Facebook brand crisis: New name might give the company a facelift, but that doesn’t book a rebrand

Facebook brand crisis: New name might give the company a facelift, but that doesn’t book a rebrand

When Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook, in 2004, it was a mere directory of students at Harvard: The Face Book. Two decades, 90 acquisitions and billions of dollars later, Facebook has become a household name. Now it wants a new one. Zuckerberg is expected to announce a new name for the...

Read more
How ivory trading to finance civil wars led to evolution of tuskless herds of elephants in Africa

How ivory trading to finance civil wars led to evolution of tuskless herds of elephants in Africa

African elephants have evolved towards tusklessness in an area where they were intensively hunted for ivory, finds a study of elephants’ traits and genetics in Mozambique. The results, published on October 21, in Science, could have implications for the recovery of elephant populations in the country. Ivory trading was used...

Read more
Vaccine boosters are contentious because they’re framed as shock additions to regimens tested in clinical trials

Vaccine boosters are contentious because they’re framed as shock additions to regimens tested in clinical trials

The US is by no means alone in its pursuit of boosters. France, Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates have all opened booster shot campaigns to large numbers of their residents, or announced plans to do so. However, campaigns intended to protect the most vulnerable...

Read more
Vaccine apartheid: When US says ‘Boosters for All’ it sets tone for rich countries to ignore poor world

Vaccine apartheid: When US says ‘Boosters for All’ it sets tone for rich countries to ignore poor world

I the next few days, an advisory committee to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expected to debate who should receive booster shots for the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, a follow-up to last week’s Food and Drug Administration committee meeting. By the end of this week,...

Read more
Covid hybrid immunity studies show vaccination after infection offers stronger virus resistance

Covid hybrid immunity studies show vaccination after infection offers stronger virus resistance

Many studies of hybrid immunity haven’t followed naive vaccine recipients for as long as those who recovered from Covid-19, and it’s possible their B cells will make antibodies that gain potency and breadth with more time, additional vaccine doses or both, researchers say. It can take months for a stable...

Read more
Turning adversity into opportunity: How female refugee scientists cope in foreign lands

Turning adversity into opportunity: How female refugee scientists cope in foreign lands

Unsurprisingly, female refugee scientists can face extra challenges – including gendered, cultural and socio-political barriers to academia. At the Council for At Risk Academics (CARA), a London-based charity that helps academics to continue their work at one of 124 partner universities and institutions in the United Kingdom or in other...

Read more
Keeping the faith in face of adversity: Trials and triumphs of refugee scientists

Keeping the faith in face of adversity: Trials and triumphs of refugee scientists

The Institute of International Education (IIE), a non-profit organisation based in New York City that supports international researchers, estimates that thousands of displaced scientists from nations such as Syria, Iraq and Yemen are now living as refugees elsewhere. Its figures are based on refugee counts, pre-war higher-education data from the...

Read more
How splits in one of South Sudan’s ruling SPLA factions may refuel war in Malakal oilfields

How splits in one of South Sudan’s ruling SPLA factions may refuel war in Malakal oilfields

Malakal’s conflict in South Sudan has been frozen in place for years: a consequence of the Padang Dinka’s influence in Juba, which is partly due to their success in keeping Upper Nile’s oil fields – one of the government’s few foreign exchange earners – running. But a split within First...

Read more
In a flashpoint South Sudanese town of Malakal, women peacemakers try to bridge the divide

In a flashpoint South Sudanese town of Malakal, women peacemakers try to bridge the divide

More than 18 months into a power-sharing government between South Sudan’s rival leaders, local conflicts still simmer, undermining a fragile peace accord. But in the northern flashpoint town of Malakal, a group of women peacemakers is trying to reverse that narrative by healing ethnic divisions to head off another bout...

Read more
Tale of 31 Mexican scientists facing charges of ‘organised crime’ and money laundering

Tale of 31 Mexican scientists facing charges of ‘organised crime’ and money laundering

When the son of astrophysicist José Franco answered the door at their home in Mexico City in June, he didn’t know why an agent from Mexico’s federal prosecutor’s office was asking for verification that his father lived at that address. When he confirmed it, the agent left without explanation. Franco,...

Read more