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Marie Matsuda and more · 5 February 2026

‘Are you tough enough?’: Rethinking the safety, culture and care of archaeologists in the field

From the old ‘Cowboys of Science’ adage to swashbuckling fictional characters like Indiana Jones and Lara Croft, the perception that fieldwork, and archaeology generally, is a job for tough people pervades both the discipline and public perception.…
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Mario Luis Grangeia and more · 4 February 2026

Framing Corruption: The Discourse in Operation Lava Jato and the Judicial Activism in Brazil

For years, Operation Lava Jato (Operation Car Wash) was the “spectacle” of Latin American politics. From 2014 to 2021, the world watched as a group of Brazilian prosecutors and a provincial judge dismantled a seemingly untouchable web of corruption involving the state oil giant Petrobras and the country’s largest construction firms.…
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Higher Education · 30 January 2026

Happy Publication Day to Entrepreneurial Finance, 2e

Edited by Luisa Alemany and Job J. Andreoli Publishing 30 January 2026 | Paperback / $65.00 / £50.00 / 9781009537834 Order an examination copy About the Book Rigorously revised, with brand new chapters on additional private sources of funding, due diligence, sustainable finance, and deep tech investing, the second edition of this successful textbook provides a cutting-edge, practical, and comprehensive review of the financing of entrepreneurial ventures.…
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Adrianna Wagner · 30 January 2026

Community collaboration: My experience as an undergrad Production Assistant on ‘Advances’

My name is Adrianna Wagner, and I am a third-year student at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where I study English literature with minors in marketing and anthropology.…
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Michelle Lynn Kahn and more · 13 February 2026

Far-Right Extremism in Post-1945 Europe

As far-right extremism surges across Europe, the editors of Contemporary European History have been searching through the journal’s archives to see what we have published on the topic over the years.…

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Jim Ansell · 12 February 2026

Better communication with policy-makers can enhance the use of evidence in land-use planning

Evidence-informed decision-making, grounded in transparent and trustworthy data and supported by appropriate consultation processes, is considered essential for promoting legitimate and lasting policies.…

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Christine Edwards · 10 February 2026

Breaking Barriers in Nutrition Research: Christine Edwards

To mark International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are celebrating the stories of women whose curiosity, resilience and strength have shaped their careers in their fields.…

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Andrea Azcarate-Peril · 10 February 2026

From Curiosity to Leadership in Nutrition: Andrea Azcarate-Peril

To mark International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are celebrating the stories of women whose curiosity, resilience and strength have shaped their careers in their fields.…

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Charlotte Evans · 10 February 2026

Anything is Possible for Women: Charlotte Evans

To mark International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we are celebrating the stories of women whose passion, resilience and strength have shaped their careers in their fields.…

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Christian Hakulinen · 9 February 2026

Understanding Intergenerational Links in Mental Health: How a Child’s Mental Health Diagnosis Impacts Parent’s Mental Health

The RCPsych Article of the Month for January is ‘Associations of mental disorders in children with parents’ subsequent mental disorders: nationwide cohort study from Finland and Denmark‘.…

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Andreas losch · 16 January 2018

The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

How long will humankind survive? Besides the fact that we have been able to eliminate ourselves with nuclear weapons for decades, even without a third world war, the challenge to take care of the resources of our planet remains; we need to use them in a way that our children and their children can have a place on Earth as well. In this blog post Andreas Losch discusses his recent review article in the International Journal of Astrobiology, The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

Read more

Marie Matsuda and more · 5 February 2026

‘Are you tough enough?’: Rethinking the safety, culture and care of archaeologists in the field

From the old ‘Cowboys of Science’ adage to swashbuckling fictional characters like Indiana Jones and Lara Croft, the perception that fieldwork, and archaeology generally, is a job for tough people pervades both the discipline and public perception.…

Read more

Benjamin W. Roberts and more · 19 January 2026

Excavating the British tin trade that shaped the Bronze Age

In 2025, we published an article in Antiquity, demonstrating through chemical and isotopic analyses that, c. 1300 BC, tin ingots made from tin ores in southwest Britain are found on shipwrecks off the coast of Israel, around 4000 km away.…

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Karen Stollznow · 15 November 2024

Sluts, Bitches, and Battle-axes: women and insults

The English language contains a wealth of insults and terms of abuse. Personal insults attack the core and immutable aspects of a person, such as their race, ethnicity, appearance, age, or a disability.…

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Mona Suleiman · 11 November 2022

Mona Suleiman Awarded Inaugural Irish Society for Parasitology William C. Campbell Award 2022

This year, Mona Suleiman, who is doing her PhD at the University of Bath, was the winner of the award. The competition this year was high, but Mona’s presentation stood out for the fundamental impacts of her research that were explained in a very comprehensible way.

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Kevin Lala and more · 29 August 2025

Race Isn’t Biological — So Why Do So Many Still Think It Is?

Even though findings from genetics and other sciences unequivocally refute biological conceptions of race, this erroneous viewpoint remains widespread among the general public.…

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Dr Dami Ajayi · 28 March 2022

Reflections on House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths

The March article of Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International is the first blog of the series. The blog is written by Dr Dami Ajayi, Specialty Doctor, Barnet Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust and Trainee/Blog Editor, BJPsych International.…

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Most Read

Andreas losch · 16 January 2018

The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

How long will humankind survive? Besides the fact that we have been able to eliminate ourselves with nuclear weapons for decades, even without a third world war, the challenge to take care of the resources of our planet remains; we need to use them in a way that our children and their children can have a place on Earth as well. In this blog post Andreas Losch discusses his recent review article in the International Journal of Astrobiology, The need of an ethics of planetary sustainability

Read more

Melissa Loja and more · 17 May 2024

Nothing-Burger? U.S. Obligation to Defend the Philippines in the South China Sea – Part 1

It is an article of faith among ordinary Filipinos that American troops will die with Filipino troops defending Philippine claims to the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea (SCS).…

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APSR Authors · 15 December 2020

Conversations with Authors: Institutionalized Police Brutality

This is the first post in our new series: “Conversations with Authors.” For our inaugural post, we asked Dr. Vesla Weaver to meet (virtually) with Dr.…

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Alexandra R. Lampard-Scotford · 23 August 2022

The impact of parasite infection on mental illness

More and more research is finding inflammation as a potential contributing factor towards to the development of various mental illnesses. A systematic review was conducted to determine the association between parasitic infection and mental illnesses in various African populations.  Two parasite groups were evaluated; helminths and protozoans, and four mental illness classifications; depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, schizotypal disorders and unspecified mental illnesses.

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Dr Dami Ajayi · 28 March 2022

Reflections on House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths

The March article of Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International is the first blog of the series. The blog is written by Dr Dami Ajayi, Specialty Doctor, Barnet Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust and Trainee/Blog Editor, BJPsych International.…

Read more

Timothy Insoll · 19 April 2021

Medieval Ethiopia, ‘Antiquity’, and African Archaeology

The opportunity to showcase some of the exciting archaeological research currently underway on medieval Ethiopia in a journal as widely read as Antiquity is important.

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Holly Pascoe · 8 February 2023

The 33%: Q&A with Dame Anna Dominiczak  

Q&A with Editor-in-Chief of the Precision Medicine Journal, Dame Anna Dominiczak, for International day of Women and Girls in Science

Read more

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