By Leonie Fleischmann, Senior Lecturer in International Politics, City St George's, University of London
The ceasefire in Gaza is on shaky ground as Donald Trump looks to progress his peace plan on to its second phase.
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By Marion Vannier, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, University of Manchester; Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA)
Hope is not a soft word in prison. It shapes how people cope with their sentence and it determines whether - and how - they engage with staff and other prisoners.
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By Barbara Jacquelyn Sahakian, Professor of Clinical Neuropsychology, University of Cambridge Christelle Langley, Postdoctoral Research Associate, Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Cambridge
Sadly, there is no cure for Huntington’s disease. But a couple new research papers suggests this may be about to change.
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By Erhan Kilincarslan, Reader in Accounting and Finance, University of Huddersfield
UK inflation may be easing, but many households still find their weekly shop getting more expensive. One key reason is something not captured in headline prices: shrinkflation, where manufacturers reduce pack sizes without reducing the price. Shrinkflation has become more common thanks to the steep increase in the cost of living in recent years. A 2025…
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By Matt Jacobsen, Senior Lecturer in Film History in the School of Society and Environment, Queen Mary University of London
I would be surprised if anything else at the cinema in 2026 can match the bizarre spectacle of The Bone Temple’s best sequence.
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By Akhil Bhardwaj, Associate Professor (Strategy and Organisation), School of Management, University of Bath
Governments across the world want AI to do more of the heavy lifting when it comes to public services. The plan is apparently to make make things much more efficient, as algorithms quietly handle a country’s day to day admin. For example, AI might help tackle tax fraud, by working out ways of targeting those most likely to be offending. Or it might be to help public health services screen for various cancers, triaging cases at scale and flagging those deemed most at risk. But what…
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By Vassilis Galanos, Lecturer in Digital Work in the Management, Work and Organisation Division, Stirling Business School, University of Stirling
Around the turn of the century, the internet underwent a transformation dubbed “web 2.0”. The world wide web of the 1990s had largely been read-only: static pages, hand-built homepages, portal sites with content from a few publishers. Then came the dotcom crash of 2000 to 2001, when many heavily financed, lightly useful internet businesses collapsed. In the aftermath, surviving companies and new entrants leaned into a different logic that the author-publisher Tim O’Reilly later described…
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By Thomas York, Postgraduate Researcher in Human Geography, University of Leicester
The UK government has just announced the results of its biggest-ever auction for new offshore wind projects. By doubling the budget at the eleventh hour, it managed to award contracts for a massive 8.4 gigawatts of new capacity. Energy secretary Ed Miliband described it as “a monumental step towards clean power by 2030”. But despite the headline success, this outcome actually makes the government’s own clean…
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By Lauren Ball, Professor of Community Health and Wellbeing, The University of Queensland Emily Burch, Accredited Practising Dietitian and Lecturer, Southern Cross University
Last week, United States health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr released the government’s revamped dietary guidelines for 2025 to 2030. These recommendations on healthy eating are updated every five years and help shape food policy and education for millions of Americans. Under the slogan “eat real food”, the new guidelines recommend…
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By Ama Samarasinghe, Lecturer, Financial Planning and Tax, RMIT University
It’s an enticing idea – but done the wrong way, it could hit some of the very cardholders it’s meant to help.
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