Katie Matthews, Online Editor-in-Chief, considers Trump’s designs on Greenland
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Katie Matthews, Online Editor-in-Chief, considers Trump’s designs on Greenland
With a focus on HS2, Fynn Rose explains why UK infrastructure projects always seem to go off the rails.
Print Deputy Editor, Harry Craig, explains the Prime Minister’s remarkable shift on the country’s environmental targets.
Features Editor Callum Martin examines the ‘concrete crisis’ in British schools and considers the extent to which it is a legacy of austerity.
Sidney Watson investigates the unprecedented flooding in New Zealand and California, discussing past and future frequency of extreme weather and its mitigation.
Callum Martin considers the legacy of 1999 for the February Turkish-Syrian earthquake and the complicated national and international politics on both sides of the border for disaster relief and reconstruction.
Clémence Smith and Ana Anajuba, Editors-in-Chief, spoke to Bookmark Reading Charity, who help improve children’s literacy rates and are actively looking for new volunteers.
Print News Editor Charlie Gershinson reviews the history of industrial action in the UK and the origins of the current unprecedented wave of strikes across different sectors.
Global Majority vs UK Government maintains that the Government’s ongoing financing of the climate crisis…constitutes a violation of the right to life and family life, a violation of the Paris Agreement and a violation of international law.
Issy Murray explores the risks of relocating I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here from the Australian jungle to Wales.
Axelle Rescourio discusses the vital role photojournalism has in our understanding and reception of the climate crisis.
Online Editor, Maddie Baker, interviews two international students staying in Exeter over the Christmas break. They both explain how they usually spend the festive period and give advice to other international students away from home at Christmas.
A pedestrian revolution Cars have shaped our cities and communities tremendously. But, as more and more…
Afiqah Abdul Hamid shares her new lockdown hobby and suggests a change for the future to keep the ‘trend’ going.
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