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Science Shows Why Our Taste in Music Can’t Be Siloed into Catch-All Genres
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Science Shows Why Our Taste in Music Can’t Be Siloed into Catch-All Genres

Liking certain things or styles is an important aspect of peoples’ identities and social lives. Tastes can influence the ways humans act and judge. How to best describe musical taste reliably is – due to the ever-changing diversification and transformation of music – difficult and open to debate. Using an approach which also considered sub-genres,...

New Book Sheds Light on Adult Mortality in India
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New Book Sheds Light on Adult Mortality in India

A new book titled, Adult Mortality in India: Trends, Socioeconomic Disparities, and Consequences, provides an in-depth analysis of adult mortality patterns in the country and addresses crucial issues related to public health and policy. Authored by Moradhvaj Dhakad, a researcher in the IIASA Population and Just Societies Program, and IIASA alumna Nandita Saikia (currently a...

Uganda’s President Signs into Law Anti-Gay Legislation with Death Penalty in Some Cases
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Uganda’s President Signs into Law Anti-Gay Legislation with Death Penalty in Some Cases

Uganda’s president has signed into law anti-gay legislation supported by many in this East African country but widely condemned by rights activists and others abroad. The version of the bill signed by President Yoweri Museveni doesn’t criminalize those who identify as LGBTQ+, a key concern for some rights campaigners who condemned an earlier draft of...

Where Art and Terror Collide
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Where Art and Terror Collide

Meet the alleged money-laundering, sanctions-evading Lebanese collector with a penchant for expensive art, blood diamonds, and, possibly, Hezbollah Little is known about Nazem Said Ahmad, the Lebanese businessman and high-profile collector, but one thing that’s certain is that he has liberal tastes in art, bought a lot of it, and wasn’t quiet about it. Before...

Sudan’s Plunge into Chaos Has Geopolitical Implications near and Far – Including for U.S. Strategic Goals
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Sudan’s Plunge into Chaos Has Geopolitical Implications near and Far – Including for U.S. Strategic Goals

The sight of diplomats fleeing Sudan amid chaotic scenes reflects the gravity of the situation, but also the extent of international interest in the strife-torn nation. Days into fighting that has left at least 400 people dead, governments from across the Middle East, Europe, Asia and the Americas evacuated nationals – teachers, students and workers,...

Raw Materials, or Sacred Beings? Lithium Extraction Puts Two Worldviews into Tension
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Raw Materials, or Sacred Beings? Lithium Extraction Puts Two Worldviews into Tension

Located in the heart of South America, Bolivia contains the largest lithium deposits in the world – an enviable position, in many countries’ eyes, as the market for electric vehicles takes off. Though EVs emit fewer greenhouse gases than fuel-powered vehicles, their batteries require more minerals – especially lithium, which is also used to make...

UN Says India to Be World’s Most Populous Nation by Mid-2023
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UN Says India to Be World’s Most Populous Nation by Mid-2023

India is on track to surpass China by mid-2023 as the world’s most populous nation, United Nations data said Wednesday, raising questions about whether a booming, young Indian population will fuel economic growth for years to come or become a liability. While India’s 254 million people between ages 15 and 24 is the largest number...

Bullfighting Ban Faces Critical Legislative Vote in Colombia
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Bullfighting Ban Faces Critical Legislative Vote in Colombia

A 61-year-old matador nicknamed “Little gypsy of America” fell headfirst into the dust when he was headbutted by a bull. He recovered to the applause of the crowd, and later killed the bull with a sword thrust to the back of its neck. He was among six veteran bullfighters performing for free on a recent...

Number of Monarch Butterflies Wintering in Mexico Drops 22%
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Number of Monarch Butterflies Wintering in Mexico Drops 22%

The number of monarch butterflies wintering in the mountains of central Mexico dropped 22% from the previous year, and the number of trees lost from their favored wintering grounds tripled. Frost and “extreme temperatures” in the United States may have played a role in the butterfly’s decline during the most recent winter season, said Humberto...