By Jo Carter
Japanese LGBTQ+ communities are taking to the streets to push for equal marriage rights with the slogan: "May love prevail in the Supreme Court."
(Full Story)
|
By Laura
Haiti is under the grip of armed gangs that control much of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and major national highways, inflicting violence that includes sexual assault, kidnapping, extortion, and arson.
(Full Story)
|
By Katarina Dimitrijevic, Lecturer in Graphic Design, Loughborough University
A walk along the Kent coast after a storm inspired one of my early works. The shoreline was covered in seaweed, shells, jellyfish – and plastic.
(Full Story)
|
By Stacey Cowe, Academic Associate & PhD Candidate in Environmental Physiology, Nottingham Trent University Caroline Sunderland, Associate Professor in Environmental and Sports Physiology, Nottingham Trent University Simon Cooper, Professor in Physical Activity and Health, Nottingham Trent University
Schools in the UK are closing as temperatures soar. If you’re a parent, you might be wondering what effect the heat has on your child. If they’re at school, will they be able to learn properly? If they’re at home, should they be playing or attending their normal clubs? How can you help keep them cool? Understanding how high temperatures not only influence physical health, but also thinking and learning is critical. Our research group investigates how heat influences the body and brain, and how targeted interventions can improve performance and safety. We research how heat…
(Full Story)
|
By Joanna Pozzulo, Chancellor's Professor, Psychology, Carleton University
Most people absorb social media content without questioning it. Switching to active reading is one of the most practical defences against misinformation.
(Full Story)
|
By Sarah Elizabeth Wolfe, Professor, School of Environment and Sustainability, Royal Roads University Philip Steenkamp, President and Vice-Chancellor, Royal Roads University
Universities must develop an intentional, place-based approach to research and teaching that’s organized around a region’s unique and specific problems.
(Full Story)
|
By Anja Mrhar, Visiting Researcher and PhD student, Karolinska Institutet Adrián Carballo Casla, Postdoctoral Researcher in Geriatric Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet
New study of older adults in Sweden suggests healthier diets may still be linked to lower dementia risk even after early biological changes are detected.
(Full Story)
|
By Vinita Srivastava, Editorial Director, The Conversation
Are you an experienced storyteller with a passion for centring Indigenous voices, histories and perspectives? Do you want to bring your editorial expertise to a prestigious, flexible residency that pairs public journalism with academic rigour? The Conversation Canada invites applications for our newly designed Indigenous Affairs Editor-in-Residence. The Conversation Canada is an established, non-profit digital newsroom in its ninth year of operation. We belong to a proven global network of explanatory journalism sister sites in the United Kingdom, the United…
(Full Story)
|
By Eric Palkovacs, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz
As the national conversation shifts to political finger-pointing, an important environmental question deserves careful scrutiny: What is the best approach to maintain urban water quality?
(Full Story)
|
By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image Peter Magyar, Prime Minister of Hungary, delivers a speech in the Hungarian Parliament before the agenda in Budapest, June 15, 2026. © 2026 Balint Szentgallay/NurPhoto via AP (London, June 25, 2026) – The new Hungarian government’s plan to make sweeping changes to key institutions through a rushed 17th amendment to the constitution, risks halting advances to restore the rule of law, Human Rights Watch said today. The plans to remove the country’s president and the head of its constitutional court lack due process safeguards.If the 17th Amendment is…
(Full Story)
|