By Amnesty International
The three-year-long brutal conflict in Sudan between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and their respective allies continues to intensify and to inflict devastating harm on civilians, Amnesty International said today, ahead of the anniversary of the outbreak of the war on 15 April. Each shift of the frontlines has left […] The post Sudan: Three years on, warring parties intensify brutal war on civilians appeared first on Amnesty International. ]]>
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By Carl Singleton, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Stirling David Butler, Associate Professor and Co-Director of the Centre for Sports Economics and Law, School of Economics, University College Cork Robert Butler, Director of the Centre for Sports Economics and Law, University College Cork
In the Premier League, the proportion of a match where the ball is in play is at a near-record low.
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By Lamya Elsabban, Doctoral Researcher in Architecture, Design and the Built Environment, Nottingham Trent University
On religious festival mornings, Egyptians gather among tombs in Cairo’s City of the Dead, a four-mile medieval necropolis at the foot of the Mokattam Hills. They’re upholding a longstanding tradition of remembrance and honouring their deceased loved ones. Though you might expect this ceremony to be marked with silence, the necropolis’s narrow alleys are filled with life as inhabitants carry on with their everyday routines. Dating back to the 7th century, the City…
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By Godfrey Kyazze, Professor of Sustainable Bioprocess Engineering, University of Westminster Merin T Pereira, PhD Candidate, Applied Biotechnology, University of Westminster
Scientists have shown that plastic bottles could be converted into levodopa, an important Parkinson’s drug, with implications for both medicine and the environment.
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By Caroline Millar, Visiting Scholar, Queen’s Business School (Organisation, Work and Leadership), Queen's University Belfast
The core premise of feminism is this: women can do anything. And yes, these days in developed economies, women without children earn about the same as men. The problem is not the opportunities available to them. It’s the opportunities that disappear as women become mothers. This disconnect between paid work and care work is evident. In my research on work and motherhood, I have often found that organisations give little thought to the tensions that arise between women’s work and care identities. A…
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By Mags Lesiak, PhD Researcher in Psychological Criminology, University of Cambridge
Kimberly Milne was 28 when she climbed over the barrier of a motorway bridge and jumped to her death. That night, witnesses saw her cowering from her husband, Lee Milne, in a retail park in Dundee, as he trapped her against a wall. CCTV footage showed her trying to get away while he shouted, drove a car at her and pulled her back into his orbit. In the year before her death, he had choked her, dragged her by the hair, hit her until she fell and lost consciousness, and apologised, promising he was “not that…
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By Enrique Gaztanaga, Professor of Astrophysics at Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth
New research suggests that relic black holes from before the big bang may still shape galaxies today. These black holes could explain dark matter, one of the biggest unsolved questions in cosmology. Generally speaking, black holes are regions of spacetime where matter is compressed into a tiny space. Dark matter, meanwhile, is matter that does not reflect or absorb light. We know it exists because of its gravitational influence on galaxies and other cosmic structures. It can be viewed as the…
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By Richard Hargy, Visiting Research Fellow in International Studies, Queen's University Belfast
The US is bracing for another cycle of elections, with November’s midterms determining the scope of Donald Trump’s power in the final two years of his presidency. All seats in the House of Representatives will be contested, as will one-third of the Senate. Trump’s Republican party currently controls both branches of Congress. However, polls are indicating a swing to the Democrats that would see them retake the House. A current RealClear generic congressional…
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By Robin Styles, Researcher in the Sustainability Research Institute, University of Leeds
My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein is Deborah Levy’s latest genre-defying novel. It is at once a compelling contemporary fiction and an extended meditation on the importance of Stein, who Levy describes as the godmother of modernism, a queer icon, a self-declared genius and a writer who has baffled readers and critics for a century. The structure of Levy’s novel artfully embraces many of Stein’s concerns. Stein was an artist…
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By Michelle Spear, Professor of Anatomy, University of Bristol
Why do medical students remember rude mnemonics decades later? The answer reveals something fascinating about how all of us learn and remember.
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