Category: Analysis
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Should you pour coffee down the drain? An environmental scientist explains
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kevin Collins, Senior Lecturer, Environment & Systems, The Open University Gorgev/Shutterstock A woman was recently fined £150 by a council for pouring coffee down a drain before getting on a bus. The fine has now been rescinded, but the incident has prompted many discussions about whether…
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Plaid Cymru’s staggeringly large victory in Caerphilly is a warning to both Labour and Reform
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Matt Wall, Associate Professor, Political and Cultural Studies, Swansea University If any seat has a claim to be part of Labour’s electoral heartland, it is Caerphilly. Labour’s electoral dominance there reaches all the way back to the creation of the constituency in the 1918 UK general…
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Humans have an internal lunar clock – but light pollution is disrupting it
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Stefano Arlaud, PhD candidate in Time Processing and Metacognition of Time Processing, SBBS, Queen Mary University of London Flash Vector/Shutterstock Most animals, including humans, carry an internal lunar clock, tuned to the 29.5-day rhythm of the Moon. It guides sleep, reproduction and migration of many species.…
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Why Beijing is looking to exert tighter control over Chinese Christians
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Gerda Wielander, Professor of Chinese Studies, University of Westminster Chinese authorities detained Ezra Jin, the leader of the Zion Church, on October 10 alongside more than 30 church staff and pastors. The arrests come amid the largest crackdown on Christian churches in China in recent years,…
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John Grisham’s The Widow: a legal mystery that asks if a sleazy lawyer can ever be seen as a ‘good’ victim
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Sarah-Jane Coyle, PhD Candidate, School of Arts, English and Languages, Queen’s University Belfast Is there such a thing as the “perfect victim”? Is it an old lady who is suddenly mugged on the street? And where does a greedy lawyer, eager to profit from an elderly…
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Voiced: Barbican festival highlights endangered languages and their connection to art
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jessica Mary Bradley, Senior Lecturer in Literacies and Language, University of Sheffield Throughout October, the Barbican in London is hosting Voiced: The Festival for Endangered Languages. It’s the first UK festival for artists who create in indigenous languages and dialects. And it explores themes of art,…
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What a newly identified portrait of a black Napoleonic soldier reveals about British Army diversity
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Michael Rowe, Reader in European History, King’s College London The Napoleonic wars were fought on a bigger scale than any conflict that had gone before. Though concentrated in Europe, their impact was global. They conjure up images of huge battles fought between armies in colourful and…
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Is Halloween more trick than treat? The dangers of overeating sugar, liquorice and sherbet
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Dan Baumgardt, Senior Lecturer, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Bristol Jaclyn Vernace/Shutterstock Trick or treat? Something I won’t be hearing at my own door this Halloween. Myself and the other misers of our village will once again be shunning anyone ringing the bell in…
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The lost history of Latin America’s role in averting catastrophe during the Cuban missile crisis
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Renata Keller, Associate Professor of History, University of Nevada, Reno A map prepared by the Defense Department in 1962 shows potential ranges of Soviet ballistic missiles from Cuba. Department of Defense Cuban Missile Crisis briefing materials/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Sixty-three years ago,…
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Navigating mental illness in the workplace can be tricky, but employees are entitled to accommodations
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – USA (3) – By Julie Wolfe, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus Coping with mental illness can make starting and completing simple tasks at work more difficult. Fiordaliso/Moment via Getty Images Mental health challenges can affect anyone, regardless of background or circumstance, and they are…
