My research develops navigable high-altitude stratospheric balloons that combine satellite-level coverage with drone-level detail at low cost. Using machine-learning trajectory models and altitude-based steering, fleets can monitor wildfires, deforestation, and environmental change in real time. This technology enables scalable, sustainable remote sensing for global environmental protection.
Adele Pentland, a pterosaur palaeontologist, has named Australia’s two most complete pterosaur species and described the country’s oldest specimens. Her work supports regional palaeotourism and has reached hundreds of thousands through museums, media, and outreach. She aims to inspire future scientists, especially young girls from diverse backgrounds.
Australia’s wildlife is hard to count due to difficult terrain and vast landscapes. This research uses remote sensing—camera traps, audio recorders, drones, and satellites—combined with AI and mathematical models to understand animal presence, habitat choices, and detectability. The goal is faster, more accurate population monitoring to guide conservation.
Bowel cancer kills thousands each year, and current stool-based screening misses many cases. This PhD develops a new non-invasive method that analyzes human cells shed into stool, aiming to detect normal, pre-cancerous, and cancerous changes more accurately. The goal is a more reliable, higher-participation screening tool that could replace the existing national test.
This research examines why Australian truth commissions consistently fail, focusing on deep mismatches between First Nations concepts of justice and Western institutional frameworks. Through interviews with Indigenous community members and past commissioners, the study identifies what First Australians want from truth processes, aiming to design future commissions that governments genuinely support and implement.
This research traces the legislative and accounting history of Australian government spending to uncover how public finances actually work. It shows that the government creates money and spends before taxing or borrowing. The real constraint is not affordability but inflation and resource availability, reframing debates about government spending and economic policy.
This thesis explores how whiteness operates as an invisible cultural norm in Australia by analysing Aboriginal accounts of exclusion and marginalisation. Through creative and critical methods, the research reveals how white cultural dominance shapes social life and highlights the need for awareness, debate, and structural change to build a more equitable nation.