Study Finds on MSN
Extreme Heat May Be Damaging Young Children’s Brains, Study Finds
As the planet’s temperatures increase, will grades and IQs plummet? In A Nutshell The 32°C Tipping Point: Children exposed to ...
New Scientist on MSN
Extreme heat hampers children’s early learning
Children regularly exposed to temperatures over 30°C (86°F) have lower scores on literacy and numeracy tests at age 3 to 4, according to UNICEF data from six countries ...
Opinion
allAfrica.com on MSNOpinion
No Time to Lose in Establishing South Africa's New Anti-Corruption Agency
The Special Investigation Unit is well positioned for a fast and seamless transition to the new Office of Public Integrity.Long-established norms of human rights, diversity and democracy are under ...
The African Union (AU) has “Justice for Africans and People of African Descent Through Reparations” as its theme of the year ...
Young children exposed to unusually high temperatures are less likely to reach basic developmental milestones in literacy and ...
Researchers have warned that spells of excessive heat driven by climate change may lead to delays in early childhood ...
The fir trees are up, the streets are glowing with bright lights, and Mariah Carey's All I Want For Christmas is playing in almost every shop you step into. That's right, Christmas is just around the ...
allAfrica.com on MSN
CIVICUS Monitor Data Reveals 'Alarming' State of Civic Freedoms in Africa as Governments Detain Journalists Across the Continent
Over 80% of people in Africa South of the Sahara live in countries with “Repressed” or “Closed” civic space.Detention of journalists is the top tactic used by African governments to silence ...
A final sweep of 60 years of evidence reveals durable truths about how development succeeds and fails.
Climate change—including high temperatures and heat waves—has been shown to pose serious risks to the environment, food ...
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