Plus: The best new books in July
| | How to deal with a micromanager |
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Have you ever felt micromanaged? If so, you're not alone. According to global statistics, around half of all employees feel micromanaged in their day-to-day work. Read our online article to hear from experts on how micromanaging happens, what it means for frustrated employees, and how to avoid it as a boss. Then, tune into The Music Show to hear a fascinating story about how some of America's most beloved jazz musicians were implicated in the death of a Congolese leader. And finally, check out recommendations from our resident book lovers and critics on the best new releases from the last month and what to add to your to-be-read pile. |
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Dating app users can feel played by the algorithm, dissatisfied with matches and sick of fruitless scrolling. Increasingly, they're discovering that there are other, in-person ways to meet new people instead. | | |
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As dangerous new opioids arrive on Australian streets, experts are calling for more frontline workers to be issued with naloxone, a medicine that can halt drug overdoses. | | |
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On the list are the latest novel from a Miles Franklin-winning author, a celebration of the nurses on the frontline of the AIDS crisis and a laugh-out-loud foray into lesbian pulp fiction. | | |
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Constantly second guessing the decisions you make in the workplace? There's a chance that a certain management style might be the culprit. | | |
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In 1961, the first elected leader of the Democratic Republic of the Congo was assassinated just months after the country's new-found independence. US jazz musicians Louis Armstrong, Nina Simone and Dizzie Gillespie played an unlikely role in his death. | | |
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What has led to a huge uptick in people wanting to freeze their eggs and is it actually the insurance policy they think it is? | | |
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The Paris Olympic Games are well underway, but not without religious controversy. The French national team has barred its own athletes from wearing religious items like the hijab. | | |
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In M. Night Shyamalan's Trap, a man and his teenage daughter discover they're at the centre of a dark and sinister event while watching a pop concert. The legendary thriller director behind The Sixth Sense discusses his latest release. | | |
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With some parents struggling to manage their young people's use of smartphones and social media, others are taking a firm position against "addictive" technology to protect teenagers' mental health. | | |
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After returning from spying for king and country in the late 17th century, Aphra Behn became the first English woman to be a paid playwright under her own name. | |
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