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In line with the Charles Darwin University (‘the University’, ‘CDU’) Strategic Plan 2021-2026, the First Nations Leadership Core Plan 2022-2026, and the First Nations Workforce Plan 2023-2026, we commit to increasing the representation of First Nations employees across our university.  
Develop a critical mass of research excellence at CDU to address the research, technical and innovation needs of the Northern Australia Agricultural sector, supporting growth and economic development.
Yvonne always planned to go to university, but young motherhood put her plans on pause – at least for a decade or two. Starting her first degree in her late 30s didn't slow her learning down in the slightest.
Two short talks: Ground-level governance of Arnhem Land Fire Abatement savanna burning projects: fire for the future, presented by Taegan Calnan, and Impact of fortified biochar on sustainable food crop production and income generation in a vegetable-rice cropping sequence in Timor-Leste, presented by Acacio da Costa Guterres
As the Northern Territory continues to experience extreme weather conditions, Charles Darwin University (CDU) researchers are investigating the role community leaders play in building resilience during times of drought.
Preventing extinctions is at last government policy. It is about time. For the thirty plus years we have been working with Australian threatened species, here and abroad, we have been highlighting their plight, working out ways extinction can be prevented and population declines reversed.
The influence of climate change is accelerating and both human society and ecological systems must change or fail. Much of our research in this field is about people – their behaviours, mobility, adaptations and energy supply.
A new project, between Charles Darwin University (CDU), Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and indigenous ranger groups, will investigate how sea level rise and increasing sand temperature may affect Northern Australia’s turtle populations.
A new Charles Darwin University (CDU) project will explore how extreme weather events are affecting where Australians choose to live and how this migration could have consequences for service provisions, infrastructure planning, disaster management and more.
Reading an old National Geographic magazine as a teenager sparked Dr Jayson Ibanez's love affair with the critically endangered Philippine eagle. He's spent his life and career dedicated to researching and conserving it.
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