From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
From July 1, government-funded paid parental leave increases from 24 weeks to 26 weeks. While welcome, many challenges remain for new parents, particularly mothers.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
Two experts explain why staying focused, especially in our modern world, can be so hard.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
Scientists don’t know enough about the food habits of less social bees. Here’s why that urgently needs to change.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
The government’s proposed workplace safety reforms aim to create simpler rules for employers. Critics argue they may also move risk onto workers.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
By Margot Staunton of RNZ Pacific A former coup convict in Fiji claims the country will remain unstable while the Indigenous iTaukei are economically marginalised. Josefa ‘Jo’ Nata, who spent 24 years in jail for treason, told the Fiji government’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission that “the lot of iTaukei has not improved a single bit
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
Lunar architecture isn’t just an engineering challenge. At its heart, it is about understanding human experience at the extremes.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
When celebrities go public with their prostate cancer diagnoses, they do more than raise awareness.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
Battered by asteroid impacts, the young Earth was hot and unstable for hundreds of millions of years.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
The UK leader’s resignation speaks to the challenges facing centre-left parties as they struggle to hold together increasingly diverse voters.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
While many countries will try to copy Ukraine’s successful drone tactics, technology isn’t enough. A military must first build a culture capable of maximizing the potential of drones.
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
As the national conversation shifts to political finger-pointing, an important environmental question deserves careful scrutiny: What is the best approach to maintain urban water quality?
From MIL OSIPost
June 26, 2026
New study of older adults in Sweden suggests healthier diets may still be linked to lower dementia risk even after early biological changes are detected.