By Robyn Klingler-Vidra, Vice Dean, Global Engagement | Associate Professor in Political Economy and Entrepreneurship, King's College London
Make American shipbuilding great again (Masga) may sound like an effort by the US to bolster its economic strength and project power internationally, but Masga is not an American policy. It is a South Korean initiative that emerged following trade talks with the US in June. Rather than responding to the Trump administration’s tariff threats solely through trade negotiations, Korean officials saw an opportunity to show their American counterparts that South…
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By Nikki Ikani, Assistant Professor Intelligence & Security, Leiden University; King's College London
There’s an unwritten rule in publishing, or so I’ve been told: don’t write about COVID. Our collective attention span has been saturated by those endless months holed up in attics and cramped corners of apartments, staring out at a world we could no longer take part in. When the worst of it passed, we felt an urge to close that chapter, to padlock it behind a heavy latch. But in doing so, we also tuck away the hard-won lessons of that time: how quickly systems buckle, how two decades of coronavirus warnings…
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By Charlotte Entwistle, Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow in Psychology, University of Liverpool
Is it possible to spot personality dysfunction from someone’s everyday word use? My colleagues and I have conducted research that suggests you can, and often sooner than you might expect. Whether in a quick text message, a long email, a casual chat with a friend, or a comment online, the words people choose quietly reveal deeper patterns in how they think, feel, and relate to others. Everyone has personality traits – habitual ways of thinking, feeling and behaving. When these patterns become rigid, intense or disruptive, they can cause ongoing problems with emotions, sense…
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By Simona Sagone, PhD Candidate, Green Finance, Lund University; University of Palermo
The EU’s new carbon tax is reshaping global trade – and starting to influence what people buy and how much they pay for it.
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By Paul Jones, Associate Dean for Education and Student Experience at Aston Business School, Aston University
The pressure to be joyful can make Christmas feel isolating. A psychologist explains how you can find connection on your own terms.
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By Chris Stokes, Professor in the Department of Geography, Durham University Florence Colleoni, Senior Researcher, Polar Geophysics, National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics (OGS) James Kirkham, Postdoctoral Researcher, Antarctic Geography, British Antarctic Survey
The warning lights from the cryosphere have been flashing red for several years and governments and policymakers ignore this at their peril.
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By Christopher Claassen, Professor of Political Behaviour, University of Glasgow
If you wander through Glasgow Green, you’ll encounter the Doulton fountain, a gaudy terracotta tribute to empire that features “native” and colonial figures in national dress holding out the produce of their lands to the imperial centre. Like thousands of imperial monuments across Britain, the Doulton Fountain is neither widely celebrated nor widely denounced. It is part of the everyday backdrop. That quiet coexistence says a lot about Britain’s relationship with its imperial past. Empire is everywhere…
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By Anita Lifen Zhao, Associate Professor of Marketing at the School of Management, Swansea University Philippa Ward, Professor of Marketing, University of Gloucestershire Ruffin Relja, Senior Lecturer in Marketing, University of Gloucestershire
It’s that time of year again, and retailers are pulling out all the stops to get us spending – from Black Friday to new year’s sales. The average Briton expects to shell out around £300 on Christmas gifts. But as budgets tighten, more people are turning to buy-now-pay-later schemes to spread the cost over time. Our research…
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By Amnesty International
How does systemic racism influence migration policies, asylum systems and border enforcement? Borders are not simply lines on a map or physical barriers separating one place from another. They are a complex infrastructure of control, social ordering and exclusion shaped by racial hierarchies rooted in histories of colonialism, slavery and other forms of oppression such as patriarchy. Experts talk about “racial borders”, referring to the ways migration policies, asylum systems, and […] The post Why systematic racism has a lot to do with migration and asylum systems appeared first on Amnesty…
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By Alison Carroll, Senior Research Fellow, Victorian College of the Arts, The University of Melbourne
Hallyu! at the National Museum of Australia comes from London’s V&A. What a pity we’re not focusing more on the history of Korean–Australian cultural exchange.
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