
Life after school for young South Africans: six insights into what lies ahead
At the dawn of democracy in 1994, South Africa faced a sobering reality. Fewer than a third of 25- to 34-year-olds had achieved at least a matric (12 years of schooling completed) or equivalent qualification. Thirty years...

The US Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief has been a cornerstone of global HIV/Aids prevention, care and treatment for over two decades. Pepfar has enjoyed broad bipartisan support in the US, but its future is now...

Many more Denver teens have experienced homelessness than official counts show
Denver saw an increase in youth homelessness from 10% to 25% between 2017 and 2021, according to our study recently published in the peer-reviewed journal Pediatrics. We are two physicians whose clinical work and research...

How the hidden epidemic of violence against nurses affects health care
Violence is just part of the job. Every nurse and health care worker experiences it at some point. Sentiments like this echo across American hospitals and health care facilities, capturing a disturbing and growing reality....

How Trump’s second term might affect the market and your finances
Ever since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, stock market expectations have been volatile driven in part by a healthy dose of motivated reasoning. At first, markets surged on hopes of lower taxes and...

Africa’s ‘sleeping’ language, |xam, has been written in stone at Oxford university
A response to the legacy of the imperialist and mining magnate Cecil John Rhodes is being written into the fabric of the refurbished Rhodes House at the University of Oxford in the UK. A statement remembering and honouring...

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs advises the president on use of America’s military power
The dismissal of Gen. Charles Q. Brown as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was startling, if not unexpected, at the beginning of President Donald Trumps second term. Trump had appointed Brown to lead the Air Force in...