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Chemistry World: How to resist threats to science

Posted on March 21, 2017 by Mark Peplow

Broader forms of activism are needed to protect evidence-based policy.

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← Chemical & Engineering News: Fractious fractions teased from crude oil
Science: Enzymes offer waste-to-energy solution →
  • Highlights

    • New Scientist: We need more radioactive drugs. Can we make them from nuclear waste?

      22 April 2026

      The rise of a new generation of radiotherapies means we will soon need much greater quantities of radioactive atoms. That’s why companies are scrambling to refine them from all manner of radioactive waste.

    • Science: Whistleblower alleges Finnish startup’s vaunted solid-state battery isn’t what it claims

      22 April 2026

      Donut Lab’s assertions of lightning-fast charging and high energy storage have led to a criminal complaint.

    • Nature: Fresh claim of making elusive ‘hexagonal’ diamond is the strongest yet

      04 March 2026

      After decades of debate, researchers say that they have found the clearest evidence yet for this rare form of carbon.

    • C&EN: Copper finally joins the metallocene club

      17 February 2026

      More than 70 years after ferrocene’s discovery, cuprocene fills a long-standing gap in the sandwich menu.

    • C&EN: Lighting a better path for biobased furans

      16 January 2026

      Photocatalytic hydrolysis offers a shortcut for renewable chemicals.

  • TESTIMONIALS

    “As an editor and reporter, Mark Peplow is fast, accurate, and versatile. He covers science policy and pure research with equal passion, and his writing combines a scientist’s precision with a journalist’s verve.” Tim Appenzeller
    Former Chief Magazine Editor at Nature, now News Editor at Science
    "Mark guided me through some of the most challenging stories I've written. These are pieces I might not have attempted were it not for his steady editorial hand." Linda Nordling
    Freelance Journalist, South Africa
    “Working with Mark is never anything other than a pleasure. He is the kind of editor that writers hope for: able to identify what needs fixing and what doesn’t, bringing to bear a wealth of knowledge, always clear, prompt and easy to talk with. Much of that comes from being a splendid writer himself.”
    Philip Ball
    Freelance Science Writer