Prøve GULL - Gratis
When dogma trumps science
New Zealand Listener
|October 4-10, 2025
The US administration's health and science funding cuts challenge NZ's role in global research in areas such as vaccines and climate change.
One of glaciologist Lauren Vargo's summer highlights over the past two years has been to take a group of teenage girls to Mt Ruapehu to introduce them to the outdoors, science and art. They would stay in an alpine hut, practise moving safely across snowfields and the volcanic landscape, sharpen their observational skills by sketching mountain ridges and design their own research projects. Vargo, a research fellow at Victoria University of Wellington Te Herenga Waka, also hoped to inspire the girls to consider working in research or other careers that remain dominated by men.
Girls* on Ice Aotearoa is for 15- to 16-year-old girls but also encourages applications from female-identifying, non-binary and intersex students. It is one of many international branches that grew from Inspiring Girls Expeditions, which started in the US in 1999, and financial support came from the US Embassy in New Zealand. Vargo, who moved here from the US in 2016, took part in the 2022 American expedition in Alaska as a science instructor.
But within weeks of Donald Trump's inauguration for his second term as US president, Vargo heard that Girls* on Ice Alaska had lost the bulk of its funding. Not long after, she received a letter from the US Department of State informing her the embassy grant would be cancelled because it no longer “effectuates agency priorities”.
The executive order to end “radical and wasteful government diversity, equity and inclusion programs” was one of 26 Trump signed during his first day back in office. Girls* on Ice Aotearoa was among the first international projects to lose its US funding.
Since then, the Trump administration has “unleashed an unprecedented rapid-fire campaign to remake ... vast swathes of the federal government's scientific and public health infrastructure”, according to
Denne historien er fra October 4-10, 2025-utgaven av New Zealand Listener.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA New Zealand Listener
New Zealand Listener
All the time in the world
A thought-provoking novel set on a sentient, planet-like spacecraft as humanity roams the interstellar void.
3 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Reaching Fifa pitch
Everything you need to know about where to watch the football World Cup and follow the All Whites.
2 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Say the truth faster
Comedian Chris Parker on the Topps’ legacy
1 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Gimme shelter
Kurt Vile goes home to escape America
2 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Silent minds
Some people have a complete absence of an inner monologue. My daughter is one of them.
3 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
What the cat brought in
I keep thinking he'll be there when I come out of the bedroom in the mornings, or that he's sitting just out of my eyeline.
2 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Untouchable girls, impossible songs
DON MCGLASHAN, who produced the Topp Twins in the studio and wrestled with their songs on stage, pays tribute to the late Jools Topp, the one, he says, who did the musical heavy lifting in the duo.
6 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
The kids deserve better
Most grandparents would do anything to protect their grandchildren, writes Anna Kenna, but how many will step up to demand a better world?
2 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Sink or swim
Janet, who lives just around the bend with Blokesy Stokesy, sent a text: “Guess what’s on our kitchen bench at the moment.”
2 mins
June 13-19, 2026
New Zealand Listener
Casting off the past
A coming of age tale set among a family of storytellers in Italy unfolds into an alluring love story.
3 mins
June 13-19, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

