The default measure of how we are doing, gross domestic product, is teetering close to the edge of its pedestal. Prof Marilyn Waring suggests we give it a nudge, Tom McKinlay reports.
We need to move on to a post-GDP world, Auckland academic Prof Marilyn Waring says.
Children's music is storming the charts, most recently in the example Wanaka artist Anna van Riel. She tells Tom McKinlay why things are sparking up now.
At the risk of encouraging yet more umbilical phone behaviour, Tom McKinlay looks at a couple of free apps designed to make a better world.
It was man against machine ... or battery ... or daughter, or daughter and battery. It was epic, writes Tom McKinlay.
Rising and more tempestuous seas mean we face hell and high water, says Dunedin writer Neville Peat. He tells Tom McKinlay about the threat and the book he has written in response.
Investors are looking to align their investments with their values, writes Tom McKinlay.
Behind my desk, pinned to the louvre blinds, are six badges heralding the seven ages of rock.
Hot on the heels of Kamasi Washington's cosmos-spanning, genre defying epic, Heaven & Earth, comes an album from Dunedin of no less ambition.
Otago was a key piece of casting for Dustin Feneley's first feature-length film, writes Tom Mckinlay.
Back in the heady post-punk days of New Zealand music, bands affected a little mockney and did their best with the three chords they knew to sound like they were from somewhere else.
Melting ice caps, floods, droughts . . . concerned? As the clock ticks down on the Government's Zero Carbon Bill consultation, now's the time to let them know, writes Tom McKinlay.
Two main methods of controlling greenhouse gas emissions from human activities, using price signals, are being debated in NZ; carbon "fee and dividend" or "cap-and-trade" using an emissions trading scheme.
The Wise Response Society - a coalition of academics, engineers, lawyers, artists, sports people and others - believes the target in the Zero Carbon Bill must be to reduce net emissions across all greenhouse gases to zero by 2050.
Wakatipu folk songstress Holly Arrowsmith may have left the district, but her songs are still singing its praises, writes Tom McKinlay.
Children’s author Andy Griffiths has been blowing children’s minds now for decades. He'll be in Dunedin next month for the Writers & Readers Festival.
When a shocking episode happens, it is rarely the case that only those immediately involved are implicated. A new Dunedin play charts the ripples of responsibility, writes Tom McKinlay.
We're beset on all sides: climate change, the sixth mass extinction, rampaging inequality and Facebook, just for a start. What is the way forward? Prof Niki Harre shares some thoughts with Tom McKinlay.
The Weekend Mix has a new poetry editor, Diane Brown. She gives Tom McKinlay some pointers on the artform.
Reuse crusader Bernadette Casey is bringing a renewed focus on footprints to iD Fashion, writes Tom McKinlay.