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Andreas losch · 16 January 2018

The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

How long will humankind survive? Besides the fact that we have been able to eliminate ourselves with nuclear weapons for decades, even without a third world war, the challenge to take care of the resources of our planet remains; we need to use them in a way that our children and their children can have a place on Earth as well. In this blog post Andreas Losch discusses his recent review article in the International Journal of Astrobiology, The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

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Holly Pascoe · 8 February 2023

The 33%: Q&A with Dame Anna Dominiczak  

Q&A with Editor-in-Chief of the Precision Medicine Journal, Dame Anna Dominiczak, for International day of Women and Girls in Science

Read more

APSR Authors · 15 December 2020

Conversations with Authors: Institutionalized Police Brutality

This is the first post in our new series: “Conversations with Authors.” For our inaugural post, we asked Dr. Vesla Weaver to meet (virtually) with Dr. Beatriz Magaloni and Ph.D. student Luis Rodriguez to discuss their recently published APSR article. We hope you enjoy! VW: We are here today to discuss an extraordinarily important, breathtaking […]

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Marianne V. Santoso, PhD · 9 July 2021

How a nutrition-sensitive agroecological intervention improved women’s mental health

Maria is a smallholder farmer in rural Singida, Tanzania. We worked together for the past few years on the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz), a nutrition-sensitive agroecological intervention that sought to improve children’s diet. In it, farmers learned about and experimented with sustainable agriculture, nutrition, and gender equity using an integrated and participatory curriculum

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Christopher Nicholson · 9 October 2025

National Endowment for the Humanities-Funded Archaeological Archive of Huhugam Archaeology Delivers Lasting Impact in the Southwest

In an era of shrinking research budgets and political pressure to justify public investment, federally funded digital archives in archaeology are delivering measurable, lasting benefits to scholars, land managers, Indigenous communities, and the public. The Center for Digital Antiquity at Arizona State University, with generous support from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), has […]

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Richard T. Rodríguez · 13 October 2025

Revisiting the Cinema Special Topic

In the May 1991 issue of PMLA, then editor John W. Kronik begins his “Editor’s Note” by announcing that the current volume of the journal “has elicited strong responses, praise as well as reproof, even before the year is out” (393). These strong responses pertain to perceived changes in the profession and, by extension, in […]

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Dennis Denisoff and more · 15 October 2025

Elements in Victorian Literature, Science, and the Environment

Many eco-scholars today have lamented our current tendency to soft denial. We acknowledge major environmental concerns such as climate change while continuing to go about our lives as if they don’t exist. As the co-editors of this series, we aim to contribute to a critical dialogue that encourages a richer understanding of our past that […]

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Most Read

Andreas losch · 16 January 2018

The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

How long will humankind survive? Besides the fact that we have been able to eliminate ourselves with nuclear weapons for decades, even without a third world war, the challenge to take care of the resources of our planet remains; we need to use them in a way that our children and their children can have a place on Earth as well. In this blog post Andreas Losch discusses his recent review article in the International Journal of Astrobiology, The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

Read more

Melissa Loja and more · 17 May 2024

Nothing-Burger? U.S. Obligation to Defend the Philippines in the South China Sea – Part 1

It is an article of faith among ordinary Filipinos that American troops will die with Filipino troops defending Philippine claims to the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea (SCS). Even Filipino scholars profess this view. US-Philippine military exercises simulated the recapture of an SCS island. The Philippine government believes in the “solid commitment of […]

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Alexandra R. Lampard-Scotford · 23 August 2022

The impact of parasite infection on mental illness

More and more research is finding inflammation as a potential contributing factor towards to the development of various mental illnesses. A systematic review was conducted to determine the association between parasitic infection and mental illnesses in various African populations.  Two parasite groups were evaluated; helminths and protozoans, and four mental illness classifications; depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, schizotypal disorders and unspecified mental illnesses.

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APSR Authors · 15 December 2020

Conversations with Authors: Institutionalized Police Brutality

This is the first post in our new series: “Conversations with Authors.” For our inaugural post, we asked Dr. Vesla Weaver to meet (virtually) with Dr. Beatriz Magaloni and Ph.D. student Luis Rodriguez to discuss their recently published APSR article. We hope you enjoy! VW: We are here today to discuss an extraordinarily important, breathtaking […]

Read more

Dr Dami Ajayi · 28 March 2022

Reflections on House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths

The March article of Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International is the first blog of the series. The blog is written by Dr Dami Ajayi, Specialty Doctor, Barnet Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust and Trainee/Blog Editor, BJPsych International. Warning: Spoiler alert In the summer of July 2018, the Bhatias, a family […]

Read more

Holly Pascoe · 8 February 2023

The 33%: Q&A with Dame Anna Dominiczak  

Q&A with Editor-in-Chief of the Precision Medicine Journal, Dame Anna Dominiczak, for International day of Women and Girls in Science

Read more

Timothy Insoll · 19 April 2021

Medieval Ethiopia, ‘Antiquity’, and African Archaeology

The opportunity to showcase some of the exciting archaeological research currently underway on medieval Ethiopia in a journal as widely read as Antiquity is important.

Read more

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