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transport
International
Maritime mathematics
John Quiggin
24 January 2024
“Keeping the sea lanes open” comes with rarely considered opportunity costs
Essays & Reportage
Climate’s quiet achiever
Akshat Rathi
20 October 2023
When the history of electric vehicles is written, who will be seen as central?
National Affairs
Flying high
James Panichi
14 August 2023
Qantas’s relations with government underscore the inadequacies of Australia’s lobbying laws
National Affairs
Time to get out of the slow lane
John Quiggin
20 April 2023
Labor’s electric vehicle strategy won’t quickly reverse Australia’s laggard status. But the news isn’t all bad
Books & Arts
Why the rush?
Sarah Barns
21 January 2023
A new book about urban mobility invites us to think differently about our streets: who do they belong to, what are they for, who gets to decide?
Books & Arts
Electric ambition
Jock Given
25 January 2022
Elon Musk has cast a spell across global business and investment. Someone needed to
National Affairs
Covid’s message for carbon reduction
John Quiggin
26 August 2021
The road to reduced emissions is clear
National Affairs
The chant of East West Link
James Murphy
21 April 2021
Why are Victoria’s Liberals stuck on a controversial project twice rejected at the ballot box?
Essays & Reportage
Up, up and away?
Nicole Hasham
27 March 2021
It’s been a long road for hydrogen, but its time might finally have arrived
Summer season
Fuel’s paradise
Jennifer Doggett
24 September 2020
Australia lags by more than a decade in tackling the health effects of low-quality petrol
Essays & Reportage
The end of the city? No, not quite
Sarah Barns
16 September 2020
All of a sudden, proximity to the city may no longer be a critical driver of innovation and job creation
Essays & Reportage
Making space
Sarah Barns
30 March 2020
What does the coronavirus mean for Australian cities?
Essays & Reportage
A progressive agenda for tackling Australia’s productivity crisis
Andrew Leigh
28 July 2019
Cutting working conditions won’t get us out of the current malaise
National Affairs
Victoria: where black is always in
Tim Colebatch
28 May 2019
A state budget that’s somehow in surplus still plays the wrong kind of politics with infrastructure
National Affairs
Helping first homebuyers, and other misdirected pledges
Tim Colebatch
14 May 2019
Election 2019
| Two parties, three promises, three problems
National Affairs
The law of large numbers
James Murphy
2 July 2018
How much does it cost to stop a freeway?
National Affairs
Are Victoria and the feds back on track?
Tim Colebatch
10 May 2018
The prime minister and the Victorian premier are talking infrastructure after a long federal funding drought
National Affairs
Budgeting in boom time
Tim Colebatch
2 May 2018
Cautious in parts, extravagant in others, the Victorian budget is built on a boom
Essays & Reportage
In the belly of the beast
Tim Dunlop
16 January 2018
As Uber picks itself up after another legal blow — this time from the European Court of Justice — an ambivalent observer recalls a visit to the company’s Australian head…
Books & Arts
Getting somewhere or going nowhere? Either prospect is inviting
Jane Goodall
15 January 2018
Television
| Our reviewer is gripped by SBS’s venture into slow TV
National Affairs
Why 2017 was a good year for climate
John Quiggin
30 December 2017
Despite the US and Australian governments, attitudes and technology are driving change
Essays & Reportage
Cities for cars, tollways for investors
Peter Spearritt
30 November 2017
Although Australia’s major capitals are changing fast, cars are still calling many of the shots
National Affairs
Dealing cities in
Peter Mares
3 July 2017
Malcolm Turnbull’s efforts to bring the federal government back into urban policy will be put to the test in Western Sydney
National Affairs
Options for housing affordability: the good, the bad and the cosmetic
Brendan Coates, John Daley & Trent Wiltshire
1 May 2017
Governments are favouring the easy but ineffectual options for reform
National Affairs
Why should we care about housing affordability?
Brendan Coates, John Daley & Trent Wiltshire
27 April 2017
In the first of two articles, the Grattan Institute describes the profound effects of housing costs across the economy.
National Affairs
In infrastructure, you get what you’re willing to pay for
Tim Colebatch
19 February 2016
Infrastructure Australia’s latest report got lost in the tax debate this week, writes
Tim Colebatch
. It deserves a closer look
National Affairs
Less than frank and not quite fearless
James Murphy
14 December 2015
The Victorian auditor-general’s criticism of the quality of bureaucratic advice on the contentious East West Link raises broader concerns about the public service, writes…
International
In Paris with the mayor of Byron
Giles Parkinson
8 December 2015
Cities, regions and states are setting the pace on climate adaptation, reports
Giles Parkinson
from Paris
National Affairs
The new urban divide, and how to deal with it
Jane-Frances Kelly & Paul Donegan
29 September 2015
State and local governments need to break down the emerging division between job-rich and job-poor suburbs in Australia’s major cities, write
Jane-Frances Kelly
and…
National Affairs
How to bridge the infrastructure gap
Tim Colebatch
8 April 2015
With a dramatically rising population and falling infrastructure spending, the pressure for action is growing, writes
Tim Colebatch
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