Representatives from the Northern Territory Herbarium will present a seminar on their role in curating the region's most significant plant collection.
Toni is a published poet and short story writer using lived experience to create fictional characters who tell their visceral and embodied stories of abuse.
The future challenges that sustainability will face and the urgent need to reduce the negative effects of human activity and encouragement of more sustainable attitudes. CDU has an important role to play in terms of educating and engaging consumers, businesses and stakeholders, as well as by conducting effective sustainability-focused research.
Students within the Bachelor of Laws must successfully complete the recognised “Priestley 11” subjects that are “prescribed areas of knowledge” required to be eligible to apply for admission to the legal profession. The compulsory “Priestley 11” areas of law are met through the successful completion of the units listed below.
Satellite imagery and artificial intelligence can detect with high accuracy two invasive weed species in Australia, posing a new opportunity for defense against these pervasive plants.
Wildlife ecologist with 30 years of research and conservation management experience. My interests are in research, monitoring and management of threats to biodiversity, especially to declining species
An Australian island’s efforts to improve food security and transition into a blue economy will be bolstered by a new project to propagate a nutritious and increasingly popular fish.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was in Darwin to meet some of Charles Darwin University’s (CDU) School of Medicine first students, reiterating the importance of the program to the Northern Territory in securing the future health workforce.
Tens of thousands of school leavers are considering their university offers, putting their hard-earned ATAR to use. But what about the students who didn’t get the ATAR they’d hoped for?
Users around the world have rushed to adopt artificial intelligence - especially in safety-critical fields - but a new study has revealed the hype has prioritised technology for technology’s sake instead of human-centred development.