Taiwan staged its first-ever military drill at Taoyuan International Airport on Wednesday, briefly halting commercial traffic as soldiers
Access to the residence and offices of Niger President Mohamed Bazoum was blocked off Wednesday by members of the elite
Japan's population fell by a record in 2022, government data showed Wednesday, as the country struggles to reverse its
Russia on Wednesday sentenced Ilya Sachkov, co-founder of the Group-IB cybersecurity firm, to 14 years in prison on
Niger President Mohamed Bazoum is being arrested by members of the Presidential Guard, who have been given an "ultimatum" by army
Ukraine’s SBU security service said Wednesday it searched the home of a member of parliament who allegedly went on holiday abroad despite war-time restrictions on officials travelling for personal reasons. Yuriy Aristov travelled to Lithuania for a work t...
A blaze on board a carrier ship suspected of being started by an electric car and killing one sailor, "could still burn for days," the Dutch
Since the pandemic began, the new coronavirus has infected more than 780,000 people and killed at least 37,000. The experts at The Conversation offer its readers insights from every continent.
Citizens around the world look warily at the rates of illnesses and deaths at home and abroad as the economic effects of COVID-19 start to hit.
The outbreak continues to spread in new geographies and in numbers.
The pandemic is still raging. Health, money, work, relationships, environment have changed throughout the world, and perhaps permanently so.
This week, our experts are looking at the major trends in post-crisis globalisation.
A look at what various countries – from Indonesia and Argentina to Canada and the US – are doing.
Scientists and academics on how the world might change once this is all over, and if a return to ‘normality’ is even possible.
This fifth weekly column by our team of international health editors highlights more of the recently published articles from The Conversation’s global network.