By David Mead, Professor of UK Human Rights Law, University of East Anglia
The High Court has ruled that the UK government’s proscription of the group Palestine Action was unlawful. This is a welcome decision for advocates of free speech and the right to protest, but it is not the end of this story. Organisations can be proscribed (banned) if the home secretary believes they are “concerned in terrorism” under the definition…
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By Jack Shelbourn, Senior Lecturer and Director of Photography, University of Lincoln
The Bafta film awards are brilliant at making film feel like it matters. The clothes, the cameras, the applause, the shared cultural moment. That spectacle is the point. But it also has a climate shadow. Not just from the night itself, but from the behaviour it effectively rewards and normalises in the weeks around it. Here’s the awkward truth: the biggest carbon impact in film and TV isn’t the red carpet. It’s travel. And awards season is, in effect, a celebration of travel. Industry data backs this up. Bafta Albert is the film and TV industry’s sustainability…
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By Jessica Irving, Associate Professor in Global Seismology, University of Bristol Elizabeth Day, Senior Teaching Fellow in Geophysics, Imperial College London
When we dream of landscapes, we might imagine rolling valleys or rugged mountains. But there is a whole landscape hidden from human view: the secret world of the seafloor. Half of Earth’s oceans are more than 3.2km deep. Beneath them lie cavernous plains untouched by sunlight, vast gaping trenches made by Earth’s tectonic plates shifting, and ranges of underwater mountains on which no human has ever set foot. We have better maps of the surface…
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By Karin Book, Associate Professor, Department of Sports Sciences, Malmö University
For the Olympics to be viable in a warming world, new models of planning and hosting are necessary. Milano–Cortina 2026’s geographical dispersion could be a solution
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By Dipa Kamdar, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, Kingston University
Many people assume that medicines sold over the counter are inherently safe. After all, if you can buy something in a supermarket or high street pharmacy, how dangerous can it really be? The reality is more complicated. Several commonly used over-the-counter medicines carry a real risk of dependence, misuse or harm when taken in higher than recommended doses, for longer than needed, or for the wrong reasons. Here are five medicines it is worth knowing about.
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By Liam Kennedy, Professor of American Studies, University College Dublin
The case of Seamus Culleton – who was detained by US immigration agents in Boston in September 2025 – is proving a diplomatic headache for the Irish government ahead of a visit to the White House on St Patrick’s Day. Culleton arrived in the US in 2009, overstaying his visa. He married a US citizen last year and obtained a valid work permit, and was in the process of applying for permanent residency when he was apprehended by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers and detained. He has remained in detention in Texas since. A US court has now issued a temporary…
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By Humayun Kabir, Assistant Teaching Professor, Dept. of Environment, Culture, & Society, Thompson Rivers University
This election is the first following the 2024 July uprising that led to the ouster of the country’s longest-serving prime minister, Sheikh Hasina.
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By Lee Ann Rawlins Williams, Clinical Assistant Professor of Education, Health and Behavior Studies, University of North Dakota
I spoke in January 2026 with 150 high school students about career options. After explaining my own career as a professor of education, health and behavior, I asked the students a simple question: Would you want to be a teacher? “Why in the world would I want to be a teacher?” one female student said. “My aunt is a teacher and she works all the time … no thanks,” a male student added. Several students said it felt like teachers were doing everything: from teaching lessons…
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By Jason Zenor, Associate Professor of Mass Communication, State University of New York Oswego
The law is on Trump’s side, in most cases, when his administration names things after him. But citizens still have the right to protest.
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By John M. Kinder, Professor of History and American Studies, Oklahoma State University Jennifer Murray, Assistant Professor of History, Shepherd University
As anger about the presence of ICE in Minneapolis divided the nation, Americans turned to the American Civil War for metaphors.
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