How drought-hit Kenyan herders stopped lions from raiding their villages
As drought and farming shrink habitats, animals are entering villages for food. By protecting land for wildlife, conservancies save crops and cattle, too
OPINION: Besides AI, regulation key to fight mis/disinformation
While AI has a crucial role to play in controlling what is seen online, government regulations play an important part in determining how such methods are to be used
UK digital residence checks lock out refugees, slavery victims
Some vulnerable migrants are struggling to access an online ID check system needed to get work and housing, rights groups say
Thomson Reuters Foundation and IFAD deliver ‘Reporting on Food Security and Rural Development’ training for journalists in East Africa
The online training for journalists based in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania focused on building expertise in reporting on food security, food productions and climate change.
Vanuatu breaks ground with 'loss and damage' costing in new climate plan
Pacific island state seeks donor funding for clear measures to tackle rising damage from climate change impacts
Blind Afghan activist who fled Taliban embraces London life
“For now our future is in Britain, but we cannot forget our home country”
Living on the edge: what's it like in Haiti?
Haitians are driven further into poverty and hunger by escalating gang warfare and rising inflation
Climate risks dwarf Europe's energy crisis, space chief warns
Following successive heatwaves and wildfires across Europe, the head of the European Space Agency (ESA) has warned economic damage from extreme weather could dwarf Europe's energy crisis
OPINION: Conversational AI: Africans disproportionally disadvantaged
With about 3,000 different languages and dialects, Africans lose out when it comes to technology that is usually in English and major European languages, but efforts are underway to change that.
OPINION: Once deployed, now unemployed: Afghan interpreters seek jobs in UK
Afghan interpreters evacuated to UK say glowing references from their British military bosses now count for little