By Kristof Titeca, Professor in International Development, University of Antwerp
Bobi Wine’s escape from Uganda is not just a striking episode in itself, it also offers insight into the current state of the opposition – particularly his National Unity Platform party – and into the divergences within the Yoweri Museveni regime. The Ugandan opposition leader had been in hiding for almost two months after the…
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By Ian Caistor-Parker, PhD student, University of Warwick
Characteristics that would come to define Mau Mau camps – neglect, forced labour and ill-health – were ingrained long before 1952.
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By Danny Bradlow, Professor/Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Advancement of Scholarship, University of Pretoria
The sad truth is that African countries cannot avoid being harmed by the current Gulf war. But they can make efforts to emerge from the crisis in a better place.
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By Sarah Barfield Marks, PhD Researcher, Department of Psychology, University of Bath
Addressing the issue requires getting frequent flyers to shift from planes to trains, but also asking wider questions about where we want to go and why.
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By Adam Coutts, Senior Research Fellow, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge
The government’s new social cohesion action plan, Protecting What Matters, is frank about its urgency: “Social cohesion is … not just a good in and of itself. It is also a vital front in the resilience of our national security.” The 2024 Southport attacks and subsequent…
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By Elizabeth Baisley, Assistant Professor, political studies, Queen's University, Ontario Francesco MacAllister-Caruso, PhD Candidate, political science, Concordia University Quinn M. Albaugh, Assistant Professor, political studies, Queen's University, Ontario
Trans people are consistently undercounted in data thanks to flawed practices in collection, analysis and sharing. And if we don’t fix this, policy and advocacy will fail to address their needs.
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By Christina Bouchard, professeure à temps partiel I Part-time professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Several housing developments are currently underway in Montréal incorporating community‑scale features, including walkable streets, lively commercial corridors, galleries and public spaces. While building on infill sites already located in the heart of established cities offers many advantages, densification projects can also present complex challenges during implementation. Drawing on my experiences working as an urban planner and teaching governance at the University of Ottawa, let’s examine emerging trends in urban development projects. Building a neighbourhood…
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By Laura Botello Morte, Personal Docente e Investigador de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad San Jorge Pedro Rodríguez López, Investigador Postdoctoral - Microbiología, Universidad San Jorge
From the moment raw ingredients are harvested to when you cook and eat a meal, an invisible process is taking place: the growth of antimicrobial resistance. This happens when microorganisms (bacteria, fungi, and so on) stop responding to antibiotics or disinfectants. Often described as a “silent pandemic”, antimicrobial resistance is currently one of the greatest threats to global health. Antimicrobial…
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By Anja Shortland, Reader in Political Economy, King's College London
It took less than three minutes for an organised crime gang to steal a Renoir, Matisse and a Cezanne painting collectively worth around €9 million (£7.8m) from a private museum near Parma, Italy in March 2026. This is the second high profile art heist in recent months, after the theft of jewellery worth €9.5 million (£8.25m) from Paris’s Louvre in October 2025. The items stolen are clearly valuable. But, as an expert in the governance of criminal markets, I can tell you acquiring the goods is only the…
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By Can Cinar, Honorary Visiting Researcher, City St George's, University of London
On paper, the numbers look astonishing. The annual rate of inflation in Argentina has plummeted from 211% in 2023 to 31.5% by the end of 2025. President Javier Milei is taking plenty of credit for the drop. And he spent some time on Wall Street last month, pitching his “chainsaw” approach to public spending as a triumph against inflation. But as a political economist who has tracked the cyclical…
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