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Showing 31 - 46 of 46 results for:
%22Jeremy Gans%22
Essays & Reportage
The enemy within
Jeremy Gans
26 June 2020
The alleged actions of former justice Dyson Heydon sit oddly with his judgement in a contentious High Court appeal
Books & Arts
This house of Grieve
Jeremy Gans
7 November 2023
A murder case looked different close-up for a journalist with worries of his own
Essays & Reportage
More Star Trek than Terminator?
Joshua Gans and Andrew Leigh
25 November 2019
Can the hopes of tech optimists and the fears of tech pessimists be reconciled?
Books & Arts
Genetic injustices
Jeremy Gans
7 June 2012
DNA evidence has exonerated nearly 300 prisoners in the United States, but an Australian case highlights its potential to mislead
Essays & Reportage
A judge’s doubts
Jeremy Gans
29 August 2019
Did all three judges overstep the mark in deciding George Pell’s appeal?
From the archive
Pell in purgatory
Jeremy Gans
13 April 2020
If the High Court is right about the evidence on timing, what went wrong during the prosecution and hearings?
National Affairs
The podcast’s trial
Jeremy Gans
4 September 2022
Did
The Teacher’s Pet
hinder the conviction of Chris Dawson?
National Affairs
Yes, section 44 can be fixed
Peter Brent
17 May 2018
The parliamentary report on dual citizenship was barely out before the government rejected its key recommendation. It’s time for some lateral thinking
Books & Arts
Welcome to the Titanic
Paul ’t Hart
8 December 2021
Andrew Leigh compellingly describes the “black swan” events we could be facing, but are his proposals equal to the threat?
Books & Arts
Machine questions
Julian Thomas
3 October 2023
What does history tell us about automation’s impact on jobs and inequality?
National Affairs
Out of the office
Andrew Leigh
20 October 2020
Covid-19 could change how we work, for the better and — if we’re not careful — the worse
National Affairs
Need growth? Scrap policies that favour rich people and monopolies
Adam Triggs
1 June 2020
Breaking self-perpetuating cycles of rising inequality will be key to Australia’s economic recovery
National Affairs
The long road to a republic
Peter Brent
8 November 2019
Will Australia be the last redoubt of the British monarchy?
Essays & Reportage
The war on sprawl
Graeme Davison
31 August 2016
Ever since William Thackeray satirised the London suburb of Clapham in 1855, critics and supporters of the suburbs have been battling it out, writes
Graeme Davison
National Affairs
The war within
Peter Browne
3 May 2019
How the Liberal right found its enemy, why the High Court could be busy this year, and why you might worry about early voting
National Affairs
Pell’s freeze is over
Jeremy Gans
27 February 2019
In this case, above all, justice needed to be seen to be done
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