Delegates are arriving in New York this week for the world’s largest gathering of Indigenous peoples. Amid other challenges, the U. S. has made it increasingly difficult for delegates to secure visas to attend.

Scientists have uncovered a “blind spot” in the research on rising seas, revealing that tens of millions of people thought safe from coastal flooding are at risk of inundation. Across much of the world, sea levels are higher than previously assumed and land is sinking faster.
Delegates are arriving in New York this week for the world’s largest gathering of Indigenous peoples. Amid other challenges, the U. S. has made it increasingly difficult for delegates to secure visas to attend.
Stories about pardons are often about presidential power. But what about people on the other side of that grace? The Coulson family may never receive millions from a wrongful death lawsuit it won years ago.

Indigenous leaders, traditional communities and researchers are resisting development in the Amazon rainforest that could push its ecosystems past irreversible tipping points.

The shipping industry is responsible for 3 percent of global climate emissions. The Trump administration and the Iran war are complicating efforts to clean it up.
The fight over the roadless rule has long focused on the West, but its repeal could fragment some of the last pristine forests in the East.
As the world is plunged into another energy crisis, market allocation is leading to grossly unjust outcomes, as the rich outbid the poor.
Al-Fassel and Pishtaz News publish pro-U. S. coverage about the war on Iran and the Trump administration’s plan to redevelop Gaza.