Queensland’s controversial new laws allow children as young as 10 to face the same sentences as adults for serious crimes.
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt is calling for parents and policymakers to roll back the "phone-based childhood", which he says ...
Good quality early childhood education does more than prepare kids to become productive adults — it provides something more ...
Our kids wanted to travel, so we made them pay for it. Here's how busking helped them earn enough for trips to Denmark and ...
China’s experience with keeping young people off video games and other digital platforms may have clues to help other nations ...
The Australian state of Queensland has passed laws which will see children as young as 10 subject to the same penalties as ...
We can anticipate how enforcing an online ban might (not) work by looking at China’s large-scale use of age verification tech ...
The law from the Australian Parliament is the first of its kind and aims to protect kids from the harms of social media.
As Thailand’s youth advocate for similar bans on under-16s, Malaysia and Singapore ramp up their own efforts to combat online ...
The Social Media Minimum Age Bill, also known as the Online Safety Amendment, forces tech giants, including Instagram and ...
Australia has had five years to repatriate dozens of women and children who went to Syria under Islamic State.
As the Queensland Government moves to pass its controversial Making Queensland Safer Bill this week, the National Children’s ...