
How businesses with ties to Jeffrey Epstein saw norms – and even share prices – suffer
The more Epstein-connected directors a company had, no matter its size, the more likely it was to have governance problems.
Independent Analysis and Reportage

The more Epstein-connected directors a company had, no matter its size, the more likely it was to have governance problems.

Africa needs to navigate the tension between interdependence, economic security, and economic diversification.

No poetry collection on the subject of abortion has come out of Ireland.

Events in eastern DRC are a reminder that Ebola outbreaks are rarely controlled by vaccines alone.

Generating solar power requires a lot of land – but which land should it be? And what else can be done on that land?

As the UK gets hotter, children will seek water to cool down. The real question is why so many have so few places to go.

Leading algorithms now achieve a mean absolute error of less than three years across all ages.

Our picks for this week include a film where internet folklore comes to life, books to lose yourself in and a eerie landscape exhibition.

Researchers are investigating whether blood tests and heart scans can detect hidden heart damage during breast cancer chemotherapy.

A Carnegie Mellon researcher explains the connection between our brains and AI chatbots – and what a new Pennsylvania lawsuit reveals about the dangers of AI.

A physical chemist outlines the promises and risks associated with methane fuel and describes why SpaceX and Blue Origin use it in their superheavy rockets.

It’s one thing to pull for your national team when patriotism feels uncomplicated. It’s quite another when you aren’t feeling very proud to be an American.