World

Home World
Egyptian Mothers’ Employment Early in Children’s Life Help Their Daughters Stay in Work
Post

Egyptian Mothers’ Employment Early in Children’s Life Help Their Daughters Stay in Work

Mothers in Egypt, where women’s employment remains ‘concerningly low’, can play an important part in shaping their daughters’ employment stability from a young age, says new research by Lancaster University. The study, by Dr. Mariam Abouelenin and Professor Yang Hu, of Lancaster University, looked at Egyptian mothers’ employment during their daughter’s adolescence and found that...

Droughts, Rising Seas Put Cuba’s Agriculture Under Threat
Post

Droughts, Rising Seas Put Cuba’s Agriculture Under Threat

Yordán Díaz Gonzales pulled weeds from his fields with a tractor until Cuba’s summer rainy season turned them into foot-deep red mud. Now it takes five farmhands to tend to Díaz’s crop. That shrinks Diaz’s profit margin and lowers Cuba‘s agricultural productivity, already burdened by a U.S. embargo and an unproductive state-controlled economy. Like the...

Revisiting Government-Backed Migration Policy Decades Later: A Potential Marginalization of Native Communities in Today’s World?
Post

Revisiting Government-Backed Migration Policy Decades Later: A Potential Marginalization of Native Communities in Today’s World?

Transmigration programs are known to have relocated millions of people from the centers of domestic economies to the national geographical peripheries to support a more equitable resource distribution. The practice is salient to the nation-building process in many developing countries, most notably in Indonesia, dating back to the 1905 Dutch settlement programs pre-independence. The transmigration...

Secret Behind Spectacular Blooms in World’s Driest Desert Is Invisible to Human Eyes
Post

Secret Behind Spectacular Blooms in World’s Driest Desert Is Invisible to Human Eyes

The Atacama desert, which stretches for approximately 1,600 km along the western coast of the cone of South America, is the driest place on Earth. Some weather stations there have never recorded rainfall throughout their existence. But it‘s far from barren: many species live here that occur nowhere else, adapted to its extreme conditions. And...

Cash Is King for Sanctioned Russian, Venezuelan Oligarchs
Post

Cash Is King for Sanctioned Russian, Venezuelan Oligarchs

It was a deal that brought together oligarchs from some of America’s top adversaries. “The key is the cash,” the oil broker wrote in a text message, offering a deep discount on Venezuelan crude shipments to an associate who claimed to be fronting for the owner of Russia’s biggest aluminum company. “As soon as you...

‘Animism’ Recognizes How Animals, Places and Plants Have Power Over Humans – and It’s Finding Renewed Interest Around the World
Post

‘Animism’ Recognizes How Animals, Places and Plants Have Power Over Humans – and It’s Finding Renewed Interest Around the World

A movement known as “new animism,” which seeks to secure personhood rights for nonhuman beings through legal means, is gaining a following around the globe. New animist environmental activists are not the only ones using the term. Animism itself has become fashionable. Some spirituality bloggers talk about animism as a way to deepen one’s spiritual...

Crippling Civilian Infrastructure Has Long Been Part of Russian Generals’ Playbook – Putin Is Merely Expanding That Approach
Post

Crippling Civilian Infrastructure Has Long Been Part of Russian Generals’ Playbook – Putin Is Merely Expanding That Approach

In response to massive battlefield setbacks, Russia has increased its attacks in Ukraine on everything from power plants and dams to railways, pipelines and ports. These attacks against civilian infrastructure are not random. Rather, they reflect an insidious calculus integral to modern Russian military theory. For more than 20 years, Russian military journals have emphasized...

Beyond Humans – Mammal Combat in Extreme Environs
Post

Beyond Humans – Mammal Combat in Extreme Environs

A new study from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Colorado State University, and the National Park Service indicates previously unknown high altitude contests between two of America’s most sensational mammals – mountain goats and bighorn sheep – over access to minerals previously unavailable due to the past presence of glaciers which, now, are vanishing due...

Global Hunger, Carbon Emissions Could Both Spike If War Limits Grain Exports
Post

Global Hunger, Carbon Emissions Could Both Spike If War Limits Grain Exports

If Russia’s invasion and the ensuing war significantly reduce Ukrainian grain exports, surging prices could increase food insecurity and carbon dioxide emissions, as marginal land is pushed into crop production. That’s the chain reaction predicted by modeling from a research team that includes Amani Elobeid, a teaching professor of economics at Iowa State University. An...