By Nicole Van Lier, Assistant Professor of Urban and Environmental Studies, Loyola Marymount University
Some Detroit residents spend as much as 25% of their disposable income on water bills. Many are struggling to keep up.
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By Ziv Epstein, Postdoctoral Associate, Schwarzman College of Computing, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Farnaz Jahanbakhsh, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan Vana Goblot, Lecturer in Media, Communications and Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths, University of London
Our engagement with AI is at a crossroads: Will we treat it as an all-knowing oracle or as a tool to expand our own way of seeing the world?
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By Tommy Blanchard, Research Associate in Cognitive Science, Tufts University
Do you actually know how a bicycle or a zipper work, or what a penny or a common brand logo look like? Intellectual humility can help reduce overconfidence in what you don’t understand.
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By Moses Ngware, Senior Research Scientist, African Population and Health Research Center
Many countries across Africa have embraced universal basic education policies in recent decades. But recent data has revealed that more than 100 million children and adolescents remain out of school, out of a total potential population of 469 million. The latest statistics suggest that after some years of progress, the situation is deteriorating. Education and youth empowerment scholar Moses Ngware and his co-researchers recently carried out an analysis of trends going back 25…
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By Steve Lindsay, Emeritus professor, Durham University Jakob Brandtberg Knudsen, Dean of Architecture, Royal Danish Academy Lorenz von Seidlein, Professor, University of Oxford Salum Ahmed Mshamu, DPhil Student at University of Oxford, University of Oxford
A three year study of Tanzanian children found that changing the way homes are designed can prevent diarrhoea, pneumonia and malaria, and help children grow taller.
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By Aifani Confidence Tahulela, Researcher, Durban University of Technology Fulufhelo Netswera, Deputy Vice Chancellor for Research and Postgraduate Studies, University of Venda
Circular economies don’t follow the ‘take, make and dispose’ model but try to keep products in use for as long as possible by reusing and recycling them.
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By Pape Abdoulaye Seck, chercheur, Académie nationale des sciences et techniques du Sénégal (ANSTS)
Agriculture is the lifeblood of Africa. More than 60% of African households depend directly or indirectly on the land for their livelihoods. And the continent has nearly 60% of the world’s uncultivated arable land. Farming is a fragile sector, however. It has to deal with climate change, market volatility, weak infrastructure and demographic pressure. Addressing these challenges requires political commitment and investment. It also requires…
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By Alex Ford, Professor of Biology, University of Portsmouth
The government promises joined‑up and long‑term regional planning for water. But some pressing challenges appear to receive surprisingly little attention.
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By Igor Shishlov, Affiliate Professor - Climate Change Economics, HEC Paris Business School
Amid the ongoing energy crisis, climate economics experts assess how much export credit agencies are actually driving the shift to lower-carbon as they focus financing on green energy.
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By Richard Youngs, Professor of International and European Politics, University of Warwick
Compounding the alarm triggered by Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the erratic unpredictability of the second Trump administration has made the need for European security autonomy obvious. On a number of occasions over the past year, Donald Trump has loosely intimated that he might leave the Nato defence alliance. Washington’s recent move to withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany, plus unease over the US’s actions in Iran,…
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