News in Context30 Jun 2023The odd items on the WHO's cancer listAspartame is expected to join aloe vera and bracken ferns on the WHO's list as a "possible human carcinogen". But what does it all mean?30 Jun 2023Future7 Jun 2023Five myths about wildfiresAre wildfires a natural, if tragic, event – or are they getting worse with climate change? Would logging help decrease them? BBC Future debunks five common myths.7 Jun 2023Future11 Jan 2019Why the world is getting betterYou’d be forgiven for thinking the world is all doom and gloom – and getting worse. But these seven charts show that’s not actually the case.11 Jan 2019Future26 Oct 2018How a lottery win changes your politicsA big lottery win might not just change your finances – it could also affect your politics.26 Oct 2018Future9 Oct 2018No, civility is not dead in politicsGood manners really do ‘cost nothing and buy everything’, even in today's increasingly polarised politics9 Oct 2018Future8 Oct 2018Why are female Nobel winners so rare?More women are graduating with PhDs in science – so why was Donna Strickland only the third female physicist to receive a Nobel prize?8 Oct 2018Future2 Oct 2018Can you tell if someone is blackout?What does being ‘blackout’ really mean in terms of brain processing – and can you tell if someone is?2 Oct 2018Future26 Sep 2018The ‘memory myth’ of sexual assaultAnd four other misconceptions about sexual violence.26 Sep 2018Future11 Jul 2018The dangerous diseases hidden in cavesDoctors have placed the Thai cave boys in quarantine due to the infectious organisms they may have faced underground. So, which diseases could they have been exposed to?11 Jul 2018Future