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1. GREEN DREAM? Carbon offsetting is a popular way for companies to claim 'net zero' greenhouse gas emissions, but this unregulated practice is fraught with complications and marred by scandal

2. THE WAR THE WORLD FORGOT: The war that devastated Tigray between November 2020 and 2023 may be officially over, but war crimes are still taking place in Ethiopia's most northerly region. With the UN turning its back and the world's attention elsewhere, starving and displaced civilians feel forgotten

3. STUCK IN THE MIDDLE: In Abyei, a land sandwiched between Sudan and South Sudan, but belonging to neither, staff from Medecins Sans Frontieres are working hard to bring life-saving treatment to desperate communities

4. INFINITE LIFE: A revolutionary story of eggs, evolution and life on Earth

5. EVE

7. WHERE ARE YOU FROM? NO. WHERE ARE YOU REALLY FROM?

9. TIME AND TIDE: The Long, Long Life of Landscape

12. LOCAL: A Search for Nearby Nature and Wildness

13. Looking for good news

14. Seeking a better life

15. Light and power: Access to electricity in sub-Saharan Africa is the worst in the world, a fact that touches every facet of people's lives there. But change can happen with the right policies in place

16. Harm and hope

17. Categorising: life: Classifying a group of organisms as a separate species has significant implications for conservation. But the science behind such decisions is far from settled

18. SEXUALITY & THE CITY: In cities around the world, the geography of homosexuality is shifting. As historic bars and clubs close down, or where they never existed, queer people are finding other ways to gather

19. England has long suffered from a North-South divide. Despite numerous attempts to tackle it, the rift shows no sign of healing

20. When the borders shut: The sudden cessation of international tourism as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic has brought the world's largest employer to a standstill, with widespread hardship following in its wake. Can the sector recover?

22. LESSONS FROM NATURE

23. No Oil, No Coal, No Future? It is supposed to ease the transfer of workers in high-carbon industries and environment-destroying jobs into cleaner, greener alternatives, without destroying their livelihoods in the process. But if the so-called 'Just Transition' holds all the answers, why aren't governments around the world listening?

24. Grub's Up: Some scientists and businesses are convinced that farming insects could help provide the world's growing population with protein, while also reducing organic waste, lowering carbon emissions and reducing land use. But do the economics of the insect industry stack up and will anyone be persuaded to eat them?

25. Addressing the Unaddressed: Most of us will have never considered the importance of having a home address, but for millions of people on the planet, lacking one can have serious consequences

26. Investigation of the expression pattern and functional importance of the Gnasxl-encoded XLαs protein of the imprinted Gnas Locus

27. Eastbound and up: The story of Margate is one of early success, severe downturn, and now revival, through a conscious strategy of 'culture-led regeneration' which has seen thousands of Londoners flock to the east coast. But can the injection of culture and a splash of new blood really change lives for the better, and if so, for whom?

28. RISE OF THE JELLIES: Many scientists believe that jellyfish numbers are increasing, pointing to their remarkable resilience to climate change and the increase in hugely damaging jellyfish blooms. But are jellies really taking over, and if so, what should be done to prevent the jellification of the ocean?

30. GREEN DREAM?

31. SEEDING THE FUTURE: We are facing a future in which staple foods, from bread to bananas, apples to aubergines could be wiped from the Earth. To rescue these vulnerable varieties, scientists at the Crop Wild Relatives Project are attempting to exploit the genetic diversity that lies hidden and neglected within the uncultivated versions of our most popular food crops

32. What's in a Name? Surrounded by historic maps, aged tomes and a thousand dictionaries, the four employees of the PCGN advise the British government on geographical names. From the Burma/Myanmar debate to the names of rocks far out in contested waters, they keep constantly up to date with the world's ever-changing toponymic climate, just as they have for the last 100 years

33. CONTROL

34. WELCOME

35. Shifting sands

37. THE HEARTBEAT OF IRAN

38. Change for good

41. Delving deep

42. BOOK OF THE MONTH

43. CROSSED OFF THE MAP

44. Mutual dependence

45. How to conserve

46. Moving forward

47. The fall of the great wall

48. BEING A HUMAN: Adventures in 40,000 Years of Consciousness

49. Life Along the Russia-China border

50. The complexity of life

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