By Steven Daniels, Lecturer in Politics, Edge Hill University
The UK’s employment rights bill will usher in major changes for workers from April 2026. But beyond promising improved rights for employees over unfair dismissal and sick pay, one of the most controversial aspects of the bill concerns the rights of trade unions. Millions of UK workers belong to a trade union. They are found in virtually every key industry in the UK, including healthcare, education and transport. This new legislation promises to strengthen their rights – notably by forcing employers to…
(Full Story)
|
By Yaz Iyabo Osho, Director of Academic Professional Development, University of Westminster Naomi Alormele, Senior Lecturer in Social Care, University of Northampton
Black women are underrepresented in senior roles in British academia. As of May 2024, there were only 70 Black women professors. This is less than 1% of all female professors in the UK. Black women are also more likely to be employed on fixed-term…
(Full Story)
|
By Jake Phillips, Associate professor, University of Cambridge Hannah Gilman, Lecturer, Arden University
In England and Wales, whole-life imprisonment is the harshest sanction available to the courts, emerging in the decades after the abolition of the death penalty. The whole-life order requires people to spend their whole lives in prison with no prospect of release, except on exceptional compassionate grounds. From 1988, whole-life sentences (called “whole-life tariffs”) could be imposed by the home secretary and were used for handful of criminals. However, a number of legal challenges in the 1990s chipped away at the home secretary’s power to do so. In 2003, the Criminal Justice Act…
(Full Story)
|
By Anthony Smith, Lecturer in Television Theory, University of Salford Laura Minor, Lecturer in Television Studies, University of Salford
Though Netflix has always cultivated an image as television’s great disruptor, the company has persistently adopted, adapted and copied the conventions of legacy television.
(Full Story)
|
By David Toews, Associate Professor of Biology, Penn State
People typically think about evolution as a linear process where, within a species, the classic adage of “survival of the fittest” is constantly at play. New DNA mutations arise and get passed from parents to offspring. If any genetic changes prove to be beneficial, they might give those young a survival edge. Over the great span of time – through the slow closing of a land bridge here or the rise of a mountain range there – species eventually split. They go on evolving slowly along their own trajectories with their own unique mutations. That’s the process that over the past 3.5 billion…
(Full Story)
|
By Hassan Vally, Associate Professor, Epidemiology, Deakin University
The CDC website used to state, clearly and correctly, that the evidence shows no link between vaccines and the development of autism.
(Full Story)
|
By Peter Draper, Professor, and Executive Director: Institute for International Trade, and Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Trade and Environment, University of Adelaide Nathan Howard Gray, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for International Trade, University of Adelaide
This week, US President Donald Trump approved previously banned exports of Nvidia’s powerful H200 artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China. In return, the US government will receive 25% of the sales revenue, in what has become a hallmark of this administration to take a sales cut of a private company’s revenues. The H200 is Nvidia’s second-most powerful AI processor. It’s roughly…
(Full Story)
|
By Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English and Writing, University of Sydney
Andrew Ross Sorkin’s book, 1929, takes us inside the Wall Street crash that led to the Depression. It asks: does history repeat itself? And what can we learn from it?
(Full Story)
|
By Peter Newman, Professor of Sustainability, Curtin University Ray Wills, Adjunct Professor, The University of Western Australia
Gas was long thought to be essential as a backup for a clean energy grid. But enormous growth in grid-scale batteries has changed the game.
(Full Story)
|
By Amnesty International
Responding to reports of a Myanmar military air strike on a hospital in Rakhine State on Wednesday night, international Human Rights Day, Amnesty International’s Myanmar Researcher Joe Freeman said: “Nowhere and no one is safe from the violence of the Myanmar military, which is widening its repression ahead of an election later this month which […] The post Myanmar: Deadly military air strike on hospital shows vicious disregard for right to life appeared first on Amnesty International. ]]>
(Full Story)
|