By Chee Meng Tan, Assistant Professor of Business Economics, University of Nottingham
As China heads into the new year it will start rolling out its 15th five‑year plan, this one is for 2026-2030. Beijing is doubling down on greening its economy, and aims to hit two major climate goals: “carbon peaking”, where carbon dioxide emissions have reached a ceiling by 2030, and “carbon neutrality”,…
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By Steve Parissien, Lecturer in Architectural History, University of Oxford
As a cultural historian who has worked with and lectured on the drinks industry for many years I was asked to write a book about post-war Britain and the drinks that made it. I immediately knew I had to include Babycham – a post-austerity tipple that had made Britain smile. Britain in the early 1950s was gradually emerging from the shadow of war and was dealing with bankruptcy and post-war shortages. By the time of Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation in 1953, British manufacturing was getting back on its feet. In that year, a little-known Somerset brewery, Showerings, hit upon…
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By Devin Smart, Assistant Professor, Department of History, West Virginia University
Rural people mostly grew their own food. But in the city, the daily meal became a commodity to be bought and sold.
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By Samuel Cornell, PhD Candidate in Public Health & Community Medicine, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney Masaki Shibata, Lecturer in Intercultural Studies, Monash University
Every summer in Australia, millions of people head to the beach, and every year, thousands are rescued by lifeguards or Surf Life Savers and even surfers…
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By Justin Bergman, International Affairs Editor, The Conversation
Several cases before the court will be pivotal in determining how much power Trump is able to accrue – and what he’ll be able to do with it.
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By Christian Brakenridge, Research Fellow, Iverson Health Innovation Research Institute, Swinburne University of Technology
Yes, there is evidence changing your desk set up can help with fat loss, improving cholesterol, blood pressure and metabolism. But try this before you buy.
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By Alex Bellamy, Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies, The University of Queensland
By any measure, 2025 was not a good year for world peace. Worse, it was just the latest of a decade-long decline of peace and upsurge of war. As author of a book on world peace and how we can achieve it (that’s literally the title), here’s my assessment. Grim numbers Peace is on the decline around the world by many measures. The Armed Conflict Location and Event Data index, a UN-funded independent monitor, reports global conflict…
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By Simon Lamb, Associate Professor in Geophysics, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
Young Earth was a blue planet covered in oceans, much like today. But the atmosphere was a lethal cocktail of gases, with no oxygen.
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By Milad Haghani, Associate Professor and Principal Fellow in Urban Risk and Resilience, The University of Melbourne Abbas Rajabifard, Professor in Geomatics and SDI, The University of Melbourne Neema Nassir, Associate Professor, The University of Melbourne Zahra Shahhoseini, Research Fellow in Public Health, Monash University
Choosing an area to live is tricky. But many people overlook the importance of walkable, leafy and quiet suburbs. Here’s how to check.
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By Konstantine Panegyres, Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History, The University of Western Australia
If you were to visit a bookshop in the ancient world, what would it be like? You don’t just have to imagine it. The ancient Roman writer Aulus Gellius, who lived in the 2nd century CE, gives us a number of descriptions of his adventures at bookstores. In one passage, he describes an encounter at one in Rome, which he was visiting with a poet friend: I…
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