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Academic Perspectives from Cambridge University Press.

July 11th 2025 0

Borders and long-term change in international order

Today the international order appears to be falling apart. War in Eastern Europe is continuing to escalate, militarism is on the rise in Western Europe, and the USA seems to be increasingly disinterested in playing by the rules which helped support its gl…

July 10th 2025

Mapping the World: How Cartography Shaped Global Science

In 1785, King Louis XVI of France commissioned Jean François de Galoup, comte de Lapérouse, to explore the Pacific Ocean, seeking to bolster French scientific prestige and imperial ambitions. The Académie des Sciences prepared a list …

July 8th 2025

Introducing A first course in Magnetohydrodynamics

Summary: A First Course in Magnetohydrodynamics offers a much-needed resource for undergraduate physics education.  Despite the fact that magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD) can be used to describe more than 99.99% of the visible universe, it is usually rele…

July 7th 2025

Handbook of Compassion in Healthcare: A Practical Approach

We are medical doctors, psychiatrists, working in a world of infinite need, finite resources, and – increasingly – ‘evidence-based medicine’. We are trained to ask questions such as: What is the evidence behind this intervention? W…

July 2nd 2025

Plan? What plan?

Sometimes plans work best when they don’t really bear the hallmarks of a plan. Less design and more muddling through can achieve unforeseen good. This might be said for a well-known, but less well-understood, postwar international aid program for As…

July 1st 2025

Exit from International Organizations: Costly Negotiation for Institutional Change

Exiting from international organizations (IOs) seems to be the strategy du jour in international relations. This is underscored by recent high-profile events: the implementation of Brexit in 2020, Russia’s IO exits after it invaded Ukraine in 2022, …

June 30th 2025

How Literary Genius Changed the Meaning of Nature and Created an Environmental Movement

Why do people so often approach nature with the same kinds of rapt aesthetic and spiritual attention that they bring to works of art?  Why do they seek in nature both their most unique (or “true”) personal self and at the same time a defi…

June 30th 2025

What Economists Can (and Should) Learn from Disability Justice Activists

In 2016, the Harriet Tubman Collective—a group of Black disabled activists and community organizers—released a statement titled “Disability Solidarity: Completing the Vision for Black Lives.” The statement was a clear and uncomprom…

June 25th 2025

The Guitar in Victorian England

During the nineteenth century Western art music advanced towards a peak of sonorous magnificence, perhaps reached in 1848 at Paris when Hector Berlioz conducted an ensemble of 1,022 performers. The guitar, however, continued to sound at the level of a sma…

June 25th 2025

Naples: Capital of Culture and Dance

The mythical siren song of Naples, which drew travelers to the shores, manifested itself centuries later in the reality of the Grand Tour. Generations came, lured by the urban expanse and broad culture of the city as well as the natural beauty of the surr…

Cambridge Core

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Advancing learning, knowledge and research.

July 11th 2025 0

Meet the Editors: Q&A with Angus O’Ferrall, Social Media Editor for Parasitology

Welcome to our “Meet the Editors” series, where we interview the editorial team about their work and their relationship to the journal.…

July 10th 2025 0

Omega-3 Supplements and Autism: A Closer Look at the Evidence

The Paper of the Month for March is ‘Impact of omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on clinical manifestations in autism spectrum disorders: an umbrella review of meta-analyses“.…

July 7th 2025 0

Types of pandemic-induced psychological distress, clarity of responsibility, and support for incumbents

Although the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic now feels like a distant memory, the political consequences of that period remain a critical lens through which we can understand voter behaviour in times of crisis.…

July 3rd 2025 0

What wild monkeys in The Gambia can teach us about intestinal parasites (and why it matters to us)

From 99 faecal samples we identified 21 species of intestinal parasites – everything from common worms to various protozoa and amoebae. Overall, seven in ten monkeys harboured at least one parasite, and Guinea baboons averaged nearly three different…

July 2nd 2025 0

A human factors accident analysis framework for UAV loss of control in flight

The number of Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) or ‘drones’ in UK skies has increased significantly over the last decade and this trend is set to continue.

July 2nd 2025 0

Breathing Easier: Our Quest to Transform COPD Management in Primary Care

Our latest article in Primary Health Care Research and Development details the route to successful implementation of a novel programme called CONQUEST across three different primary care networks in the US. Our mission? To improve the quality of care for …

June 27th 2025 0

The Forgotten First Woman Candidate for U.S. President

Long before Hillary Clinton won the popular vote in 2016, or Kamala Harris became the first woman vice president and launched her own presidential bid in 2024, another woman set her sights on the White House, at a time when women couldn’t even vote.…

June 23rd 2025 0

Pensar los 30.000 Que sabíamos sobre los desaparecidos durante la dictadura y lo que ignoramos todavía

The 1970s remain a minefield in Argentina. Nothing underscores this more than the discussion about who is responsible for the cycle of political violence and the number of missing persons, a topic that recurs time and again, dividing those who openly hold…

June 20th 2025 0

Muses at Three: Reflections by Dami Ajayi

It has been three years since Muses, the art blog of BJPsych International, was launched. Although time travels fast, reflection is an active process of slowing time down to take stock of what time has bequeathed us.

June 20th 2025 0

Akritas Cape: a recently discovered raptor migration hotspot in the Balkans

Several new hotspots have been identified in the past three decades, particularly in Italy, but none have approached the numbers observed at those three traditional sites. Up to now, the flyway connecting Greece with North Africa during post-breeding migr…

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