Examining the Climate Change-Migration Nexus from a Disability Lens
Growing interest in migration as a form of climate adaptation risks exacerbating existing inequalities and generating new ones for disabled people.

The Supreme Court is willing to subordinate public health policies to pet interests in boosting religious freedom and dismantling the administrative state.

If public health is to prosper, we will need to overcome the after-effects of several failures of imagination.

We are currently at a crossroads: The underlying issues of speciesism and the anthropocentric bias of law are increasingly contested.

A new pandemic instrument should explicitly embrace the three emerging global regulatory standards of due diligence, due regard, and regulatory coherence.

Researchers believe that gene drives could eliminate vector-borne diseases, kill off invasive species, and combat pesticide resistance.
