What has Brexit taught us about the British? The story so far.
Whatever kind of Brexit occurs – hard, soft, or even a last minute cancellation and staying in the European Union – the public and
Whatever kind of Brexit occurs – hard, soft, or even a last minute cancellation and staying in the European Union – the public and
A provocative vision of the future in which the global population plummets, dramatically reshaping the social, political and economic landscape.
On 8 March 2019 Lu Hiam and Martin McKee, referring to the most recent report from the Institute of Actuaries
There may be a silver lining. Brexit is a much larger national disaster than the 1956 Suez crisis, and more embarrassing.
What on earth will happen now? Will some people never learn about the British past, the nature of its empire, its decline, and how all this is linked to Brexit?
You read this magazine [The Oxford Magazine] and because of that you almost certainly know how the start of the story goes
The ides of March, March the 15th, is the date on which Romans traditionally settled debts.
In the ‘Origin of Species’, Charles Darwin described how a population explosion occurs. He called the events required – ‘favourable seasons’.
How did Britain’s wealthy take the end of the British empire? Not well — and the rest of us are still paying the price.
Brexit represents the last gasp of the British empire
What does Brexit tell us about ourselves – and what will happen now?
Danny Dorling speaking at the monthly meeting of “Global Justice Now”, Oxford Town Hall, February 12th 2019.
Things fall apart when empires crumble.
Take a minute to think about where current education policy is likely to take us in England, and to some extent in Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland run things a little differently.
The first of an interdisciplinary seminar series on the topic of ‘Inequality and the Environment’, organised by Alex Milden.