Latest Articles
Leatest articles published in the Riiven.
Abraham Lincoln and the Promise of a Nation
At Gettysburg, Lincoln reminded a war-torn nation what it was fighting for: the idea that all men are created equal.
The Small Rooms Where We Become Ourselves
How the March sisters' imperfect, luminous journey toward selfhood still lights the way for anyone torn between duty and desire.
EAT-Lancet Urges 7x Bean Surge for Planetary Diets
EAT-Lancet calls for a 7x increase in bean consumption. Here's why legumes beat beef on nutrition, cost, and climate, plus how to make the shift.
Transgender Inclusion Boosts Athletics Equity
UCLA's transgender inclusion model uses policy alignment, staff training, and belonging metrics to show that equity and competitive excellence coexist.
Federal Cuts Force US Universities to Rethink AI Research
Federal cuts have frozen over $1.2B in US university AI grants. How are universities adapting with private deals, endowments, and global partnerships?
Screening Feedback in Apps Boosts Healthy Eating
A 2026 Swedish study finds that brief screening feedback in food apps meaningfully nudges fruit and vegetable intake. Here is what the research shows.
How the Brain Learns Rules and Exceptions
New brain imaging reveals two distinct neural pathways for learning rules vs. exceptions, with major implications for how we teach and study.
EU Rules Push Fashion Firms to Trace Waste as Hidden Labor
EU textile waste rules are forcing fashion brands to trace supply chains, exposing hidden labor risks from factory floor to landfill. Here is what changes.
Where Gold Meets Skin
Gustav Klimt's The Kiss dissolves the boundary between ornament and feeling, revealing what love looks like when the world falls away.
Dutch WGS Reimbursement Transforms Cancer Care Access
The Netherlands became the first country to fully reimburse whole genome sequencing for cancer patients in 2025. Here is what it means for care access.