By Tandeep Sidhu, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of Manitoba Merissa Daborn, Assistant Professor in Indigenous Studies, University of Manitoba
The Toronto Police Service is embroiled in an unprecedented crisis following a criminal investigation that led to several officers being charged with a list of drug trafficking, theft, conspiracy, fraud and other offences related to an organized crime investigation. Project…
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By Arshad Majid, Professor of Cerebrovascular Neurology, School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield
The vagus nerve has quietly shaped how our bodies function for thousands of years. Recently, it has moved into the spotlight, especially in wellness culture, where manipulating it is often described as a way to calm the body, reset the nervous system or even treat a wide range of conditions. As someone who researches the vagus nerve in clinical settings, I think it is important to explain what it actually does, what we know so far and where claims run ahead of the evidence.
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By Viren Swami, Professor of Social Psychology, Anglia Ruskin University
About a decade ago, author Mandy Len Catron wrote an essay for the New York Times about “36 questions that lead to love”. The idea suggests that two people can grow closer – and even fall in love – by answering a series of increasingly intimate questions. Catron described how in 2014 she and an acquaintance went on a date together. During the evening, they took turns asking and answering 36 questions. Before that meeting the pair both admitted to a slight mutual…
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By Paolo Aversa, Professor of Strategy, King's College London
Heavy demands for energy and water risk locking ski resorts into a model that climate change will ultimately make unviable.
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By Janset Özün Çetinkaya, Teaching Associate in Philosophy, University of Nottingham Ian James Kidd, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Nottingham
For Aristotle, the true form of love wasn’t about intense passion or grand gestures on one day of the year.
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By Kelly Hignett, Senior Lecturer in History, Leeds Beckett University
The people of Berlin woke on August 13 1961 to discover that their city had been split in two. Despite the earlier cold war division of Germany into east and west after 1945, the border between the two halves of Berlin had remained open, allowing most Germans to travel, mix and mingle freely across the city. This abruptly changed in 1961 when the East German authorities closed the Berlin border and…
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By Erin Clabough, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Virginia
In 2024, 51% of families read aloud to their very young children, while 37% read aloud to their kids between the ages of 6 and 8 years old. Some parents have said they stop reading aloud to their school-age children because their kids can read on their own. I’m a neuroscientist…
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By Tamsin Johnson, PhD candidate in visual cultures, Nottingham Trent University
Marks and Spencer is one of the latest UK high-street brands to launch a ski-wear collection. Even supermarket Lidl are in on the action, with their ski range starting from £3.99. This follows earlier moves by fast-fashion retailers such as Topshop who launched SNO in the mid 2010’s and Zara’s imaginatively titled Zara Ski collection, which launched in 2023. Fast fashion brand PrettyLittleThing’s Apres Ski edit (a collection of clothes chosen for a specific theme) tells potential shoppers that going skiing is “not…
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By Gerard F. Powers, Director of Catholic Peacebuilding Studies, University of Notre Dame
In recent weeks, Catholic leaders have been increasingly outspoken in their criticism of the Trump administration’s foreign policy, especially its military intervention in Venezuela and saber-rattling over Greenland. On Jan. 19, 2026, the three cardinals heading U.S. archdioceses…
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By Patrick Aguilar, Managing Director of Health, Washington University in St. Louis
In announcing its “Great Healthcare Plan” in January 2026, the Trump administration became the latest in a long history of efforts by the U.S. government to rein in the soaring cost of health care. As a physician and professor studying the intersection of business and health, I know that the challenges in reforming the sprawling U.S. health care system are immense. That’s partly for…
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