Early shoppers: how African consumers set global trade trends in the 1800s
Africa’s ‘new consumer class’ isn’t new; in the 1800s the continent called the tune for European factories.
Africa’s ‘new consumer class’ isn’t new; in the 1800s the continent called the tune for European factories.
Some 1 million Syrians were welcomed in Germany after fleeing civil war. They are increasingly unwelcome in a country where politics have swung sharply right.
Seeing more refurbished electronic devices on the market? Thank tech innovation – and the government regulation that sparked it.
Girls are at an even greater risk of early substance use than boys.
Judges and federal regulators will make significant decisions over Americans’ reproductive rights.
The mass adoption of new technologies drives demand for rare and complex materials used in their manufacture.
There are better ways for teams to cut their climate impact.
Students explored ideas of identity through model building.
Eternity is not truly about a love that could last forever. It is about the way that love, real ordinary love, involves more than happiness.
Brain organoids are revolutionising research, but their growing complexity raises unsettling ethical questions.
The perfect gift probably isn’t what you think it is.
More extreme weather is set to cause more more problems for farmers and supermarkets in getting food to consumers.
A breakthrough therapy is driving aggressive leukaemia into remission. Here’s what the headlines don’t tell you about life after treatment.
Confusion could be a big threat to accepting autonomous vehicles.
The US is wrong to try to impose its worldview on Europe – but it has been able to do so because European leaders don’t have a strategy of their own.