Articles
Podcast Pulse Z: Volunteering Abroad experiences
This Podcasts covers details of volunteering as an non-EU citizen abroad, from participant to leader experiences, Mariam tells us about her 2 months of volunteering, cover how it changed her life, career path and made her life overall better.
Al and the Future of Work: Replacement or Reinvention
Artificial intelligence is often imagined as a thinking machine, but in reality it is far closer to a powerful pattern-recognition tool trained on vast amounts of data. While many fear that AI will replace human work entirely, history suggests that new technologies usually transform jobs rather than eliminate them. Machines may excel at speed and analysis, yet qualities such as empathy, moral judgment, and lived experience remain uniquely human. The real challenge, therefore, is not whether AI will shape our future, but how we choose to use it.
How recycling Fashion Trends can cause a Spike in the Rate of Eating Disorders
From the resurgence of Miu Miu skinnies to the "Pilates Princess" aesthetic, the fashion cycle has officially returned to the ultra-thin silhouettes of the late 90s and early 2000s. However, this 2026 revival carries a new, more insidious edge. While the original "Heroin Chic" era was overtly gritty, today’s obsession with thinness is often "repackaged" as holistic health—disguised by protein-loading, gut-cleansing, and the controversial rise of Ozempic.
“Why does Gen Z have a desire to be sad?”: How Social Media Romanticizes Mental Illness
With the increased open discussion and acceptance of mental health, there has been a quiet, yet alarming, change in the way we think as a culture. This is especially true on social media, where, in addition to being acknowledged as a reality, emotional pain has become, in some circles, beautiful, or even desirable. This is especially true on social media, which thrives on engagement, and rewards vulnerability with validation.
How Georgia’s Controversial Government is Undermining the Education System
Georgia’s new education reforms threaten to reduce access to higher education, limit student choice, and increase financial pressure on families. Critics and observers, including opposition parties and OSCE monitors, warn that the changes — including abolishing the 12th grade, restricting university selection, and cutting state grants — could push thousands of students out of school and weaken the country’s alignment with European standards.
Super Bowl – Just a show or road to peace?
The Super Bowl has become an eventful night not only for the American sports-loving community but for people all around the globe. While it is meant to be an exciting...