By Dušan Radunović, Associate Professor/Director of Studies (Russian), Durham University Daniel O'Brien, Lecturer, Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies, University of Essex
The exceptional historical film has had such a profound impact on western visual culture that many may not realise how deeply its language is rooted in mainstream cinema.
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By Genevieve Johnson, Associate Lecturer in history, Newcastle University
Mary Ann Macham’s story is an example of a larger phenomenon of Black American refuge in Britain in the 19th century.
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By Eef Hogervorst, Professor of Biological Psychology, Loughborough University
Research linking cheese and cream to lower dementia risk has made headlines, but the story is more nuanced than it might sound.
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By Taylor Snowden, Post-Doctoral Fellow, Neuroscience, Université de Montréal
The claim that the brain, and particularly the frontal lobe, finishes developing at 25 is far less solid than social media would have you believe.
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By Deanna Needell, Professor of Mathematics, UBC. Co-Director Programs, Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences, University of British Columbia Kristine Bauer, Associate Professor, University of Calgary Ozgur Yilmaz, Professor of Mathematics and Director of PIMS, University of British Columbia
AI shapes daily life but remains unreliable and costly. Canada can lead by investing in the mathematics that make these systems fair, efficient and trusted.
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By Flora Thomas
Criticism around the prime minister’s posturing, which academic Richard Drayton called “defiantly, even rudely, anti-Caricom,” started in September, when the U.S. began to assert its military presence in the region.
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By Sulette Ferreira, Transnational Family Specialist and Researcher, University of Johannesburg
More than one million South Africans, about 1.6% of the country’s population of 63 million, currently live overseas. Emigration is never a solitary event or a purely economic decision. When one person leaves, an entire network of relationships is reshaped. This means that parents, grandparents, siblings and friends are left behind, making it challenging to maintain close bonds across continents. Despite vast geographical distances and the challenges of differing time zones, the enduring parent–child…
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By Cecilia Maundu
Across Africa, Reporters Without Borders has documented sustained online harassment and surveillance targeting women journalists in West Africa, noting that digital abuse has become an emerging barrier to press freedom.
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By Samuel Lloyd, PhD Candidate, Department of Psychology, University of Victoria Katya Rhodes, Assistant Professor, School of Public Administration, University of Victoria
2025 has been a year of setbacks for Canada’s climate policy. In November, the federal and Alberta governments signed a memorandum of understanding to remove strict climate policies in the province and to support the construction of a new pipeline from Alberta to northern British Columbia. The government also cancelled the federal carbon tax this year, while ending funding for home…
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By Fatme Abdallah, PhD Candidate, English and Writing Studies, Western University
‘You Will Not Kill Our Imagination: A Memoir of Palestine and Writing in Dark Times,’ sees author Saeed Teebi examine the effects of the genocide on Palestinian art and imagination.
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