
See The 4 Books Scientific American Loved Reading In June

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Scientific American
4 days ago
- Scientific American
See The 4 Books Scientific American Loved Reading In June
In 2008 Ecuador startled the world. Articles 71 to 74 of the nation's then newly ratified constitution stated that nature had rights —rights to be respected for its existence and the crucial, life-giving services it provided and rights to be restored when damaged. Further, it asserted that the government could intervene when human activities might disrupt these inherent rights. In his latest book, Is a River Alive?, Macfarlane travels to three very different rivers (in Ecuador, India and Quebec) to examine the question of a river's sovereignty. He discovers that rivers create interconnected (and often fragile) worlds of plant and animal species—confirming they are life-giving wherever they run, as many Indigenous populations throughout the world have recognized for thousands of years. Now rivers are fighting for their lives as corporations, governments, pollution and climate change violate their vitalizing flow. 'Muscular, wilful, worshipped and mistreated, rivers have long existed in the threshold space between geology and theology,' Macfarlane writes. 'Rivers are—I have found—potent presences with which to imagine water differently. We will never think like a river, but perhaps we can think with them.' —


Hamilton Spectator
25-05-2025
- Hamilton Spectator
Anglican Diocese of N.S. and P.E.I. adopts pledge banning inappropriate use of NDAs
The head of a Canadian advocacy group says the Anglican Diocese of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island's passing of a resolution not to misuse non-disclosure agreements marks an important step forward. Julie Macfarlane of Can't Buy My Silence Canada says a member of the diocese told her the membership unanimously passed a resolution to not use NDAs unless requested by a complainant in cases involving sexual harassment, misconduct or abuse, discrimination, retaliation or bullying. She says the resolution was passed Saturday during the diocese's weekend of meetings, which is called a synod. Macfarlane says the movement among Christian organizations to ban the inappropriate use of NDAs is particularly impactful given that non-disclosure agreements have been used to silence victims of abuse in the church. Macfarlane, who is a survivor of sexual abuse by an Anglican minister, says she hopes the regional Anglican diocese is the first of many religious organizations in Canada to commit to the non-disclosure agreement pledge. The diocese did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a statement issued by Can't Buy My Silence on Friday, diocese member Cynthia Pilichos said she would be speaking in favour of adopting the ban on inappropriate NDA use at the synod because the pledge is in line with the organization's commitments to ensure justice, respect and dignity for all. This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 25, 2025.
Yahoo
15-05-2025
- Yahoo
Scots £15,000 a year poorer due to flatlining wages, research finds
Flatlining wages mean Scots are now £15,000 a year poorer than they should be, research has found. According to analysis by the Future Economy Scotland think tank, workers would be £297 a week richer if wages had continued to grow 'as normal' after 2007/08 financial crisis. Real average weekly earnings in 2024 were just £8 higher than they were in 2008, the researchers said – the equivalent to an increase of just 1% over the past 16 years. If earnings had continued to grow at the pre-crisis rate of 2.2%, Future Economy Scotland – which analysed figures from the ONS – said that would be the equivalent of £15,000 a year. The average full-time salary in Scotland in 2024 was £38,464, meaning the same worker would now be paid £53,923 had salaries risen as expected. Laurie Macfarlane, co-director of the think tank, said wage growth in Scotland is historically low. 'Never in modern times have Scots seen their earnings grow so little over a 16-year period,' he said. 'Our analysis shows that if wages had instead grown as normal since 2008, the average full-time worker would be over £15,000 a year better off.' Mr Macfarlane said for many households, this meant the difference between economic security and 'living on the breadline'. He went on: 'Although real earnings are now rising slowly again, the damage inflicted by disastrous austerity and runaway inflation cannot be undone. 'Rather than scapegoating migrants for the country's economic failures, the debate must focus on the real culprit: a broken economic model. 'As we enter an election year, there is an urgent need for political parties to embrace bold new ideas to transform the economy. 'Scotland simply can't afford yet another five years of economic failure.' Sign in to access your portfolio