Dr. Sarah Buckland-Reynolds is a Christian, Jamaican, Environmental Science researcher, and journal associate editor. She holds the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Geography from the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona with high commendation, and a postgraduate specialization in Geomatics at the Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia. The quality of her research activity in Environmental Science has been recognized by various awards including the 2024 Editor’s Award from the American Meteorological Society for her reviewing service in the Weather, Climate and Society Journal, the 2023 L’Oreal/UNESCO Women in Science Caribbean Award, the 2023 ICETEX International Experts Exchange Award for study in Colombia. and with her PhD research in drought management also being shortlisted in the top 10 globally for the 2023 Allianz Climate Risk Award by Munich Re Insurance, Germany. Motivated by her faith in God and zeal to positively influence society, Dr. Buckland-Reynolds is also the founder and Principal Director of Chosen to G.L.O.W. Ministries, a Jamaican charitable organization which seeks to amplify the Christian voice in the public sphere and equip more youths to know how to defend their faith.
An undergraduate class project, later published in a journal, ends up reinforcing evolutionary dogma, even while candidly admitting that ‘no one knows, from a scientific perspective, how life could have been formed from an early Earth that had no life.’
As we celebrate International Day of Happiness, we explore some amazing scientific insights into the health benefits of joy and dangers of depression – just as the Bible described thousands of years ago.
The world’s driest non-polar desert is more hospitable than space. Evolutionists view organismal adaptation as evidence for macroevolution, but is this a valid notion?
An 18‑month ethnographic study of AI therapy simulations exposes profound ethical breaches and systemic underperformance, underscoring that genuine human empathy cannot be reduced to mere syntax.
Scientists have uncovered evidence of what they describe as “prehistoric mathematical thinking” in early Mesopotamian art, challenging long‑held assumptions about the gradual evolution of human knowledge.