Three ways climate action can be more inclusive for 1.3 billion disabled people
Imagine a global political summit that shapes the future of our planet, where one of the most populous countries in the world does not have a voice. This may seem unlikely, but currently 1.3 billion disabled people (nearly the population of China) do not have formal representation at policy talks held by the UN's climate change body.
The kindness section highlights people helping people: strangers stepping in during emergencies, communities rallying around neighbors, small acts that ripple outward. These are not performative charity stories; they are moments where someone chose to act when they did not have to.
As part of new wildlands protection law, the French Government has announced the creation of a new nature reserve in Fre…
In what is believed to be the first surgical program of its kind in Australia, a pair of profoundly deaf twins have rece…
A 5-year-old who had her fingertips sliced off in a freak merry-go-round accident recently visited the station of the fi…
For the first time since the Middle Ages, Italy has more woodland than agricultural land. Forests now stretch across 60,…