Is the Clean Water Act enough to prevent disease from polluted rivers?
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How science influences, and is influenced by, the systems we live in. We explore the intersection of science with governance, economics, law, education, and social justice. This is where scientific thinking meets the real world of power, policy, and people.
Is the Clean Water Act enough to prevent disease from polluted rivers?
Can artificial intelligence truly understand every society or is it amplifying inequality worldwide through hidden cultural assumptions?
Why do millions of girls still feel shame during menstruation when science clearly shows periods are a natural biological process?
Could a rigid sense of self quietly fuel depression, and could a more flexible way of relating to ourselves support well-being?
Why do athletes still dope despite knowing the risks? This research explains how moral reasoning influences the likelihood of doping.
Can athletes motivate coaches too? Discover how psychology is reshaping sport through trust, support, and shared motivation.
What happens when climate stress collides with weak governance, and how can grassroots activism drive climate justice?
Research shows medals are won not by athletes alone but by families too. Should sporting organisations step in to support the parents and siblings behind them?
The first part of the article is titled “Part I: All Living Things Descended From The Survivors Of Snowball Earth”. This second article in the series is based on a new scientific perspective titled "Ecosystem relocation on Snowball Earth: a polar–alpine ancestry for the extant surface biosphere?", published by geologist Paul F. Hoffman of the University of Victoria (British Columbia)...
Who were the survivors of the ‘Snowball Earth’ climate disasters, from whom the living surface biosphere descended? Charles Darwin knew the answer.
Why was Italy dependent on Russian gas before 2022? Discover how decades of policy, economics, and Cold War decisions...
What if invisible materials could store hydrogen or trap pollutants? Meet the Nobel winners who built chemistry’s most powerful...
Research shows medals are won not by athletes alone but by families too. Should sporting organisations step in to...