Waiting for Superman.
Zoltan Gabor/Shutterstock
Britain’s central bank governor Mark Carney is like a prize fighter throwing his last, limp punches.
The plebiscite on whether Australia should legalise same-sex marriage is constitutionally unnecessary.
AAP/Alan Porritt
It’s the plebiscite Australia doesn’t have to have. But if the plebiscite on marriage equality goes ahead, how should it be designed?
Nurses will have to apply for a student loan.
Rob Marmion/Shutterstock
More people will go into nursing after bursaries are scrapped, but fewer than the NHS needs.
The docks at Felixstowe: what does the customs union mean for business?
Martin Charles Hatch / Shutterstock.com
The difference between a customs union and a free trade area – explained.
Shutterstock
If turnout had been 100% on June 23, you might be eating a croissant right now instead of protesting about Brexit. Then again, you might not.
Keeping the lights on.
Davide Barelli/Flickr
Post-Brexit Britain will have many rivals eager to exploit any weakness in London’s primacy as a home for banking.
Catching up on the UK news.
EPA/Jorge Zapata
The case of a man stripped of his EU citizenship offers some guidance for emigrants living in legally uncharted territory after the Brexit vote.
ell brown/flickr.com
Brexit, borrowing and birth rates may prove a lethal cocktail.
Your vote is not insignificant in the bigger scheme of things. It matters.
Rod Waddington/Flickr
Not voting can have serious consequences regarding the kind of society we end up living in. Disengagement can mean a lowering of quality of life.
shutterstock.com
The added costs from trade-related red tape that will result from leaving the EU are certain and they will be costly for business and government.
How to keep them active?
Jonathan Brady / PA Wire
How can British politics win back the trust of young voters?
EPA/Sean Dempsey
The UK is in for a volatile few years, with no obvious calming measures in sight. But for a true revolution to happen, a great many stars would have to align.
The Western Distributor project announced by the Andrews government will benefit Melbourne’s suburban residents in the west and north, but inner-city elites are mobilising against it.
AAP/Melissa Meehan
It’s a project that creates benefits for Melbourne’s western suburbs and the state as a whole. But the inner-city elite don’t like it and recent experience suggests their opinion holds sway.
Please, you must go now.
EPA/Ian Langsdon
Britain might want to play nice and exit calmly, but the French president must avoid giving ammunition to Frexiters.
Meet new British PM: Check.
EPA/Odd Andersen
Everyone is looking to the German leader to save the union in the wake of the Brexit vote.
shutterstock.com
Wetherspoon chief Tim Martin is so excited about Brexit he’s called it a ‘new Magna Carta' – but do his sums add up?
Australia’s current public-policy space is too small to grapple with the huge geopolitical and environmental shifts underway.
EPA/Mast Irham
Australia needs a clear bipartisan vision of its role in the world and a strategic agenda for the long-term national interest.
Much of Trump’s popularity comes from his populist messages.
Carlo Allegri/Reuters
Both the Republican and Democratic platforms show a shift away from globalization, thanks to the influence of the rise of populists in both parties.
tostphoto/shutterstock
A drop in migration from the EU would ease demand for housing, but also reduce the availability of those legendary Polish house builders, who will be hard to replace with local labour.
Boris Johnson outside Whitehall in London.
Peter Nicholls/Reuters
Boris Johnson, the man who led the Brexit campaign, has been appointed as the UK’s chief diplomat. It has sent shudders down many spines, but does Africa need to worry?