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Report

Report

National Gambling Prevalence Study pilot 2024

Tanvi Pappu, Mikayla Budinski, Nancy Greer, Barbara Whitlock, Kei Sakata

This study reveals more Australians are being harmed by gambling amid rising participation. Any policy seeking to address gambling harm must consider links between riskier gambling and mental health, financial stress and intimate partner violence. Future policy should be underpinned by and evaluated from a routine national gambling prevalence study.
Report

Work health and safety across Australia’s regions


Work‑related injuries and illnesses can occur anywhere across Australia, in urban, regional or remote areas. This analysis uses national workers’ compensation claims data to provide new perspectives on the different incidence of injured or ill workers across these regions. It finds there are key differences across the regions.
Report

Enacting assessment reform in a time of artificial intelligence


Generative artificial intelligence (gen AI) continues to transform teaching, learning and assessment across Australian higher education. This resource aims to help institutions address the risks gen AI poses to learning assurance, while also supporting students to use these tools responsibly and ethically. It assists institutions and staff to navigate three main approaches that have emerged.
Report

Managing the ethical risks of artificial intelligence


This audit focused on policies that the Queensland Government has issued that guide entities in managing ethical risks with artificial intelligence (AI). It also assessed how a Queensland Government department managed ethical risks and controls of two AI systems it uses. The report provides department-specific recommendations and one recommendation for the benefit of all public...
Report

The great regression: how unions and the Government have changed the rules from accord to central control


The Australian Government has introduced a series of industrial relations (IR) laws that in large part mark a deliberate and systematic shift away from the enterprise-level bargaining model. This report details how the Government’s IR laws are reshaping Australia’s industrial landscape and radically regressing from the workplace reforms of the Hawke and Keating government era.