By Tim Holmes, Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Policing, Bangor University
In the recent king’s speech, King Charles outlined a series of UK government proposals, including plans to move forward with digital identity through the digital access to services bill. The government says the scheme is designed to modernise access to public services, allowing people to verify who they are more quickly and securely. The proposal is voluntary. But after last September’s politically bruising debate over compulsory national ID cards, digital identity may once again become a contentious…
(Full Story)
|
By Angus Harrison, Senior Lecturer in Law, The University of Law
The 46 countries bound by the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) have signed a new declaration on migration, setting out how they believe human rights law should apply to migration issues. With the ECHR playing a contentious role in immigration discourse in the UK, the UK government trailed this declaration as a…
(Full Story)
|
By Eva Cheuk-Yin Li, Lecturer in Screen Industries, King's College London
Set in 1930s Taiwan under Japanese colonial rule, Taiwan Travelogue follows fictional Japanese novelist Aoyama Chizuko and her Taiwanese interpreter, Ō Chizuru (or Ông Tshian-ho'h), as they journey across colonial Taiwan by rail, encountering its diverse local food cultures. But Taiwan Travelogue is far more than a historical travel narrative. Through meals, translation and silences, Yáng explores colonial power, intimacy and the limits of empathy. At first glance, the novel almost resembles a cookbook. Each…
(Full Story)
|
By Olga Lazareva, Professor of Psychology, Drake University Reggie Gazes, Associate Professor of Psychology, Bucknell University
On your mental number line, are the numbers smaller on the left or on the right? Two comparative cognition researchers explain how culture may influence the orientation – but also may not.
(Full Story)
|
By HaDi MaBouDi, Research fellow, University of Sheffield
Even advanced technology can struggle when the real world becomes unpredictable. In April 2026, a Waymo robotaxi in San Antonio, Texas, drove into a flooded lane during severe weather, prompting the company to recall about 3,800 vehicles for a software fix. No one was injured, but the incident exposed a deeper challenge: intelligence is not just about processing data. It is about knowing where to look, what to notice, when to act and…
(Full Story)
|
By Amir Bahman Radnejad, Chair and Associate Professor of Innovation and Marketing, Mount Royal University Brenda Nguyen, Associate Professor, Dhillon School of Business - Organizational Behaviour and Human Resources, University of Lethbridge
For Canada’s regulatory reform proposals to work, federal leaders need to stick to tight timelines even when faced with lawsuits and provincial pushback.
(Full Story)
|
By Scott Shackelford, Professor of Business Law and Ethics, Indiana University
The federal task force that defends US elections has been largely absent this election cycle, and the threat-sharing hub it relied on has been defunded.
(Full Story)
|
By Yeimy J. Rivera, Researcher in Astrophysics, Smithsonian Institution
The Sun is a complex physical body. It generates incredible amounts of heat and a strong, often tangled, magnetic field.
(Full Story)
|
By Alex Krasnok, Assistant Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Florida International University
Quantum computers are still a work in progress but quantum sensors are already in use at hospitals, laboratories and by defense contractors.
(Full Story)
|
By Susan Radzilowski, Lecturer in Social Work, University of Michigan
Misinformation and a shifting legal landscape have left many families with trans children uncertain about what care doctors can still provide.
(Full Story)
|