OPINION: Monster hurricanes are now inevitable - but flooding is not
Here's how to cut the risks of disaster
Women's rights seen taking a backseat under Japan's new government
Japan has missed a target to have women in 30% of leadership posts, and experts see few prospects of rapid change
Digital rights legal fund targets COVID-19 violations with grants
The Digital Freedom Fund (DFF) warns that measures to contain the coronavirus are increasingly infringing on privacy and other basic rights
'Nobody has done anything': Amazon indigenous group decries illegal mining
Munduruku indigenous leaders say their land is being invaded as gold prices rise, and efforts to fight the problem are inadequate
New law to protect Thai fishermen seen boosting child labour
Activists are opposing a new law that will allow children to work on fishing vessels as unpaid interns
Women-only tailoring house opens on London's Savile Row
London's Saville Row, known for centuries as the place to go for luxury tailoring, now hosts The Deck, offering made-to-measure suits for women only
All must come aboard for a smooth ride to carbon-neutral future
Many governments are planning to slash carbon emissions to net-zero by mid-century but they need to make sure green policies do not deepen social divisions, climate experts say
First fighting, then COVID-19 leave Colombian forest tribe homeless
About 300 members of the Embera community are living outside a Bogota park, calling on the city to provide permanent housing
South Africa’s battle between coal and climate
DOCUMENTARY: What's the price of South Africa clinging to coal?
A Nobel for Thunberg? In the age of climate change and virus, it is possible
Don't rule out the teenage environment campaigner for the Nobel Peace Prize, say experts, as she wins nomination for a second time