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on (#52MTP)
The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas has become an intriguing puzzle piece of the pandemic's spread after new Bay Area COVID-19 deaths indicate the virus' presence in the United States earlier than thought.
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The World: Latest Stories
Link | https://www.pri.org/programs/the-world |
Feed | http://www.pri.org/feed/index.1.rss |
Updated | 2025-07-02 13:46 |
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on (#52MKD)
As we continue to fight the coronavirus, is there a safe way to reopen sections of society?
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on (#52MTR)
Large-scale migration from Morocco to the Netherlands started in the 1960s under a guest worker program. But when Dutch officials realized that families from Morocco and elsewhere weren’t returning to their homelands, they tried to get them to learn Dutch. When that only partially worked, attitudes hardened.
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on (#52MTT)
As the coronavirus continues to upend the lives of people around the world, many are using the simulation game to live out experiences and routines disrupted by the pandemic — and for a sense of normalcy and connection.
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on (#52K5C)
Ghana is the first African country to ease its lockdown in response to the coronavirus. The country is using drones to deliver samples collected in more than 1,000 health facilities across the country.
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on (#52K5E)
The recent escalation in fighting has dashed hopes that the pandemic might succeed where previous attempts at diplomacy and sanctions had failed.
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on (#52K5G)
To celebrate the holy month of Ramadan, many Muslims typically fast during daylight hours and gather together to break the fast every evening. But this year, many are adapting to social distancing measures and stay-home orders.
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on (#52K5J)
For those living in camps or sleeping rough in Greece, the country's lockdown poses many challenges. In the absence of much government help, refugees are turning to each other for support.
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on (#52JN4)
The pandemic has led to delays for many cases across the country, but the court deemed the first criminal trial worldwide on Syrian state torture too urgent to postpone.
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on (#52K5M)
Former US Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power was part of the US effort to fight the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014. Power spoke with The World's Marco Werman about how lessons from that experience apply to the pandemic the globe is facing today.
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on (#52JBK)
The novel coronavirus is more deadly in areas with many years of high air pollution, researchers are now saying.
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on (#52GKZ)
The coronavirus pandemic appears well-managed in countries that moved swiftly with science as their guide. Countries that initially downplayed the threat, such as Italy and the United States, have seen spiking death rates as health care systems are overwhelmed.
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on (#52HFD)
Ever since the US started its "Remain in Mexico" policy, many migrant families have sent their kids over the border alone to seek asylum. Now, even that door has closed. On March 21, citing the coronavirus, the US began summarily expelling children from the country.
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on (#52HFF)
Prickles was just a little lamb when she disappeared seven years ago in a devastating Australian bushfire. She recently returned to her owners as a grown sheep sporting an impressive fleece.
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on (#52HFH)
Professor Erika Lee speaks with The World's Marco Werman about how the US has responded with changes to immigration policy and increased xenophobia during times of war, economic hardship and disease throughout history.
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on (#52HFK)
Stephan Lewandowsky, a cognitive scientist at the University of Bristol, speaks with The World's Marco Werman about how societies can combat misinformation — particularly around the coronavirus and climate change.
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on (#52FPV)
Two novels published in English this spring show the broad landscape of Mexican literature today.
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on (#52FPX)
The 93-year-old Holocaust survivor shared her story with The World on Holocaust Remembrance Day.
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on (#52FPZ)
The Wa, a people governed by one of the world’s largest armed groups, faces a new invader ― one that is both invisible and fearless: COVID-19.
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on (#52FQ1)
Until coronavirus hit, one Texas teen says he was primarily concerned with the cost of college and student loans. Now, he's far more worried about the US economy and job insecurity — especially as the November presidential nears.
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on (#52FEM)
Messages to stay at home and follow social distancing measures are seemingly everywhere in Mexico. But for those living in remote, rural communities with little or no internet access, getting those messages is not so easy.
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on (#52FQ3)
Pioneering radio broadcaster Gil Bailey, known as the Godfather of Reggae Radio, died Monday of COVID-19.
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on (#52F54)
At a time when the COVID-19 pandemic has led most of the American population to practice physical distancing, gardening can provide emotional comfort and improved health.
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on (#52DXC)
Hundreds of Yemeni bodega workers in New York City are on the front lines of the COVID-19 fight, just like doctors and nurses. Many deal with shortages of face masks, gloves and hand sanitizer. Now, there is a community campaign to bring safety kits to them.
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on (#52DXE)
A new study in the Netherlands has found the coronavirus in sewage. And in one Dutch city, the coronavirus was detected in wastewater days before any cases were officially confirmed through human testing. Can sewer surveillance serve as an early warning tool for cities?
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on (#52DXG)
The Campaign for Real Ale predicts that 50 million pints worth of beer will be dumped in the United Kingdom within weeks if the country’s lockdown continues.
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on (#52DNW)
COVID-19 is a threat for many refugee camps across the world. Sanitary conditions are typically not ideal and social distancing is nearly impossible. But at two camps in northern Syria, residents face the virus as well as stigmatization tied to their lives under ISIS.
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on (#52DNY)
There’s a massive effort underway to help thousands of Indians on visas in the US who can’t return to India.
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on (#52DCW)
As Washington starts to talk infrastructure as a way to put people back to work during the COVID-19 pandemic, a team led by congressional Democrats is working to develop long-term solutions to climate change that will help rebuild the economy.
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on (#52AEM)
Few industries on the continent have been spared by the epidemic. The region is projected to experience its first recession in 25 years, according to the World Bank. Among the biggest challenges for Africa is the large scale of people employed in the informal sector.
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on (#52A8M)
In Japan, people are making a long-forgotten cheese called “so.†The 1,000-year-old recipe became popular recently on Japanese social media as people stuck at home have extra time on their hands.
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on (#52DCY)
There’s a massive effort underway to help thousands of Indians on visas in the US who can’t return to India.
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on (#52A8P)
From makeshift sparing buddies to swimming in a kiddie pool, professional athletes get creative during a time of physical distancing.
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on (#52A8R)
Some 1,600 nurses in Ontario cross the border every day to work in the US, but the pandemic could change that. As the number of novel coronavirus cases grows in Michigan, some officials in Ontario are calling for restrictions on where these nurses can work.
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on (#52A07)
The COVID-19 pandemic is once again calling attention once to the illegal trade of endangered species and its consequences for human health.
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on (#528N5)
Tom Moore set a goal of walking the length of his back garden 100 times by his 100th birthday. Today, he reached that goal — and raised nearly $20 million for Britain's National Health Service while doing it.
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on (#528N9)
Australian social scientist and reef researcher Joshua Cinner looks for “bright spots,†or reefs that are doing better than expected, to glean lessons for building resilience in the world's reefs, which are suffering from bleaching events.
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on (#528N7)
If there is a COVID-19 outbreak in overcrowded Rohingya refugee camps, the success of the response may depend in part on the status of women in the camps.
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on (#528ND)
Grace Young, a Chinese American award-winning author of cookbooks devoted to Chinese cuisine, is documenting the impact of the pandemic on businesses and restaurants in New York City's Chinatown.
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on (#528NB)
As shutdown measures stretch into weeks and months, many communities across the globe are now wrestling with when and how to relax those policies.
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on (#528NF)
Dr. Michel Yao is WHO's program manager for emergency response for Africa. He spoke to The World's host Marco Werman about what it's like to deal with a pandemic and an epidemic at a time when WHO is overstretched.
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on (#528E2)
Peru's national oil company, Perupetro, wants to drill for oil in a vast national park, threatening the Amazon forest and the Indigenous communities who depend on it. A judge has blocked the plan.
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on (#528NH)
Doctors in China and the US have transfused antibodies from recovered patients directly into the blood of people with severe cases of COVID-19. Dr. Mario Ostrowski and his collaborators want to identify the genes that encode these antibodies and use them to mass produce lab-grown versions — to turn into a drug to treat the infection.
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on (#52703)
Blacks and Latinos are more likely than whites to be considered "essential workers" and to be diagnosed with COVID-19 — and to die of the disease. Those experiences are shaping how people from those groups will vote in the November presidential election.
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on (#52705)
An acoustic map of Notre Dame made before the fire could inform its reconstruction.
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on (#52707)
The history of the antimalarial drug chloroquine has many lessons about the power — and geopolitics — of medicine.
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on (#52709)
Museum visitors usually don't acknowledge security guards. But they're often incredibly knowledgable about the art they keep watch over — and may even be artists themselves. A new MoMA audio guide puts the guards front and center.
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on (#526QF)
On election day, at least 29 million South Koreans lined-up at polling places to cast ballots. Quarantine restrictions were temporarily lifted and polling stations were kept open to allow some 13,000 recent returnees to briefly leave their homes and vote.
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on (#5264K)
The forests of coastal Vietnam are among the most biodiverse on Earth. But in the face of rampant poaching, many species are vanishing. Recently a species of mouse-deer was spotted for the first time in nearly 30 years, handing a much-needed bit of hope to conservationists.
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on (#525BY)
Cybercrime has surged in recent weeks. Hospitals, companies and even individuals are targets. That’s where the COVID-19 Cyber Threat Intelligence League steps in.
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