Maddie Conlan writes on the recent dead deer on campus controversy reflecting that, it may be no surprise that the dead deer is linked the …
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Maddie Conlan writes on the recent dead deer on campus controversy reflecting that, it may be no surprise that the dead deer is linked the …
Caitlin Barr discusses the effects of the Amazon workers’ Black Friday strike, ‘Make Amazon Pay’.
Izabela Wojcik explores the politics of queer spaces and discusses whether or not straight people should enter them.
Catherine Stone discusses COP26 and the Glasgow Climate Pact, and what effects it may have on climate change.
Jessica Holifield discusses whether changing to a vegetarian diet is a solution to the environmental crisis.
Pippa Bourne and Lucy Evans discuss their thoughts around the upcoming ending of restrictions on 19th July.
Georgia Balmer explores how the COVID-19 Pandemic may have changed our working habits for the better.
Flo Marks and Students for Uyghurs Exeter share their concerns with Exeter University’s links with certain Chinese institutions following previous claims that this makes them complicit in the Uyghur genocide.
The information was unclear and no so are the consequences: with schools set to reopen on the 1st of June, will teachers be there? Do they have the right to abstain, as do the parents in choosing to continue allowing their children to learn from home? But more importantly – what is the safest option?
Aaron Loose discusses the government’s new message to ‘Stay Alert’ and the implications behind using such slogans to guide the Coronavirus pandemic
In unambiguous campaigns to ‘protect the NHS’ that emulate those seen in the war, the Government directly highlights their own failings. The public is being asked to provide for these failings through, exemplarily, donations. Rather than in disillusionment, the result will be of a public quickly forgetting the chronic societal issues that have brought this on – in the name of national pride.
As the nation faces an unprecedented challenge, Cassie Grace urges us to find hope in each other amidst the darkness of coronavirus.
Hungary, Israel, India – are we all going to end up a people of QR-code scanning, ultra-monitored insects under the thumb of the most powerful? Will corruption have to become the norm as ’emergency measures’ remain in place after decades of resolution, as with the post-terrorism measures still in place in the USA? Isaac Bettridge evaluates the situation that the world is facing but looking past, as the focus rests on the pandemic.
Life in lockdown can be exceptionally lonely, which is why, as Katie Fox attests, it can help to have some animal companions.
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