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By Lexi Eikelboom, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry, Australian Catholic University 
The documentary, 1,000 Men & Me: The Bonnie Blue Story, has made Tia Billinger – stage name Bonnie Blue – a household name. 
 Famous for her sexual stunts, including one in which she has sex with more than 1,000 men in 12 hours, Bonnie Blue fascinates us because we do not understand her.
 
 Billinger claims to be an embodiment of feminism. She points out she is rich and independent, and says she has taken control of her sexualisation. Yet it is difficult…
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By Jon Faine, Vice Chancellor's Fellow, The University of Melbourne 
Australia has been, and continues to be, remarkably resilient. But the fragile machinery of democracy needs some long overdue maintenance. (Full Story) | 
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By Brendon Larson, Professor, School of Environment, Resources and Sustainability, University of WaterlooRaymundo Martínez Jiménez, MSc, Instituto Politécnico Nacional
 Ronda L. Brulotte, Professor of Geography & Environmental Studies and Anthropology, University of New Mexico
 
Tequila’s manufacturing process consumes huge amounts of energy, water and agrochemicals. While some make lots of money, those who harvest the crops make significantly less. (Full Story) | 
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By Gemma Ware, Host, The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation 
Why early Protestants embraced demons and witches but turned their backs on ghosts. Listen to expert Penelope Geng on The Conversation Weekly podcast. (Full Story) | 
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By Maud Borie, Senior Lecturer in Environment, Science & Society, King's College LondonSarah Bracking, Professor of Climate and Society, King's College London
 
At its most basic level, sciencewashing entails using the vocabulary of science, and borrowing its authority, to claim sustainability outcomes. (Full Story) | 
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By Anna Turns, Senior Environment Editor, The ConversationSarah Reid, Senior Business Editor, The Conversation
 
This week, The Conversation UK’s environment and business teams join forces to look into how we as consumers can make our money greener. (Full Story) | 
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By Muireann McMahon, Associate Professor, School of Architecture & Product Design, University of Limerick 
Hospitals generate thousands of tonnes of waste every year – much of it single-use plastics. But a circular future for healthcare is closer than you might think. (Full Story) | 
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By Lynda Yorke, Associate Professor (Senior Lecturer) in Critical Physical Geography, Bangor UniversityGiuseppe Forino, Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Salford
 
A century after a dam burst in Dolgarrog, killing 16 people, the Welsh village still lives with the legacy that reshaped UK safety laws and its own identity. (Full Story) | 
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By Femi Owolade, Research Associate, Sheffield Hallam University 
Every few years, a familiar anxiety resurfaces in British public discourse: that sharia law is establishing a parallel legal system and threatening the sovereignty of English law. Those fears were reignited following Donald Trump’s recent speech to the UN, where he claimed that London wants “to go to sharia law”. 
 Such claims ignore two realities. First,…
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By Abi Crane, Postgraduate Researcher in Palaeontology, University of Southampton 
A new specimen of one of the most controversial species of dinosaur has the potential to overturn decades of research on the T rex.
 Nanotyrannus, the “miniature T rex”, has been the centre of one of the fiercest debates in palaeontology. Scientists have long argued over whether the Nanotyrannus is a separate species or just a young T rex.
 
 The controversy 
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