Explosion of Violence in Ecuador Shuts Down Science
At week’s end, campuses were closed and fieldwork canceled in the biodiversity-rich country
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At week’s end, campuses were closed and fieldwork canceled in the biodiversity-rich country
New Presidential Science Council to advise on policy
If Geert Wilder’s party can form government, it could restrict international students and scrap key climate policies.
Academics like keeping definition narrow but worry about tighter deadlines and more record-keeping.
Conflict has left many labs empty or in ruins
The importance of science in helping the UN to make progress on key issues is as clear and critical as ever. Yet participation of the scientific community is not what it could and needs to be.
After years of excruciating delays, elated scientists welcome the new agreement.
Request for comment suggests government may soften controversial proposed restrictions.
Australia shows the need for more sustainable and just water management.
New methods are emerging to quantify human and animal welfare on a common scale, creating new tools for policy.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the way we create and evaluate information, and this is happening during an infodemic, which has been having marked effects on global health.
Sarvenaz Sarabipour is tired of academics understanding mentorship through anecdotes. The scientific community “needs a minimum set of standards for good mentorship,” says the Johns Hopkins University systems biologist, which can only be achieved by studying it systematically.
Nearly 5 years after a Chinese scientist sparked worldwide outrage by announcing he had helped create genetically edited babies, China has unveiled new rules aimed at preventing a repeat of such ethically problematic research on humans.
Windsor Framework could end impasse over Horizon Europe funding program, but hurdles remain.
Draft report from biosecurity panel examining “gain-of-function” research policy gets mixed response from outside experts.
Making COVID-19 manageable and covering financial losses from climate change could make headlines
If only there was a list of words all scientists can share—words that will baffle outsiders unfamiliar with the pressures we face, but that every scientist will understand. This article proposes, in alphabetical order, some that you might find useful.
The current scholarly publishing system is detrimental to the pursuit of knowledge and needs a radical shift. There have already been many attempts and partial successes to drive a new shift in scholarly publishing. Many of them should be further developed and generalised.
Two studies of citations in physics highlight factors contributing to this gender disparity.