Stories by Sharon Brettkelly
News
Peter Ellis' faith finally repaid
The Detail talks to Newsroom's Melanie Reid about the years she's spent covering the Peter Ellis case.
AudioTaxing times: What's on the table for tax cuts?
A record tax take, a better than expected deficit - could tax cuts be on the table going into next year's election?
AudioWhy your caffeine fix is getting more expensive
The price of your flat white is going up. The Detail tries to find out why.
AudioWe've got a king, now what?
Now that the dust has settled after the Queen's death, what's next for Aotearoa and the monarchy?
AudioThe 'spicy' mayoral races you haven't heard about
Outside our bigger cities, Aotearoa's smaller centres are seeing stacked races and fraught local issues.
AudioPutting women's rugby on the world stage
With the Rugby World Cup getting underway next month, The Detail takes a closer look at what it means for the women's game.
Audio"Scared of change": the cities shirking new housing laws
Christchurch is saying 'no' to the government's new housing density rules. Has the whole thing backfired?
AudioWho really is Liz Truss?
New British Prime Minister Liz Truss has a lot on her plate, but who is she and what does she stand for?
AudioIs WorkSafe working?
At least two people have died at work every month since last January. Are our workplace whistleblowers up to the task?
AudioKawerau Mill strike: The cracks that can't be papered over
Workers have been locked out, threatened with legal action and left without any means of income - and it's not the first time.
AudioWhy do we mourn for people we've never met?
When Princess Diana died, millions were compelled to travel to her home and leave flowers. Why?
AudioHow do you move an island?
Sea level rise is already destroying people's homes across the Pacific. How do you move a whole island community?
AudioThe hand that holds the purse strings
Why is the Reserve Bank facing flak from every angle over its economic handling of the pandemic?
AudioTurning the system upside down
From our water supply to our polytechnics, we're eschewing regional control for a more centralised approach. Why?
AudioA unified approach to head injuries
Thousands of Kiwi kids are concussed playing sport every year, but our rules for treating them aren't up to scratch.
AudioThe Detail: Rugby's communication breakdown
What happens when the balance between feeding public interest in the All Blacks and protecting the team's image blows up on you?
AudioDrama behind the scenes at Film Commission
After only one year in the job, the head of the New Zealand Film Commission has been stood down over a conflict of interest involving public funding for his own TV series. What happened?
AudioHow to fix Auckland's ghost CBD
A simple stroll down Queen Street will reveal more than 38 empty shop fronts. What happened to Auckland's main street, and how can we fix it?
AudioSuperpowers cast big shadow on Pacific forum
It's one of the most high-stakes Pacific Islands Forum in recent memory, but political power plays may be standing in the way of real progress.
AudioPaving the way to Australian citizenship
The new Australian prime minister is keen, so will Kiwis' rights across the Tasman finally be brought in line with Aussies' rights here?
AudioGetting the EU trade deal across the line
How hard was it to get a free trade deal with the European Union across the line?
AudioNew Zealand's food wastage problem
We're producing up to 150,000 tonnes of surplus food every year. The New Zealand Food Network steps up and takes it before it reaches what would've been its destination: landfill.
AudioCompeting in elite sport as a transgender woman
Elite sporting bodies worldwide are barring transgender women from competing if they've experienced male puberty, all in the name of fairness – but The Detail finds out that the science isn't that…
AudioWhy are asylum seekers treated differently to other refugees?
About half of the 400 people who arrive in New Zealand as asylum seekers every year end up being accepted as refugees - but why are they treated differently to people arriving through the quota…
AudioCounting our farming emissions
Twenty years ago, he thought human-induced climate change was a load of rubbish. Now, George Moss' dairy farms are leading the way in counting - and cutting - greenhouse gas emissions.
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