Women’s Health Is a Market Failure

Why half the population is still underfunded By Emmanuella Abraham For decades, women’s health has been framed as a niche concern within a universal system. The reality is far less neutral. Across research, funding, and product development, women’s health remains structurally underinvested, creating what economists increasingly describe as a market failure. A market failure occurs […]
Did You Know? The Strange Ways Nature Lets Go

By Daniel Agusi There is a quiet pattern in nature that most of us have noticed, even if we never stopped to question it. A tiny creature on the floor, legs curled inward. A fish drifting slightly off balance. A bird that simply seems to disappear. It can feel random. Almost eerie. But it is […]
EARTH AS CANVAS: WHERE ART, CULTURE, AND INNOVATION MEET THE PLANET

By Francisca Sinjae There is a difference between speaking about the Earth and working with it. One stays in language. The other leaves marks. Each year, Earth Day arrives with familiar vocabulary. Protection. Awareness. Action. But across art and culture, the more interesting shift is not in what is being said, but in what is […]
The New Face of the Moon: Why Artemis Is More Than a Space Mission

By Ifeanyi’s Daughter For decades, the image of the Moon has been fixed in history. A distant, grey surface marked by one defining moment, when men first stepped onto it during the Apollo missions. It was groundbreaking, yes, but it was also incomplete. Now, with NASA’s Artemis programme, that story is being rewritten. And this […]