Solar lights help Kenyan women escape sex-for-fish trap
Using the palm-sized lamps, women can go out fishing themselves at night, and no longer need to trade their bodies for fish to sell
Most British teachers say they lack training on climate change - poll
Most teachers think climate change should be compulsory, but many say it is rarely mentioned in school
Deb Haaland becomes first-ever Native American U.S. Cabinet secretary
Haaland's historic appointment to the cabinet follows weeks of campaigning by Native American tribes and environmental groups
U.S. housing legacy puts some Black neighborhoods at higher flood risk
Impact of 1930s practice of "redlining" when banks and insurers refused loans in parts of cities mainly with large minority populations still lingers, says economist
UK bill would give police too much power to curb protests, critics warn
Under the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, police would be able to set noise limits and start and end times on demonstrations
Australia's Cormann to lead OECD, climate activists dismayed
Climate activists have voiced disappointment over the new OECD boss, saying he has a history of blocking efforts to cut emissions
Green transition in islands hamstrung by debt, says Antigua & Barbuda PM
As COVID-19 adds to economic woes and climate shocks worsen, small island nations find themselves further in debt, and struggling to finance plans for greener energy
Green transition in islands hamstrung by debt, says Antigua & Barbuda PM
As COVID-19 adds to economic woes and climate shocks worsen, small island nations find themselves further in debt, and struggling to finance plans for greener energy
IMF, late-comer on climate change, should embrace ambitious goals - report
The fund has a chance to take a leading role when it rewrites the rules for its surveillance of member countries and finance sector assessments, report says
U.S. housing legacy puts some Black neighborhoods at higher flood risk
Impact of 1930s practice of "redlining" when banks and insurers refused loans in parts of cities mainly with large minority populations still lingers, says economist