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EDITORIALS, BLOGS, BOOK REVIEWS
Do we know what works to meet the SDGs?
(w/ Rana Dajani for Devex, 3.1.24)
Through an Artist’s Eye, Scientific Tools Help Tell Vital Stories
(Undark, 01.12.22 + Atlas Obscura, 27.12.22)
Don’t just debunk misinformation: 4 tips for navigating the COVID-19 infodemic
(IJNET, 2.04.20)
Don’t just debunk Covid-19 myths: Learn from them
(Undark, 19.03.20)
A cloud of questions hangs over the promise of tech
(SciDev.Net, 12.12.18)
To sway science skeptics, first listen to them
(Undark, 18.10.18)
A fork in the road after the latest forest data
(SciDev.Net, 29.06.18)
Put science on the frontline in emergencies
(SciDev.Net, 05.06.17)
The power missing from Africa’s biotech sector
Energy is hardly ever the focus of debates over how to boost the continent’s S&T capacity. Maybe it should be. (SciDev.Net, 05.04.17)
India awards inclusive brand of innovation
Festival hosted by president’s office signals recognition of a decentralised innovation powered by the grassroots. (SciDev.Net, 09.03.17)
Back to the future
An epidemiologist takes a long view of our fraught relationship with the environment. (Science, 27.01.17. Also posted as blog with open access)
Give the public the tools to trust scientists
argues that the form of science communicated in popular media leaves the public vulnerable to false certainty. (Nature, 17.01.17)
Ebola: How a People’s Science Helped End an Epidemic
I’m sure that to readers of this blog the Ebola epidemic that devastated West Africa a couple of years ago needs no introduction… (Oxfam blogs: From Poverty to Power, 11.10.16. Reposted in LSE Review of Books and The World Bank blog People, Spaces, Deliberation)
Tool targets fairness deficit in research
There is cautious support for initiative that looks to compliance to promote a level playing field among partners. (SciDev.Net, 03.10.2016)
Cancer in poor countries: Too big to tackle?
Governments face an uphill battle to control cancer. Simple messages and basic capabilities can help. (SciDev.Net, 22.09.16)
Can tech tip the balance towards peace?
Programmes to counter conflict are enlisting digital tools. There are successes, and questions over lasting impact. (SciDev.Net, 13.07.16)
Medical charity responds to mental toll of conflict
Médicins Sans Frontières is evolving its approach to psychological care for people exposed to violence. (SciDev.Net, 24.05.16)
Innovation needs the right partners to have impact
Development and innovation are equally vital — but how can the gap between the two be bridged? (SciDev.Net, 10.05.16)
What the refugee crisis tells us about journalism
The sector’s digital shake-up is making us think differently about reporting and its role in social change. (SciDevNet, 03.05.16)
Mental healthcare is getting imaginative
Specialists struggle with poor resources and social barriers. But they’re being creative to get people proper care. (SciDev.Net, 16.03.16)
DFID makes the right noises over Ebola lessons
Government is committed to learn from disaster, but there are niggling questions over how this works in practice. (SciDev.Net, 14.03.16)
Invisible workers need recognition
The world has a choice: include informal workers in development plans or leave them to struggle on. (SciDev.Net, 02.03.16)
Editor’s picks: Opinions and special features in 2015
Read about the ten pieces that did most to challenge and reflect on the most relevant global issues this year. (SciDev.Net, 28.12.15)
What will it take to meet global housing needs?
Disaster zones and cities fuel the crisis. They are also hotbeds for knowledge and innovations to break through it. (SciDev.Net, 24.11.15)
Film dares to show health in the real world
Film and journalists can uniquely reveal the drama and complexity of ensuring health breakthroughs reach the poor. (SciDev.Net, 16.11.15)
COP vs POC: Innovation under the radar of climate talks
A world of grassroots creativity hums away, far from the world of policy — and it should probably stay that way. (SciDev.Net, 30.10.15)
Climate action: Global policy is not enough
It’s down to local action to integrate climate change, development and disaster work, project by project. (SciDev.Net, 14.10.15)
How to plan for the next health crisis
Being ‘nimble’ in thinking and action is the best way to prepare for crisis in the face of uncertainty. (SciDev.Net, 01.10.15)
The value of first-hand experience and field work
A picture is worth a thousand words, and a day in the field a thousand days spent reading about those issues. (SciDev.Net, 17.08.15)
Firms and indigenous people can be partners
A case of commercialising a South African plant shows one way to work together and add value to natural resources. (SciDev.Net, 06.07.15)
Is big data the gold dust of medical aid?
An argument for the lifesaving potential of mobile phone data fails to factor in ‘ground truths’ from health crises. (SciDev.Net, 12.05.15)
Ebola exposes weak links in outbreak response
People in a crisis need a system that can receive knowledge from the ground as well as give science-based guidance. (SciDev.Net, 29.04.15)
Talking openly about women and gender
Gender is a complex issue to navigate. Simply put, women and men should neither be limited nor defined by gender. (SciDev.Net, 03.03.15)
Lessons from the social response to Ebola
Post-Ebola public health reforms will miss a trick if they ignore insights from anthropology and local learning. (SciDev.Net, 10.02.15)
Climate action stands at a crossroads in Lima
This year’s COP negotiations should be judged by countries’ support for adaptation as much as mitigation. (SciDev.Net, 10.12.14)
How to avoid drowning in a sea of climate data
A new initiative enlists ‘twenty-first century librarians’ to turn unruly masses of data into knowledge for action. (SciDev.Net, 04.12.2014)
What to expect from the COP20 climate summit
The UN meeting offers a glimpse into complex climate change debates that normally go on behind closed doors. (SciDev.Net, 01.12.2014)
Urban sustainability starts by bridging divides
Integrating tech and planning, urban with rural and formal with informal development can help transform cities. (SciDev.Net, 19.11.14)
Urban sustainability research with a local flavour
A challenge to one of India’s planning initiatives stands out in a melange of studies on sustainable cities. (SciDev.Net, 26.09.2014)
Ebola response: The real measure of success
Responding to the outbreak shouldn’t just be about stopping its spread, but also about heeding the warning sign. (SciDev.Net, 19.08.14)
Calls for change in Africa’s higher education
The ‘how’ might be contested but there’s agreement on one thing: universities need reform to help drive development. (SciDev.Net, 25.06.14)
Technology’s part in the tale of Rwanda’s child soldiers
Reflections on a first-hand account of children used in war shows how humanity and technology shape one another. (SciDev.Net, 16.06.14)
Big data: Excitement tempered by a dose of reality
The world’s digital leftovers will keep growing, tempting our ingenuity. Will they do more good than harm? (SciDev.Net, 15.04.2014)
Research without fixed boundaries
Interdisciplinary research starts by questioning basic, ingrained ideas. This should remain a guiding principle. (SciDev.Net, 17.02.2014)
Complexity science meets bottom-up development
Systems models may offer realistic solutions for development, a workshop hears. But what about the building blocks? (SciDev.Net, 11.02.2014)
Food security demands diversity
The challenge calls for divergent solutions — small-scale, tech-based initiatives as much as long-term research. (SciDev.Net, 21.11.2013)
Investing in people and evidence for sustainable farming
Evaluation of farming systems, new ideas and learning with practitioners should be part of a transformed agriculture. (SciDev.Net, 16.10.2013)
Cultivating a voice outside academia has tangible benefits
Evidence of impact for SciDev.Net’s opinion articles shows what researchers stand to gain from improving communication skills. (SciDev.Net, 23.09.2013)
Science and NGO practice are closer than they appear
Recognising common ground is the first step towards concrete ways of enhancing the work of both scientists and development practitioners. (SciDev.Net, 19.04.2013)
Adapting to the realities of getting science into policy
Messages about the workings of policymaking should be easier to come by, and can inform how scientific evidence is presented. (SciDev.Net, 25.01.2013)
It’s not too soon for plans to monitor new development goals
The next set of development goals should be underpinned by plans to measure progress and results — and to boost data infrastructures. (SciDev.Net, 25.01.2013)
Using disaster warning tools to their best potential
Stronger links between scientific tools and the environment in which they operate can improve the effectiveness of early warning. (SciDev.Net, 21.11.2012)
Embrace complexity but not jargon
In advocating that science writers should not shun scientific jargon, Trevor Quirk proposes the wrong means to the right end for improving science communication. (Nature, 30.08.2012)
Scientific disciplines must link up to serve development
A greater commitment to multidisciplinary research, and to local problem solving, is essential to achieving future development goals. (SciDev.Net, 13.08.2012)
Managing oceans with sound science
Management of marine resources for sustainable development needs local capacity for science, particularly in the Pacific region. (SciDev.Net, 15.02.2012)
Tackling fake drugs needs technology and collaboration
Developing countries must be given all the scientific, technical and legal help they need to counter the growing trade in fake medicines. (SciDev.Net, 30.03.2011)