Will Pakistan’s ‘Nazuk Mor’ Ever End?
Faiq Zafar writes in Dawn:April 14, 1919. The sun rose on an India gashed and mutilated by a horrific display of brutality, the likes of which she had seldom seen
Faiq Zafar writes in Dawn:April 14, 1919. The sun rose on an India gashed and mutilated by a horrific display of brutality, the likes of which she had seldom seen
Nandini Das in The Guardian: Sathnam Sanghera’s Empireworld tells the story of Bartram and Kew as part of a nuanced, complicated account of the British empire’s impact on the world as we
Continue readingA Nuanced Account of the British Empire’s Impact on the World
McKenzie Prillaman in Nature: Lightning bolts of lime green flashed chaotically across the computer screen, a sight that stunned cancer neuroscientist Humsa Venkatesh. It was late 2017, and she was watching
Continue readingHow Cancer Hijacks the Nervous System to Grow and Spread
Rachel Kleinfeld at Persuasion: Last week, a widely-circulated analysis in the Financial Times confirmed what many researchers had long suspected: The ideological gap between men and women is growing. Over the past fifteen years,
A survey of 19 countries in Asia revealed important gaps in data, disclosures, and taxonomies, and that these are exacerbated by inconsistent national climate policies that can promote fossil fuel
Continue readingHow Asia Can Unlock $800 Billion of Climate Financing
Adam Tooze at Chartbook: As data from the IEA confirm, the scale of China’s green energy push in the last couple of years dwarfs the much ballyhooed green energy programs
Continue readingIn China, Clean Energy is NOW the Driver of Economic Growth