On Jan. 28, 1986, the U.S. Space Shuttle orbiter Challenger exploded 46,000 feet above the ground 73 seconds after liftoff, killing all seven people inside. The causes of the disaster were fiercely ...
Last year was a tough one for science journalism. National Geographic laid off all of its staff reporters, and Wired laid off 20 people. And the most recent blow came in November, when Popular Science ...
The Balkan Network of Science Journalists and the European Federation for Science Journalism are proud to present “A Tudományos Újságírás Alapjai” (The Basics of Science Journalism), a new guide in ...
In December 2016, a flurry of headlines declared that “flashing lights could treat Alzheimer’s disease,” based on a single mouse study 1. The research was widely amplified by the media. But within a ...
Sisanda Nkoala receives funding from the National Research Foundation. The training to undertake this study was funded, in part, by the Institute of Pan African Thought and Conversation at the ...
As reports pile in about news outlets laying off their science reporters or shutting down altogether, it’s difficult to predict where science journalism is going. And it’s difficult to consolidate ...
In the years before mass censorship in Russia, the country’s science journalism community thrived. During this time, in 2016, a group of science communicators – officials from university science ...
Jeffrey Epstein aggressively sought access to publishers, mentions of Scientific American and other media in Department of Justice files show ...