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By the time the Nazi Party’s systematic murder of Jewish people in Europe ended in 1945, the global Jewish population had ...
World Population Day 2025 reminds us that behind the 8 billion count are lives, challenges, and global trends demanding ...
The world's population is expected to peak at 10.3 billion in 2084 and then decline to 10.2 billion through the end of the century.
South Africa’s economic growth since 2010 has left its population significantly poorer than the global average.
Climate change is mostly blamed on fossil fuels, deforestation, or overconsumption, but we rarely talk about how our ...
Almost 92 percent of the global population now has access to electricity, up from 87 percent in 2010, according to the latest ...
Far more families are choosing to have fewer — or no — children. Many countries, including the U.S., now face a rapidly aging ...
World Population Day will be marked, just like every year on July 11. It is a time to reflect on population trends and their impact on sustainable development. For Rwanda, this day is not just ...
What if the challenge for humanity’s future is not too many people on a crowded planet, but too few people to sustain the ...
South Africa’s anaemic economic growth since 2010 has left its population significantly poorer than the global average, ...
Friday, July 11 is the 2025 commemoration of the World Population Day, an annual event, observed to raise awareness on global population issues such as family planning, gender equality, poverty, ...
Biodiversity continued to decrease in most of the areas we studied, irrespective of population increase or decrease. Only ...