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WEDNESDAY, 17 DECEMBER 2025, 07:27

Education

Ghana: Journalists Schooled in Green Mining for Responsible Reporting

Today at 01:53 AM, via AllAfrica

[Ghanaian Times] The Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Emmanuel Armah Kofi-Buah, has urged journalists to uphold ethical standards in reporting on issues surrounding illegal mining activities. That, he explained, was the only way the devastating nature of the illegal activity could be clearly understood by communities for them to take collective action against the menace.

UK to rejoin EU’s Erasmus student exchange programme

Yesterday at 20:09 PM, via The Guardian

Exclusive: British students will be able to participate in EU-wide scheme from January 2027, sources say

An agreement to rejoin Erasmus – the EU’s student exchange programme – is expected to be announced on Wednesday as part of the UK government’s drive towards closer relations with Brussels.

The final details of the announcement were agreed by the two sides on Tuesday, with a plan to allow UK...

Sudan: UNDP Completes Training Program for Small Business Owners in Al-Gadarif

Yesterday at 19:47 PM, via AllAfrica

[SNA] – The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has completed its plan to fund capacity-building courses on the credit guarantee system and financial literacy for small business owners. The programme was implemented in partnership with Al-Ibda’a Bank for Microfinance in Al-Gadarif state.

‘A shifting system’: concerns over students’ civil rights rise as DoJ changes priorities

Yesterday at 18:00 PM, via The Guardian

Under Trump, the department that once rooted out race- and disability-based discrimination has begun opening investigations over antisemitism and transgender policies

The 10-year-old was dragged down a school hallway by two school staffers. A camera captured him being forced into a small, empty room with a single paper-covered window.

The staffers shut the door in his face. Alone, the boy...

The Untold Story of How Jeffrey Epstein Got Rich

Yesterday at 17:48 PM, via New York Times

For years, rumors swirled about where his wealth came from. A Times investigation reveals the truth of how a college dropout clawed his way to the pinnacle of American finance and society.

Liberia: Making Education Better

Yesterday at 13:28 PM, via AllAfrica

[Liberian Observer] When President Joseph Nyuma Boakai officially launched the Excellence in Learning in Liberia (EXCEL) Project, the ceremony marked more than the unveiling of a five-year education program. It symbolized a renewed national reckoning with one of Liberia’s most enduring postwar challenges: how to rebuild an education system battered by conflict, epidemics, chronic...

Nigeria: Nile University of Nigeria Contributes to the Honoris United Universities 2025 Impact Report Showcasing Human-Centered Ai Transformation in African Higher Education

Yesterday at 12:19 PM, via AllAfrica

[Vanguard] ABUJA — Honoris United Universities, Africa’s first and largest pan-African private higher education network, today announced the release of its fourth annual Impact Report, showcasing how the network is harnessing artificial intelligence to advance its mission Education for Impact across Africa.

Brown Shooting Tests a Fragile Trust on Campus

Yesterday at 12:03 PM, via New York Times

The Ivy League school has faced a series of challenges related to protests and politics. Through it all, it has kept its gates open to the city and tried to heal divisions on campus.

Our young people aren’t shirkers or snowflakes – they were failed by government policy. That changes now | Pat McFadden

Yesterday at 09:00 AM, via The Guardian

The number of ‘neets’ is skyrocketing in Britain, another Tory failure. Labour’s plans for apprenticeships and training funds will turn this around

• Pat McFadden is secretary of state for work and pensions

Neglect is a political choice, and one with deep human consequences.

That is what has struck me in the early months as secretary of state for work and pensions. Graph after graph, slide...

Lawyers accuse DoJ of political pressure in University of California antisemitism investigation

Monday at 22:44 PM, via The Guardian

Attorneys who eventually quit tell LA Times they were pushed to conclude university system had violated law

Attorneys with the US Department of Justice have reportedly said they felt pressured to accuse the University of California of discriminating against Jewish students and faculty, at the urging of the Trump administration, in what one lawyer described as a “hit job”.

Nine attorneys, some...

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