NI Seminar as part of the People. Policy. Place. Seminar Series 2025 on Aboriginal Shared Medical Appointments
When sparky Ellie Hedington signed up to learn the ropes of live production, she never imagined she would be running a three-hour stage show for all of Darwin just a few months later.
The physiology of many Australian Gehyra gekkonids (dtellas) are not well understood, partly due to the cryptic nature of several species- many of which have only been recently identified. Measuring physiological traits can reveal whether species have adapted to their environment and can provide insights into their evolutionary history of dispersal and trait development.
Charles Darwin University has launched Be A Better Human as part of a month-long push to raise awareness on how everyone can help to reduce sexual violence.
Research to understand the movements of fish in Top End waterways has found that barramundi exhibit very accurate homing behaviour, travelling up to 80 km to their “home” billabongs after wet season rains.
The Territory and Me is a research project run by the Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University. The focus is on population drivers affecting the Territory and we have developed a survey to ask people about their experiences of living here. We ask questions on: how long have you lived here, why you came, why you stayed, and why you may have left.
Charles Darwin University Professor of Conservation Biology John Woinarski has joined an expert panel to help steer the wildlife recovery in the aftermath of the devastating bushfires still raging in the south of the country.
This project was funded by the federal government’s Office of Learning and Teaching. In 2015, Charles Darwin University was given a Seed grant to develop an online shell to enable Indigenous authorities to teach their language and culture on their own terms to University students.
CDU is looking for outstanding early- to mid-career researchers to join the University. Through the growth strategy Connect, Discover, Grow, CDU will further develop world-class research and emerging research areas critical to the sustainable and prosperous development of northern Australia and the region. It is a distinctive, region-focused, strengths-based plan that builds on the University’s commitment to Indigenous leadership.
Health care workers and medical researchers are invited to attend a free Australian Clinical Trials Alliance (ACTA) “super webinar” on 11 February at Menzies’ Royal Darwin Hospital. The event will provide guidance for clinical trialists regarding optimising their trials for implementation.