By Geoffrey Propheter, Associate Professor, School of Public Affairs, University of Colorado Denver
The Denver Broncos announced in early September 2025 their plan to build a privately financed football stadium. The proposal received a lot of attention and praise. Across the five major sports leagues in the U.S. – the NBA, NHL, NFL, MLB and MLS – only 20%…
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By Hana Green, Postdoctoral Fellow in Holocaust Studies, Zucker/Goldberg Center for Holocaust Studies, College of Charleston
Some women adopted non-Jewish identities to support the resistance. For most, though, it was simply a strategy for survival – one with constant risk of exposure and execution.
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By Kelsey Roberts, Post-Doctoral Scholar in Marine Ecology, Cornell University; UMass Dartmouth Daniele Visioni, Assistant Professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University Morgan Raven, Associate Professor of Marine Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara Tyler Rohr, ARC DECRA Fellow/Senior Lecturer, IMAS, University of Tasmania
Some methods being tried to counter climate change shift the ocean’s biology or chemistry. Others would deflect solar radiation. All have consequences for marine life.
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By Amnesty International
By Joe Freeman, Amnesty International’s Myanmar Researcher, and Aung Naing Soe, Burmese journalist and filmmaker One morning last November, Bee Kyal’s phone pinged with a message about a fighter jet taking off from a military base in central Myanmar’s rural Sagaing region. Reacting quickly, the resistance fighter picked up a walkie-talkie and shouted into it, […] The post In Myanmar, civilians bear consequences of Starlink cuts appeared first on Amnesty International. ]]>
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By Qiqi Cheng, Quantitative Research Associate, School of Environment, Education and Development, University of Manchester Neil Humphrey, Professor of Psychology of Education, University of Manchester
The research found little evidence that time spent on social media or frequent gaming causes mental health problems in early-to-mid adolescence.
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By Human Rights Watch
Col. Claude Pivi, Guinea’s former minister for presidential security and one of the men convicted in a landmark trial for rapes and killings committed in Guinea in 2009, reportedly died in custody in a hospital on January 6, 2026, of natural causes. Click to expand Image Col. Claude Pivi, Guinea’s former minister for presidential security, at Martyrs Square of Conakry on October 2, 2009. © 2009 Seyllou/AFP via Getty Images On July 31, 2024, a Guinean court issued a verdict for the September 28, 2009 massacre, in which security forces attacked peaceful demonstrators…
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By James Martin, Associate Professor in Criminology, Deakin University
The alleged kingpin of Australia’s illicit tobacco trade has been arrested - does this mean the end of the so-called ‘tobacco wars’?
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By Luke McNamara, Professor in Faculty of Law and Justice, UNSW Sydney
At first glance, this new legislation might appear to significantly restrict free speech. But it is important to note there is a high threshold for conviction.
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By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra
It’s unusual for central bank leaders to issue such a statement. But the reason is simple: what happens in the US matters worldwide.
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By Karuna kumari Kandregula
What happens after a child discloses an abuse is determined not only by law, but by the social worlds families must navigate once silence is broken.
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