Today (2017 C.E. - 2025 C.E.)

This archive spans the years 2017 through 2025, a period marked by rapid advances in clean energy, medicine, technology, and social equity. It collects documented breakthroughs, policy wins, and scientific achievements from the present era. If you want evidence that progress is real and ongoing, this is where to look.

Two women holding a young child outdoors for an article about same-sex parental rights

Ukrainian court recognizes same-sex couple as a family for the first time

Same-sex family recognition reached a historic milestone in Ukraine as a Kyiv court ruled that a same-sex couple constitutes a legal family — the first such ruling in Ukrainian history. The case was brought by a serving soldier and his partner of over ten years, highlighting urgent legal gaps that leave LGBTQ+ service members’ partners without medical, property, or benefits protections during wartime. The ruling stops short of marriage equality but establishes family recognition as a viable legal path. Human rights advocates say it adds meaningful momentum to parliamentary discussions on civil partnerships already supported by President Zelenskyy.

The Wisconsin State Capitol building exterior for an article about the Wisconsin abortion ban ruling

Wisconsin Supreme Court strikes down 175-year-old abortion ban

Wisconsin abortion ban struck down by the state Supreme Court, restoring legal abortion access up to 22 weeks for the first time since the 2022 Dobbs ruling. The court ruled that a 1985 state statute regulating abortion care superseded the 1849 pre-Civil War law, which had criminalized all abortions from conception with no exceptions for rape or incest. Clinics that closed after Dobbs can now reopen, restoring care for patients across Wisconsin and the broader Midwest. The decision also offers a legal blueprint advocates may apply in other states with similarly outdated abortion bans still on the books.

A worker replacing a corroded lead pipe in a residential street for an article about Flint lead pipe replacement, for article on lead pipe removal

Flint replaces lead pipes a decade after water crisis exposed a city to poison

Flint lead pipe replacement is complete, with Michigan officials confirming in a court filing that all 11,000 lead service lines have been replaced and more than 28,000 properties restored — fulfilling a core requirement of the city’s 26 million legal settlement. The milestone arrives more than a decade after state-appointed managers switched Flint’s water source in 2014, exposing nearly 100,000 residents to toxic lead. For a majority-Black city that spent years being dismissed by officials, the achievement reflects both relentless community organizing and hard-fought legal accountability. Flint’s struggle directly shaped federal lead pipe policy now affecting cities nationwide.

A farmworker walks through a maize field at dawn for an article about the South Africa terbufos ban — 13 words.

South Africa bans terbufos pesticide, protecting farming communities

Terbufos ban marks a major win for South Africa’s farmworker communities, as the country moves to prohibit one of the world’s most hazardous pesticides starting in 2026. The organophosphate chemical, rated “extremely hazardous” by the World Health Organization, had been routinely applied to maize and sugarcane while exposing rural workers and children to potentially fatal risks. The ban followed a multi-year campaign by the Center for Environmental Rights and the Rural Women’s Assembly, combining toxicological evidence with direct community testimony. South Africa joins the EU and other nations in phasing out terbufos, signaling that grassroots advocacy centered on vulnerable communities can reshape national chemical policy.

A rainforest river winding through dense green jungle in Suriname for an article about Suriname malaria-free certification, for article on dual-insecticide bed nets

Suriname becomes the first Amazon nation certified malaria-free by WHO

Suriname malaria-free certification marks a historic first for the Amazon region, as the World Health Organization officially declared the South American nation free of the disease on June 30, 2025. Suriname became the 46th country worldwide and the first in the Amazon basin to earn this status, completing a decades-long effort that recorded its last locally transmitted case in 2021. The achievement required reaching deeply remote Indigenous and mining communities through trained local health workers and a policy of free treatment regardless of immigration status. That combination of political will, community-centered design, and international support offers a replicable model for neighboring countries still working toward elimination.

A nurse-midwife consulting with a pregnant patient in a rural clinic for an article about autonomous midwifery practice

Virginia gives nurse-midwives the right to practice without physician oversight

Certified nurse-midwives in Virginia can now practice independently after the state eliminated its physician supervision requirement. The change addresses a critical gap in maternity care, particularly in rural counties where obstetric services are scarce or entirely absent. Research consistently shows that midwife-led care for low-risk pregnancies produces strong outcomes for mothers and newborns while reducing unnecessary medical interventions. Virginia joins a growing number of states aligning licensing laws with full practice authority standards, reflecting national momentum to expand access to qualified maternal care providers.

A Vietnamese court building at dusk for an article about Vietnam death penalty reform — 12 words

Vietnam cuts death penalty for eight crimes including corruption and drug offenses

Vietnam death penalty reform marks one of the most significant shifts in the country’s criminal justice history, removing capital punishment from eight categories of offenses including economic crimes and corruption. The revised penal code introduces a restitution pathway allowing convicted individuals to have death sentences commuted to life imprisonment by returning illegally obtained assets, prioritizing recovery of public funds over retribution. This structurally novel approach creates transparent, measurable criteria for sentencing rather than leaving mercy to judicial discretion. The reform aligns Vietnam with a growing global movement to narrow the scope of capital punishment, even where full abolition remains politically difficult.

A diverse group of elected officials at a government building for an article about LGBTQ+ political representation

Out LGBTQ+ elected officials in the U.S. have tripled since 2017

LGBTQ+ elected officials across the United States have more than tripled since 2017, marking an unprecedented expansion in American political history documented by the Victory Fund Institute. Wins are occurring not just in coastal cities but in suburban districts, rural counties, and states once considered out of reach — suggesting a genuine nationwide shift. Research links higher LGBTQ+ representation to stronger non-discrimination protections and more equitable public health policy. For young LGBTQ+ people, seeing someone like themselves hold office measurably affects civic identity and belief that participation matters. The tripling is a milestone, not an endpoint.

Rows of solar panels extending across a vast installation for an article about China's 1 terawatt solar milestone

China becomes the first country to install 1 terawatt of solar power

China’s solar milestone reached one terawatt of installed photovoltaic capacity in 2025, making it the first nation in history to hit that mark, arriving ahead of schedule. The achievement is equivalent to 1.6 million utility-scale solar arrays running simultaneously and now represents half of all solar capacity installed worldwide as recently as 2024. Beyond climate goals, the buildout reflects a strategic push toward energy independence, reducing exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets. Most significantly, China’s manufacturing scale has driven global panel prices to historic lows, making clean energy newly affordable for developing nations that once had no realistic alternative.

Aerial view of a coastal power station at dusk for an article about Ireland coal-free Moneypoint closure

Ireland closes its last coal-fired power plant at Moneypoint

Ireland’s coal-free milestone arrived in 2025 when Moneypoint power station, the country’s only coal-fired plant, shut down permanently after nearly six decades of operation. The closure makes Ireland one of Europe’s first fully coal-free nations and eliminates the single largest source of greenhouse gas emissions from its electricity grid. Wind power, now generating 35-40% of Irish electricity, effectively replaced what coal once provided. Communities near Moneypoint in County Clare stand to see direct air quality improvements, while Ireland’s shift from imported coal to domestic wind also strengthens energy security against volatile global commodity markets.