It sounds sustainable: tableware made of melamine with bamboo and maize added as innovative raw materials. But when this tableware turns out to be unsafe.
ITU
When Hollywood notices a trend, it’s a reasonable bet that it has become mainstream.
So, as shown by this year’s Golden Globes extravaganza, digital health has officially joined diversity, climate change, and social equity as one of the premier celebrity issues of our time.
Indeed, healthy aging a positive outcome of digital health, especially during the pandemic took center stage all night, as nearly 20 million viewers watched 80-year-old Jane Fonda receive her Cecil B. DeMille award, recognize 98-year-old Norman Lear for his longevity, and celebrate I Care A Lot, a comedy about two tough ladies and the Russian mafia making money off of elder caregiving, which also seems to have entered the pop culture psyche.
"This report alerts responders to the importance of language in building trust and effective communication with people facing Ebola and other epidemics." From Translators without Borders (TWB), this report was produced in the midst of the 11th outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD), which rapidly followed the 9th and 10th outbreaks in the Democratic
Radios in the Gulf region celebrate World Radio Day 2021
04/03/2021
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Each year on February 13, UNESCO celebrate the World Radio Day. Proclaimed in 2011 by the Member States of UNESCO, and adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2012 as an International Day, the World Radio Day (WRD) celebrates radio as a powerful medium for celebrating humanity in all its diversity and constitutes a platform for democratic discourse.
At the global level, radio remains the most widely consumed medium. This unique ability to reach out the widest audience means radio can shape a society’s experience of diversity, stand as an arena for all voices to speak out, be represented and heard. Radio stations should serve diverse communities, offering a wide variety of programs, viewpoints and content, and reflect the diversity of audiences in their organizations and operations.
16 of our subjects are in the top 100
We have once again been named as one of the world’s leading universities across a number of our subjects in the latest edition of the world’s most-consulted university rankings.
The QS World University Rankings by Subject 2021 put Durham in the world top 10 for Archaeology (fourth) as well as Theology and Religion (fifth).
Anthropology, Classics and Ancient History, English Studies, Geography, History, and Law also feature in the world top 50. Out of all the subjects ranked at Durham, Geography held the accolade for most citations per paper.
Earth Sciences, Education, Geology, Geophysics, Modern Languages and Cultures, Philosophy, Physics, Government and International Affairs, Psychology and Sports and Exercise Sciences are in the world top 100.