[Thomson Reuters Foundation] Paris -Dealing with climate change and its risks will require not only technical responses like drought-resilient crops and higher sea walls but also reshaping economic and political incentives that are driving global warming, scientists said on Wednesday.
[News24Wire] Rocks and volcanic ash from the Karoo have led scientists from the University of Witwatersrand to deduce that a single global mass extinction event 260 million years ago wiped out almost all life on the planet.
[News24Wire] Balancing different types of fishing situations to grant rights fairly requires "the wisdom of Solomon", a participant at a public consultative meeting told the fisheries department in Cape Town on Wednesday.
[Al Jazeera] Suspected Boko Haram fighters have killed 26 people in night attacks on two villages on Lake Chad over the weekend, Chadian officials have said.
[The Daily Vox] I'm old enough to remember when that Nando's Dubai Ramadaan advert was first flighted. From over the seas, I watched the ad on my third-world broadband connection and thought: "Look! Islam is going mainstream!"
[The Conversation Africa] The association between school and HIV risk has been fiercely debated for more than two decades. It has long been suggested that formal education acts as a "social vaccine" to reduce the spread of HIV because it may give young people more information about the virus and how to protect themselves from getting infected.
[Al Jazeera] Juba -The capital of South Sudan lies hundreds of kilometres away from the pockets of violence and severe food insecurity that is tearing apart the world's youngest nation. Nonetheless, Juba's businesses are caught up in their own fight for survival.