Property: Property price growth accelerated slightly in November in the capital, but a rise in homes for sale meant conditions were still in buyers' favour.
Public service: The Department of Home Affairs' troubling week has continued, a public service-wide survey revealing only one-third of the agency's employees feel fairly paid for their work.
Sport: The ACT Greens are set to launch a war on sports advertising, flagging their desire to introduce radical legislation which would ban fossil-fuels advertising at Canberra's premier venues and on the playing strips of teams coming to the city. Opinion: Let's make ACT first jurisdiction to get fossil fuels out of sport
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Court: A dedicated sexual assault court will be among options considered for the ACT as part of changes to the justice system to support victim-survivors.
Analysis: Glimpsing the scenes behind the walls built by savvy government media teams is not easy, especially when a pervasive fear of speaking up backs this up, writes Miriam Webber.
Media: ABC Radio Canberra listeners and colleagues bid newsreader Andrew Messenger a fond farewell on Thursday, his last day in a 50-year broadcasting career.
Charity: The Productivity Commission has called for the federal government to scrap the $2 threshold for tax-deductible donations, labelling the figure 'a product of history'.
Art: It's an eight-metre showstopper of tangled white on a black background, and there's nothing like seeing it in real life. It's here in the capital, too.
Opinion: We need teacher education that actually prepares prospective teachers for the day-to-day realities of the job, rather than attempting to indoctrinate them in either side's ideological preoccupations, writes Michael Castrission.
World: Two women have returned to Israel after being handed to the Red Cross in Gaza City, Israeli authorities say, and further hostages are expected to be released later in the evening, following a last-minute deal.