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Science
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Science

Flagship peer-reviewed journal of AAAS; published the USAID-cuts-violence study on 14 May 2026.

Last refreshed: 17 May 2026

Key Question

What did the Science paper published on 14 May 2026 find about USAID cuts and violence?

Timeline for Science

#314 May

Science links USAID cut to violence

Pandemics and Biosecurity
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Common Questions
What did the Science journal publish about USAID cuts in May 2026?
Science published a study on 14 May 2026 (DOI: 10.1126/Science.aed6802) linking USAID funding cuts to measurable increases in violence in affected countries, providing independent academic evidence that the dismantling of USAID's programmes carried security consequences.Source: Science (AAAS)
Who publishes the Science journal?
Science is published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world's largest general scientific society. It has been published weekly since 1880 and is one of the highest-impact multidisciplinary journals globally.
How does the Science DOI 10.1126/science.aed6802 relate to the Ebola outbreak?
The paper (DOI 10.1126/Science.aed6802), published on 14 May 2026 — the same day Uganda confirmed its cross-border Bundibugyo case — documented that USAID cuts increased violence in recipient countries, directly relevant to the security constraints on the Ituri outbreak response.Source: Science (AAAS)

Background

Science is the flagship weekly peer-reviewed academic journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), founded in 1880. It is one of the world's most widely read scientific journals, publishing research across all disciplines of Science and technology alongside news, commentary, and policy analysis. An impact factor consistently above 40 places it among the highest-ranked multidisciplinary journals globally.

In the context of the May 2026 Bundibugyo ebolavirus PHEIC, Science became directly relevant when it published a study on 14 May 2026 (DOI: 10.1126/Science.aed6802) linking USAID funding cuts to measurable increases in violence in affected countries. The paper provided independent academic evidence that the dismantling of USAID's health and development programmes carried security consequences, not merely public health ones. The timing — published the same day Uganda confirmed its cross-border Bundibugyo case — made the study an immediate reference point in coverage of the PHEIC.

Science's role in public health emergency coverage extends to its rapid publication of epidemiological and response findings; during the 2014-16 West Africa Ebola outbreak it published critical early modelling studies that shaped international response decisions.

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