Academic
Studying at university is a time when many of us hone our academic skills. Curieux is committed to encouraging academic growth and experimentation. Here, you’ll find past assignments and other academic work submitted by students.
Adolescence is a near-universal part of human development that has far reaching determinants on one’s health: Why is the experience so different depending on where you live?
Imagine waking up as young woman to your first experience with your menstrual cycle and not knowing what was happening to your body, worse still, that your first thought was that of disease.
Inequalities Faced by Australians Over 65 Who Live with Dementia
Inequalities placed on people with dementia are quite evident within Australia. Dementia impairs the normality of the brain to function and can affect memory, speech, mobility, and behaviour.
An Evaluation of Australia’s Health Care Systems Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
Australia has a world-class health care system that functioned well through the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, supported by lockdown measures.
Zeros and Crosses: A Game of COVID-19 Public Health Policy in Europe.
I was talking to a colleague recently when she suggested that the success of North Korea’s COVID-19 management was due to a policy ordering anyone who tested positive to be shot.
South Korea: A COVID-19 Success Story to Country in Crisis
Following South Korea’s commendable response to their first encounter with the Coronavirus (COVID-19) in January of 2020 (1), the nation now finds itself in a compromising position.
COVID-19 Lessons from the Republic of Korea for Sweden: Taking Initiative in Humility and Caution
The ever-evolving nature of the COVID-19 situation has seen nations around the world grapple with finding the “correct” plan of attack, inevitably giving way to strategy missteps and miscalculations.
Costly Gambles and Effective Execution: Pandemic Lessons from Sweden and Singapore.
When considering the different responses to the coronavirus pandemic around the world, it is hard to ignore the unconventional position adopted by Sweden.
Do COVID-19 Lockdowns Reduce Healthcare Equity in Robust Systems?
Considered two of the most successful healthcare systems globally, albeit, for different reasons, Sweden and Singapore have chosen dramatically different approaches when it comes to the COVID-19 response.
Science Comes Up Trumps: The USA, COVID & What Went Wrong
When we think of risk factors relating to the Covid-19 pandemic we may think of age or underlying health conditions, but for Americans, the biggest risk factor was President Trump.
Covid-19 Pandemic: Singapore’s Recipe to Success
The first known infection from SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) was discovered in Wuhan, China. On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak as a global pandemic.
Go See a Therapist
It is an overused and boring cliché to say that “despite the great strides made in recent years, there is still a great stigma around mental health treatment, such as seeing a psychologist.”
Setting a target on national security development
Staring down the barrel of a camera wearing a balaclava, Caleb announced to the Australian public that their cities would be destroyed…
Helping small businesses survive and thrive in a pandemic
A new era of online innovation is sparking hope for Canberra’s entrepreneurs and small businesses, facing the impacts of the pandemic.
Australia and Israel: Strange Bedfellows
Last week, for the first time Australia welcomed an Israeli Prime Minister to its shores.
American Media Pulls Out of White House Correspondents Dinner
American financial journal Bloomberg announced today they will not be attending the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
Calls to Ban Netanyahu Visit Ignore Importance of Open Dialogue
The first visit to Australia from an Israeli leader, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, kicks off today despite calls to ban his entry.