 years ago,...
Griffith University’s Climate Action Beacon conducted the first of five annual Climate Action Surveys in late 2021. These surveys discover Australians’ thoughts and feelings about climate change and related environmental and climatic events, conditions, and issues.
Impacts are worsening, future risks are high, and wide-ranging adaptation is needed.
A tongue-in-cheek editorial about the death of the Great Barrier Reef undermined efforts to build action on climate change and amplified conflict a new study has found.
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?
Researchers from Griffith University have joined a new national research network known as Healthy Environments And Lives (HEAL).
Climate responses are often distant global discussions that don’t translate to the everyday lived experience of local communities. The embeddedness of community radio in the social and cultural lives of their communities is an untapped reservoir to communicate climate action and pursue climate justice.