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Anjana Ahuja

Science Commentator

Anjana Ahuja is a contributing writer on science, offering weekly opinion on significant developments in global science, health and technology. She was previously a feature writer and columnist at The Times in London.

She is the co-author, with Professor Mark Van Vugt, of Selected: Why Some People Lead, Why Others Follow, and Why It Matters (2010), on the evolution of human leadership. With Sir Jeremy Farrar, she also co-authored the bestselling Spike: The Virus Vs The People (2021/updated paperback 2022), on the inside story of the Covid-19 pandemic. Spike was shortlisted for the 2022 Orwell Prize for Political Writing and is shortlisted for the 2022 Royal Society Science Book Prize.

Anjana has a PhD in space physics from Imperial College London, and studied journalism at City University, London.

Email Anjana Ahuja @anjahuja  on Twitter (link opens in a new browser window)
  • Wednesday, 6 March, 2024
    Chemicals
    The battle against forever chemicals should not become a forever war

    The coveted qualities which make these substances resistant to water and oil has also rendered them virtually indestructible

    Ann Kiernan illustration of pink lake  with dark chemicals on the water’s edge and a toxic sign stuck in the middle of it
  • Wednesday, 28 February, 2024
    Science
    UK scientists don’t need a corporate saviour as their boss

    Replacing a top researcher with a private sector manager would send entirely the wrong signal

    Andy Carter illustration of scientists studying a chalkboard which has the symbols cash multiplied by science drawn on it
  • Wednesday, 21 February, 2024
    Science
    There is magic in the discovery of a new type of magnetism

    Altermagnets could help make computing more energy efficient

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist floating among electrons spinning/whooshing around her, with papers, files, computation/maths symbols floating in the mix
  • Friday, 9 February, 2024
    ReviewHistory books
    Smoke and Ashes review — Amitav Ghosh on the opium trade

    The Ibis trilogy author looks back at how Britain used the drug to pummel India, corrupt China and prop up its empire

    A poppy
  • Wednesday, 7 February, 2024
    OpenAI
    AI’s bioterrorism potential should not be ruled out

    Risk evaluation of the technology cannot be left to the industry alone

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist showing a regulator a screen with an AI/bot mixing chemicals, but behind the scenes we see the full picture and the dangerous chemical it’s making.
  • Wednesday, 31 January, 2024
    Genomics
    The EU risks losing out on farming’s genomic reboot

    Scientists in Africa and elsewhere are seizing the opportunity to transform agriculture

    Andy Carter illustration of 2 branches of a plant, one with a defiant EU type, with his branch wilting and weak looking, and another with African scientists opening a hatch and working on the genes, with a branch full of life.
  • Tuesday, 23 January, 2024
    Science
    The case for a social sciences tsar is stronger than ever

    An exclusionary focus on shiny new technology has left the UK’s research and innovation strategy lopsided

    Andy Carter illustration of three scientific types - a man in a suit with a speech bubble, a woman in a lab coat looking at a microscope and another lab-coated person holding a glass flask containing an orange liquid. They are all under a spotlight.
  • Wednesday, 17 January, 2024
    Space exploration
    A new galactic superstructure could undo science’s theory of the universe

    The finding has provoked a mixed reaction among the cosmological cognoscenti

    Andy Carter illustration of scientists looking through a telescope, with the eye showing up in the end of the telescope with the big ring of galaxies
  • Wednesday, 10 January, 2024
    Science
    Could an AI ‘death calculator’ actually be a good thing?

    A new Danish algorithm exploits the fact that both language and life are sequences

  • Tuesday, 26 December, 2023
    Health
    Worrying about your festive BMI? You may not need to

    The measure is saddled with scientific and historical baggage — and may not be that useful anyway

    A person stands on weighing scales while another paints over the scales’ measurement indicator
  • Friday, 22 December, 2023
    Television
    My University Challenge debut was a heady festive cocktail

    I pored over obituaries, memorised cultural trivia and even learnt the Latin for ‘turkey’ — but prep was not much help

  • Tuesday, 5 December, 2023
    News in-depthNews in-depth3 min
    Crispr gene editing technology could transform medicine | FT Tech

    Questions such as the long-term effects on patients, how much it will cost, and who will have access to it, need answering

    FT Tech: Gene therapy gathers speed
  • Wednesday, 29 November, 2023
    Coronavirus
    How (not) to do science in a crisis

    It is a way of thinking that is open to the curious, not a boxful of unchanging truths only for the initiated

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist and a politician holding off a huge hurricane, closing it together as if it were curtains
  • Wednesday, 22 November, 2023
    Science
    There is an epidemic of scientific fraud

    Rooting out manipulation should not depend on dedicated amateurs who take personal legal risks for the greater good

  • Wednesday, 15 November, 2023
    FT SeriesBest books of the year 2023
    Best books of 2023 — Health & wellness

    Anjana Ahuja selects her must-read titles

    Montage of book covers
  • Tuesday, 14 November, 2023
    Earthquakes
    Volcanic drama reminds us that nature remains in charge

    A river of molten lava is on the move in an Icelandic town

    Andy Carter illustration of an erupting volcano breaking through ice sheets
  • Wednesday, 8 November, 2023
    Science
    Science needs diversity more than ever

    The government should beware stifling the questioning of orthodoxy

    Andy Carter illustration of three scientists under a giant microscope, with the black professor being pulled away by a giant hand of a person in a suit
  • Wednesday, 1 November, 2023
    Science
    How older women defy evolutionary logic

    A new study of chimpanzees has failed to explain why humans and some animals survive post-menopause

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist holding a magnifying glass looking at an older lady
  • Wednesday, 18 October, 2023
    Science
    Even the periodic table must bow to the reality of war

    Sanctions on Russia are changing the hunt for superheavy elements

    A male and female clinician pullback some curtains in a room to reveal a tropical desert island beyond
  • Wednesday, 4 October, 2023
    Satellites
    It’s up to governments to declutter space

    The Earth is encircled with decades-old litter. Who will take control?

    Andy Carter illustration of a man carrying the Earth globe away from cloud of flying space junk.
  • Tuesday, 26 September, 2023
    Disease control and prevention
    ‘Inverse vaccines’ could turn autoimmune treatment upside down

    The latest findings build on experiments from over a century ago

    Ann Kiernan illustration of a woman getting ready to inject herself with a vaccine
  • Wednesday, 13 September, 2023
    Covid-19 vaccines
    The rush to outpace Covid variants

    At least three descendants of Omicron have scientists on alert and vaccination programmes speeding up

    Andy Carter illustration of a man running away from coronavirus proteins while pushing a shopping trolley with a vaccine syringe in it
  • Wednesday, 6 September, 2023
    Science
    New revelations about humans’ near extinction spark scepticism

    The further back in time we go, the more slippery scientific deductions about the origins of Homo sapiens become

    Andy Carter illustration of a classic evolution diagram, with one of the people in the chain jumping over a hole and the man in front of the chain dressed in a white T-shirt, blue jeans and white trainers
  • Wednesday, 30 August, 2023
    Science
    New neutrino research may help answer the question of our existence

    It is possible that the subatomic particles are the reason the Big Bang did not result in nothing

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist physically capturing a neutrino in a jar
  • Wednesday, 23 August, 2023
    Antibiotic resistance
    New bacterial ‘dark matter’ offers hope for a drug-resistant world

    As the antibiotic pipeline empties, a fresh approach to studying bacteria has emerged

    Illustration of a scientist opening a pill capsule to unleash a new antibiotic to kill bacteria
Previous page You are on page 2 Next page

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