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What's right: free public transport for Belgrade

Belgrade will offer free public transport from January, aiming to ease congestion, but can its ageing system handle the surge in passengers?

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tags: free public transport, Belgrade, Serbia
categories: What's right
Friday 12.20.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Brazil's succesful poverty fight

Brazil’s bold fight against poverty lifts 8.7 million people in a year, thanks to innovative policies like Bolsa Família and economic recovery efforts.

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tags: Brazil, poverty, Bolsa Familia, G20, financial aid, Lula da Silva
categories: What's right
Thursday 12.19.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Miss Netherlands beauty pageant ends

Miss Netherlands ends its run, paving the way for a bold new platform redefining beauty, inclusivity, and empowerment in modern society.

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tags: The Netherlands, Miss Netherlands, inclusivity, beauty pageant, modernization
categories: What's right
Wednesday 12.18.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: AI camera's to catch drunk motorists

A pioneering AI camera is being tested to catch motorists driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, helping police stop dangerous drivers before accidents happen.

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tags: UK, Devon and Cornwall, AI camera, AI technology, alcohol, drugs, impaired driving, Heads-Up
categories: What's right
Tuesday 12.17.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Hope for the Aral Sea region

From a vanished sea to a desert reborn—discover how bold restoration efforts are bringing hope to the Aral Sea region.

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tags: Aral Sea, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, environment, sustainability, Aralkum Desert
categories: What's right
Wednesday 12.11.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: gay men to donate blood in Luxembourg

Luxembourg updates its blood donation rules, allowing gay men to donate, marking a major step toward equality and modernized health practices.

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tags: Luxembourg, gay, blood bank, blood donation, HIV, Aids
categories: What's right
Tuesday 12.10.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Fighting childhood obesity

The UK bans junk food ads on TV before 9 pm and online anytime from 2025, aiming to tackle childhood obesity. Get all the details on today’s “What’s right with the world”.

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tags: good news, positive news, constructive journalism, health, obesity
categories: What's right
Monday 12.09.24
Posted by Franziska Peschel
 

What's right: Revolutionary asthma treatment

A new injection could revolutionize asthma and COPD treatment, significantly reducing flare-ups, improving symptoms and quality of life. The results of the study were recently published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine.

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tags: UK, King's College, COPD, asthma
categories: What's right
Wednesday 12.04.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: maternity leave for Belgian sex workers

Belgium leads the way in labor rights by granting sex workers maternity leave, pensions, and formal contracts under a groundbreaking new law.

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tags: Belgium, sex workers, maternity leave, pensions, employment contracts, health insurance, fair treatment
categories: What's right
Tuesday 12.03.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Australia's social media ban

Australia has passed a law banning social media for children under 16, sparking debate over mental health, privacy, and youth access to support networks.

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tags: Australia, social media ban, Tik Tok, Facebook, Instagram, tech giants, online bullying, mental health
categories: What's right
Friday 11.29.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Nanobots fighting cancer

Swedish researchers have developed cancer-fighting nanobots that target tumors with precision, offering a promising alternative to traditional treatments with fewer side effects.

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tags: Sweden, Karolinska Institutet, cancer, cancer-fighting nanobots, trials, research
categories: What's right
Friday 11.29.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: cash for the homeless

UK researchers are testing whether cash transfers can more effectively reduce homelessness than traditional aid in a groundbreaking large-scale study.

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tags: UK, homelessness, King's College London, KCL, cash, study
categories: What's right
Friday 11.29.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Redefining economic growth

The UK is redefining economic growth with Gross Inclusive Income (GII), a new measure that includes sustainability, well being, and non-monetary factors beyond traditional GDP.

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tags: UK, GDP, ONS, GII, sustainability, renewable energy growth, voluntary care, environment
categories: What's right
Friday 11.29.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Norway apologizes to Sami people

Norway’s parliament has apologized to the Sami for decades of forced assimilation, marking a historic step. Alongside the apology, new measures will protect Sami culture, language, and land rights. While welcomed by the Sami, critics question economic impacts, and implementation remains under scrutiny. Get all the details on today’s “What’s right with the world”.

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tags: What's right with the world, Whats right, good news, positive news, constructive journalism, Scandinavia, politics, culture, Norway
categories: News, What's right
Tuesday 11.26.24
Posted by Franziska Peschel
 

What's right: Paris protects babies from pollution

Paris is launching an inspiring initiative to support new parents and protect babies from pollution. Starting mid-2025, eco-friendly gift bags will be provided, including stainless steel baby cups, wooden toys, reusable cotton wipes, and non-toxic cleaning items. This effort aims to give infants a healthier start in life while promoting sustainable practices

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tags: France, Paris, eco-friendly, gift bags, wood, cotton, non-toxic, sustainability
categories: What's right
Friday 11.22.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: no more cracks in concrete?

A research team at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia has combined civil engineering and their wish to cut back on textile waste by using textile waste and carpet fibres to create sustainable concrete. Their approach not only diverts clothing and carpet waste from landfills — which is urgently needed when it’s estimated that the world produces 92 million tons of textile waste every year — but it also makes for stronger concrete, reducing early-age shrinkage cracking in concrete by up to 30%.

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tags: Australia, Melbourne, RMIT University, landfills, textile waste, concrete, Construction and Building Materials journal, Chamila Gunasekara
categories: What's right
Thursday 11.21.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: Young Scientist Challenge

A fourteen-year-old has won the 3M Young Scientist Challenge. Sirish Subash created a device called Pestiscand. It is a handheld device for at-home use to detect pesticide residue on produce without damaging the food. It measures the wavelength of light reflecting off of fruits and vegetables and uses a machine-learning model to analyse the data. Users download a phone app, point Pestiscand at the produce, tap the scan button and voilà, they see if their apple or spinach needs another rinse.

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tags: pesticides, Young Scientists Challenge, 3M, Pestiscand
categories: What's right
Wednesday 11.20.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: one far-right conspiracy platform less

There is one far-right conspiracy platform less in the United States. The satirical media outlet The Onion has acquired the site Infowars.com. For years, the owner Alex Jones distributed lies and fake news to the public, earning millions of dollars by selling conspiracy theory merchandise like vitamins, diet pills, and gear for a supposed civil war.

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tags: The Onion, Infowars.com, Alex Jones, conspiracy theories, Hillary Clinton, Jeff Lawson, misinformation, gun violence prevention
categories: What's right
Monday 11.18.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: World's largest coral discovered

Scientists have discovered the world's largest coral reef in the Solomon Islands, which holds centuries of ocean secrets. It measures 34 meters wide and five meters high, making it longer than the world's biggest mammal, the blue whale. It is made of nearly one billion little polyps, pulsing with life and color and it is so huge that it is visible from space.

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tags: Solomon Islands, Pristine Seas research vessel, coral reef, National Geographic, space, global warming
categories: What's right
Friday 11.15.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 

What's right: zero emission in ocean freight?

Amazon, Ikea and about three dozen other companies that depend on ocean freight will invite shipping firms for the first time ever to bid on a contract in January to move their cargo on vessels powered by near-zero emissions e-fuels like e-methanol. The Alliance hopes to accelerate the ocean shipping industry's move toward net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2050.

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tags: Amazon, Ikea, greenhous gas, zero emissions, Zero Emissions Maritime Buyers Alliance, ocean freight, climate goals, renewable electricity
categories: What's right
Thursday 11.14.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
 
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