Grey market: Incentive to produce charcoal illicitly or legally set to rise in Kenya

Grey market: Incentive to produce charcoal illicitly or legally set to rise in Kenya

Despite a longstanding moratorium on charcoal production and trade in Kenya, current high demand for the fuel that has been enforced by expansive alternatives such as liquified gas and kerosene has given rise to a booming ‘grey market’ that now threatens to exacerbate ecological degradation. Increased production and trade in...

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There are spying eyes everywhere – and now they share a brain

There are spying eyes everywhere – and now they share a brain

One afternoon in the fall of 2019, in a grand old office building near the Arc de Triomphe, I was buzzed through an unmarked door into a showroom for the future of surveillance. The space on the other side was dark and sleek, with a look somewhere between an Apple...

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Cocaine pipeline to Europe grows as drug peddlers target lucrative market

Cocaine pipeline to Europe grows as drug peddlers target lucrative market

Europe has emerged as the world’s leading illicit drugs market over the past eight years for cocaine and heroin produced in Latin America, a new report by the Global Initiative Against Organised Crime shows. With the traditional market in the Untied States of America having either shrunk due to unending...

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Forget blood, your skin is able to ‘know’ if you are sick

Forget blood, your skin is able to ‘know’ if you are sick

A river of biological information flows just beneath the outermost layers of your skin, in which a hodgepodge of proteins squeezes past each other through the interstitial fluid surrounding your cells. This “interstitium” is an expansive and structured space, making it, to some, a newfound “organ.” But its wealth of...

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On the trail of QAnon: How Trump turned conspiracy theory research upside down

On the trail of QAnon: How Trump turned conspiracy theory research upside down

For people around the world, the now-iconic images of a man in a horned headdress roaming the US Capitol during the January 6 insurrection came as a shock. For Kate Starbird, the images were frighteningly familiar. ‘QAnon Shaman’ – the online persona of Jacob Anthony Chansley, or Jake Angeli –...

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Covid’s mental-health toll: How scientists are tracking a surge in depression

Covid’s mental-health toll: How scientists are tracking a surge in depression

As the Covid-19 pandemic enters its second year, new fast-spreading variants have caused a surge in infections in many countries, and renewed lockdowns. The devastation of the pandemic — millions of deaths, economic strife and unprecedented curbs on social interaction – has already had a marked effect on people’s mental...

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Report: Vaccines helping curb infections, admissions among older people in Israel

Report: Vaccines helping curb infections, admissions among older people in Israel

Good news from Israel. Researchers are seeing signs that Covid-19 vaccines are helping to curb infections and hospitalisations among older people, almost six weeks after shots were rolled out in that group. The country is the first to release data showing vaccines working in such a large group of people,...

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Jeff Bezos, world’s second richest man retires from his company to ‘fix the Planet’

Jeff Bezos, world’s second richest man retires from his company to ‘fix the Planet’

What happens when the world’s second wealthiest human suddenly switches careers? If you’re Amazon founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos, you can now spend more time with your Rich Person Pursuits. On Tuesday, Bezos announced that he’s stepping down as Amazon’s boss and will focus on The Washington Post, which...

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Pumping the body with diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart attacks and strokes

Pumping the body with diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart attacks and strokes

The world is getting fatter. It is a general trend, but one that’s especially well illustrated in the United States. As of 2018, 42 per cent of US adults were obese – almost three times more than in 1980 and prior decades, according to government statistics. With that comes rising...

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Coronavirus: Fomite transmission is possible, but it just seems to be rare

Coronavirus: Fomite transmission is possible, but it just seems to be rare

In 1987, researchers at the University of Wisconsin – Madison put healthy volunteers in a room to play cards with people infected with a common-cold rhinovirus. When the healthy volunteers had their arms restrained to stop them touching their faces and prevent them transferring the virus from contaminated surfaces, half...

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