The world we live in is changing rapidly. From unprecedented technological advancements to increasing globalisation, our everyday reality is becoming more and more complex. To get a real perspective on these changes and how they will affect the citizens of the future, an understanding of humanity - and the laws and institutions that govern how we live together - is essential.
Flinders University’s research into people and society covers a broad spectrum of human endeavour, from government, business and the law to how we respond to and contribute to society through cultural production. Knowing how society works, and how we operate in it, will help us plan for the future on the local, national and international level.
We spend roughly one third of our lives asleep. It’s vital for recharging our bodies and minds, and may be linked to decluttering our busy brains.
And yet, there is still so much we don’t know about what happens after we hit the hay.
Flinders experts are spending their waking hours looking into sleep. How can parents get babies to sleep when they won’t stop crying at bedtime? Does technology influence our ability to sleep? What affect do disorders like sleep apnoea or insomnia have on working Australians?
Making a difference.
It’s the reason our researchers get up in the morning.
Professor Neil Brewer has been working to correct the flaws in the eyewitness line-up processes to reduce misidentification rates.
Read moreProfessor John Halsey is working to make rural towns a chosen destination for outstanding teachers.
Read moreProfessor Murray Drummond is an international expert in men’s health, sport and body image.
Read moreProfessor Anna Ziersch is examining the impact of marginalisation on groups from various backgrounds.
Read moreProfessor Melissa De Zwart is engaged in exacting global legal debate to find the right framework for pioneering space law.
Read moreDriving the cultural change around appearance, Professor Tiggemann hopes one day we will be happy in our own skin.
Read moreEmeritus Professor John Vincent Stanley Megaw is exploring how Indigenous people adapted their artistic techniques.
Read moreDr Wendy Van Duivenvoorde is diving into the history behind shipwrecks on the Australian coast.
Read moreProfessor Mike Nicholls and Dr Nicole Thomas looking at the difference in attentional capacities between the two sides of the brain.
Read moreCriminology Professor Mark Halsey has unearthed a worrying truth about intergenerational incarcerations.
Read moreProfessor John Spoehr leads a multi-disciplinary team focusing on industry and workplace transformation in the context of technological change and innovation.
He has written extensively on economic and industry development, employment, unemployment and the socio-economic impact of change.
Professor Nicholls specialises in the realm of cognitive neuroscience, which examines cognitive processes in relation to brain function, behaviour and perception, spatial attention, language and facial expression.
Associate Professor Hughes seeks to advance Australian and international drug policy by improving the evidence-base into the effects of different legislative and law enforcement approaches to drug use and supply and working directly with policy makers.