By Isabelle Wallach, Professeure de sexologie, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)
Baby boomers have broken many taboos and transformed social norms, particularly around sexuality. As this generation grows older, is society’s view of older adults’ sexuality changing? Research suggests it is, even if some taboos persist. As a specialist in sexuality and aging, I have been working on this topic for nearly 15 years and have observed growing interest in it. The baby boomer generation’s greater comfort with sexuality may explain this trend. However, this openness — both in society…
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By Adnan Skhawat Ali, PhD Candidate, Public Policy and Global Governance, Queen's University, Ontario Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Professor, Political Studies; Director, Canadian Opinion Research Archive, Queen's University, Ontario
Pakistan has made measurable progress in reducing the gender gap in voter registration. More women are now listed on electoral rolls than ever before. Yet this administrative success masks a troubling democratic reality: while the number of registered women voters increased significantly before the 2024 general elections, overall voter turnout declined…
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By Douglas Stenton, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Anthropology, University of Waterloo
Researchers have revealed the identities of six sailors and shed new light on the expedition that went missing more than 170 years ago.
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By Ozlem Cankaya, Associate Professor, Early Childhood Curriculum Studies, MacEwan University Marielle Papin, Assistant Professor in Political Science, MacEwan University Salim Hashmi, Lecturer in Psychology, King's College London
If we want cities where all children can thrive, we need to create conditions where play is part of daily life, not something that must be scheduled or purchased.
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By Saheed Babajide Owonikoko, Researcher, Centre for Peace and Security Studies, Modibbo Adama University of Technology
Located in the same Sahel region and threatened by similar jihadist insurgents, Nigeria has some lessons to learn from Mali.
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By Marew Abebe Salemot, Researcher in Political Sciences and International Studies, Debark University Behaliu Atenafu Dessie, Assistant professor in Media and Communication Studies, Bahir Dar University Kibrom Berhane Gessesse, PhD candidate, University of British Columbia Mulatu Alemayehu Moges, Associate Professor of Journalism and Communication, University of Agder
When conflicts break out, most people around the world rely on international media to understand what is happening. These reports do more than inform. They shape how crises are interpreted, which actors are seen as responsible and where global attention is directed. In complex situations, what is left out can matter as much as what is included. Ethiopia is a clear example of this problem. Since 2020, the country has experienced multiple, overlapping conflicts. …
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By Lisette IJssel de Schepper, Chief Economist Bureau for Economic Research, Stellenbosch University
It is forgivable to think that an oil shock mainly hurts at the petrol pump. After all, that is where households feel it first. But when my colleagues and I at the Bureau for Economic Research started digging through South Africa’s fuel data, a different story emerged – one that says as much about the country’s infrastructure failures as it does about global geopolitics. As we began modelling the likely impact on the South African economy, it quickly became clear that diesel would inflict even more pain on the…
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By Jia B. Kangbai, Senior lecturer, Njala University
By the second week of the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo it was already clear that containing the spread of the haemorrhagic disease was proving to be difficult. On 17 May 2026, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak…
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By Gabriela Mesones Rojo
Bolivia’s 2024 wildfires devastated Santa Cruz, but Indigenous Chiquitano and Monkox communities led recovery through collective organization, ancestral knowledge and fire management strategies, and revived food systems amid delayed state response.
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By Kevin Trenberth, Distinguished Scholar, NCAR; Affiliate Faculty, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
The Global Ocean Observing System informs weather forecasts and climate projections. But funding pressures could create data gaps leaving the world blind.
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