“Trove is a place for all Australians”, a National Library of Australia spokesperson said, “most recently, it has been a place for First Nations communities to continue to tell their stories, through our First Australians pages.”
Author: Aidan Elwig Pollock
It takes genuine effort to recall the sequence of events in the unfolding global catastrophe of COVID-19. Instead, I am left only with memories of reconnecting with nature and family, and discovering new friends and new eyes through which to see the city I had spent so much time as a child.
The FedUni Branch of the National Tertiary Education Union aims to “sign an Agreement that will make FedUni a better, safer place to work, while improving the quality of the education and support we provide our students.”
The Fair Work Ombudsman alleges that UniMelb’s benchmark payment system breaches the Fair Work Act and the Enterprise Agreement between the University and the NTEU.
The loss of Trove would instantly make such research much more difficult, forcing people to go through a variety of smaller institutions or physically attend the National Library.
What if Diary of a Wimpy Kid deserves a place in the literary canon?
We danced, we laughed, we cried; we were transported away from inner-city Sydney’s claustrophobia to endless empty highways, tangled stringybark, and savannah grass of outback Australia.
The shearers of 1891 show us the immense and unprecedented positive impacts that can emerge from industrial action; who knows where victories in modern battles for workers’ rights like the NTEU’s – and subsequently the rights of ordinary people across Australia – will lead us?
The Liberal Party’s attacks on the national history curriculum entrench conservative values and risk dumbing down a generation for political gain.
There is a dark side to triangulation.