News

The world needs an urgent fix and humanity could just be it. As inequality and polycrises stalk the world, deep changes are needed in relationships with nature if the planet is to be livable and ...
More than 13,600 participants from around the world registered for the inaugural CGIAR Science Week at the UN Complex, ...
Since the breakdown of the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, the Gaza Strip has been subjected to significant bombardment and blockages of humanitarian aid. With aid deliveries having been ...
In the heart of Istanbul, a remarkable transformation is underway. What began as student protests following the politically motivated arrest of Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu has evolved into Turkey’s most ...
Two weeks after an earthquake hit Myanmar, the military junta is directing aid to the centres it controls while bombing areas held by resistance forces.
Climate change is outpacing science and farmers are paying the price. Agricultural research innovations need to reach farmers ...
CGIAR Science Week saw the launch of the inaugural CGIAR Flagship Report: Insight to Impact: A decision-maker’s guide to navigating food system science.
Europe must understand that the only reasonable and humane way to tackle migrant smuggling is to open regular routes for people to reach Europe in safety and dignity. Europe’s approach to migrant ...
Animal scientist Lindiwe Majele Sibanda tells IPS in an exclusive interview that science is key to ensuring that 9.7 billion will be food secure by 2050.
As the Trump administration’s hostility towards the United Nations and other international organizations keeps growing, a New York Times columnist last week proposed what he frivolously described as ...
On March 18, the first plane with deportees from the US landed in Cap-Haïtien. Of the 46 passengers, 25 were convicted felons ...
The state of food and nutrition security in the Global South masks the great strides and investments made to increase agricultural yields.