The coming train wreck for older workers

By Richard Eisenberg16 June 2016 (MarketWatch) – Uh-oh. American workers aged 50 or older think there’s nearly a 1 in 2 chance they’ll still be working at 70 but many employees who expect to work longer are exactly the ones who’ll likely be least able to do so. That’s the upshot of the new, frightening […]

The 2016 Global Peace Index records a historically less peaceful and more unequal world

9 June 2016 (IEP) – The 2016 Global Peace Index (GPI) shows the world became less peaceful in the last year, reinforcing the underlying trend of declining peace over the last decade. Results also show a growing global inequality in peace, with the most peaceful countries continuing to improve while the least peaceful are falling […]

America’s shrinking middle class: A close look at changes within metropolitan areas – The middle class lost ground in nearly nine-in-ten U.S. cities

11 May 2016 (Pew Research Center) – The American middle class is losing ground in metropolitan areas across the country, affecting communities from Boston to Seattle and from Dallas to Milwaukee. From 2000 to 2014 the share of adults living in middle-income households fell in 203 of the 229 U.S. metropolitan areas examined in a […]

The Unnecessariat and the epidemic of suicides and overdoses in the U.S.

By Anne Amnesia 10 May 2016 (More Crows Than Eagles) – […] See any overlap? I do. AIDS generated a response. Groups like GMHC and ACT-UP screamed against the dying of the light, almost before it was clear how much darkness was descending, but the gay men’s community in the 1970’s and 80’s was an […]

For young Americans, living with their parents is now the norm, in a ‘postponement of, if not retreat from, marriage’

By Aimee Picchi24 May 2016 (CBS News) – The kids may not be alright, at least when it comes to one traditional mark of growing up: moving out of their childhood homes. More young adults are now living with their parents than with a spouse or partner, marking a tipping point for the first time […]

At UN Security Council, climate change cited among factors impacting stability in Sahel – ‘Life is already tough and will get tougher’

26 May 2016 (UN) – At a meeting today in the United Nations Security Council on the situation in the Sahel region of sub-Saharan Africa, senior UN officials stressed that climate change plays a direct role in the region’s security, development and stability by increasing drought and fuelling conflict. Speaking via videoconference from Niger, the […]

UN: Iraq humanitarian crisis ‘one of the world’s worst’ – More than 10 million Iraqis are in need of immediate humanitarian aid

By Zena Tahhan13 May 2016 (Al Jazeera) – Iraqi civilians and officials have voiced concern over the humanitarian situation in the country’s western cities of Fallujah and Ramadi. “The situation is deteriorating every day – the shortage of food is becoming worse,” a member of the Anbar Province’s security committee, Rajeh Barakat al-Issawi, told Al […]

Global urban air pollution levels increased by 8 percent in five years – ‘Urban air pollution continues to rise at an alarming rate, wreaking havoc on human health’

12 May 2016 (UN) – More than 80 per cent of people living in urban areas that monitor air pollution are exposed to air quality levels that exceed guidelines set by the World Health Organization (WHO), with populations in low-income cities the most at risk for respiratory diseases and other long-term health problems. Some 98 […]

300 economists urge leaders to reject tax havens – ‘While all countries are hit by tax dodging, poor countries are proportionately the biggest losers’

By Danica Kirka9 May 2016 (AP) – Hundreds of economists urged world leaders Monday to end the era of tax havens, arguing they only benefit rich individuals and multinational corporations and serve to increase inequality. The 300 economists, in a letter coordinated by activist group Oxfam, say poorer countries are hit hardest by tax dodging. […]

Poor Pennsylvania communities bear greatest burden from fracking – ‘This trend is not one we’re surprised by, we see this in a lot of industries’

By Brian Bienkowski6 May 2015 (Scientific America) – Fracking wells in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale region are disproportionately located in poor rural communities, which bear the brunt of associated pollution, according to a new study. The study bolsters concerns that poor people are more likely to deal with hydraulic fracturing in their community and raises concerns […]

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