Category: English
-
Digital ID cards: what are they and how will they help the UK deal with illegal immigration?
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Tim Holmes, Lecturer in Criminology & Criminal Justice, Bangor University The UK’s new digital ID card scheme, announced by Keir Starmer on September 26, has two big questions swirling around it. Is it a solution to illegal immigration? And will it give the government too much…
-
A landmark treaty could protect the high seas – and spark new conflicts
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Naporn Popattanachai, Lecturer in Environmental and Marine Law, University of Galway BobbyWjr / shutterstock Two-thirds of the world’s oceans lie beyond national borders, an unregulated expanse under growing pressure from mining, fishing and climate change. Now, a new UN treaty promises to change that – but…
-
How water fuels conflict in Pakistan
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Daanish Mustafa, Professor in Critical Geography, King’s College London Two children walk along a burst water pipeline in Karachi, southern Pakistan. Asianet-Pakistan / Shutterstock For ten days in April 2025, Pakistan almost came to a standstill. No freight was moving from its only port city, Karachi,…
-
Nigel Farage’s pledge to end indefinite leave could hurt the economy even before an election
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Tom Montgomery, Lecturer in Work and Organisations, University of Stirling Nigel Farage’s proposal to abolish indefinite leave to remain is a shifting of the goalposts for those who have already come to the UK legally and settled. Framing issues of migration as a crisis has been…
-
Why Charli XCX might be Gen Z’s answer to the Romantic poets
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Katie MacLean, PhD Student, University of Stirling Popstar Charli XCX is turning her hand to acting in the new film Erupcja. In it, she recites Lord Byron’s poem Darkness. Charli and Byron may be 200 years apart, but the legacies of Romantic poetry are alive in…
-
Booker shortlist 2025: six novels (mostly) about middle age that are anything but safe and comfortable
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jenni Ramone, Associate Professor of Postcolonial and Global Literatures, Nottingham Trent University The Times has described the 2025 Booker Prize shortlist as “revenge of the middle-aged author”“. If the phrase sounds derogatory, it isn’t meant that way: the review also describes the shortlist as “novels for…
-
Starmer has enabled the far-right – promises of ‘progressive patriotism’ are no longer enough
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By George Newth, Lecturer in Politics and member of Reactionary Politics Research Network, University of Bath Faced with an insurgent UK far right backed by a billionaire oligarch, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s pledge to lead the progressive fightback is long overdue. If Starmer’s speech, however, is to…
-
When mental health apps become worry engines: how digital ‘care’ can hijack our anxieties
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Mikael Klintman, Professor of Sociology, Lund University voronaman/Shutterstock It’s 2:47 am and your phone buzzes on the nightstand. The notification suddenly glows in the darkness: “You’re on a 7-day streak!”; “Don’t break your streak!”. You feel the need to open the app right away for an…
-
Don’t cut them out: lymph nodes may be key to cancer treatment
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Justin Stebbing, Professor of Biomedical Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University Oleksandra Bolotina/Shutterstock.com Removing lymph nodes during cancer surgery has saved countless lives in many tumour types. Yet recent research is challenging parts of this long-standing practice. Imagine your body’s immune defences as a city, and lymph nodes…
-
Trump’s love affair with crypto raises worries about presidential conflict and influence
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Thomas Gift, Associate Professor and Director of the Centre on US Politics, UCL US president Donald Trump’s “meme coin” $TRUMP fell about 8% in five minutes in late September 2025, wiping millions off its value. Users can buy and sell this cryptocurrency, inspired by an internet…
