Category: MIL OSI
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What will Trump’s deal with Xi mean for the US economy and relations with China? Expert Q&A
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Tom Harper, Lecturer in International Relations, University of East London It was 12 out of ten, said US president Donald Trump when reporting back on his meeting with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. The two men met in the South Korean city of Busan on October…
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Witch memorials are quietly spreading across Europe
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jan Machielsen, Senior Lecturer in Early Modern History, History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardiff University Across Europe, campaigns for national witch memorials are gathering pace. In the Netherlands, a charity recently announced it had selected the design for a monument in Roermond, the site of the country’s…
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The painting that haunts me – seven experts share their favourite scary artwork
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Chloe Ward, Senior Lecturer in the History of British Art, Queen Mary University of London Saturn Devouring His Son by Francisco Goya (1820-1823). Museo del Prado With Halloween approaching, we asked seven of our academic experts to tell us about the most unsettling artwork they’ve ever…
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The surprising ways Halloween treats can interact with your medications
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Dipa Kamdar, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, Kingston University Yta23/Shutterstock As Halloween approaches, the air fills with excitement. Costumes are planned, pumpkins are carved, and the promise of sweet treats is everywhere. But while dipping into chocolates and colourful candies may seem harmless, some ingredients in…
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Trick or treatment: Halloween health hazards hiding in plain fright
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Adam Taylor, Professor of Anatomy, Lancaster University yurakrasil/Shutterstock.com While Halloween offers a chance to embrace all things spooky and supernatural, the real terrors this season aren’t confined to ghost stories. From pumpkin-carved fingers to contact lens infections that can lead to life-threatening heart conditions, the festivities…
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Special educational needs reform could be a bureaucratic nightmare – here’s how to put families first
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Paty Paliokosta, Associate Professor of Special and Inclusive Education, Kingston University PeopleImages/Shutterstock Plans to reform support for children with special educational needs in England have been delayed after the government announced its new policy would not be unveiled until 2026, rather than autumn 2025. However, there…
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Women folk healers were branded as witches, but their treatments may have been medically sound
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Anthony Booker, Reader in Ethnopharmacology, University of Westminster AlexShevchenko78/Shutterstock “Hubble bubble toil and trouble” is a quote from Shakespeare’s Macbeth that conjures images of evil witches making potions in giant cauldrons. But the truth was that women persecuted as witches were probably legitimate healers of the…
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Plastic packaging could be a greater sin than food waste
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By James Cronin, Professor in Marketing and Consumer Culture Studies, Lancaster University Miljan Zivkovic/Shutterstock Food waste has long been reviled as an immoral, largely preventable feature of our consumer society. An estimated 4.7 million tonnes of edible food is thrown away by households each year in the…
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The Scottish king who wrote a treatise on demonology and obssessed over witches
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Gemma Ware, Host, The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation Suspected witches kneeling before James VI in Daemonologie, his 1597 treatise on witches. Wikimedia Commons In the 16th century, witches and demons weren’t just for Halloween. People were terrified and preoccupied with them – even kings. In…
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The Rose Field takes Philip Pullman’s ‘Dust’ to its philosophical conclusions
Source: ForeignAffairs4 Source: The Conversation – UK – By Samuel Jesse Cox, Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Lecturer in English Literature, University of Tübingen The Rose Field, the third and final volume in Philip Pullman’s The Book of Dust trilogy is finally in the hands of his readers. This trilogy accompanies Pullman’s earlier series, His Dark…
