Europe’s electoral quakes call for shock detectors
Rightward lurches at the polls means migration studies are more essential than ever, says Mette Louise Berg

Rightward lurches at the polls means migration studies are more essential than ever, says Mette Louise Berg

Christopher Bigsby on the hardships and high points of life under canvas

While a legal fight led to the unravelling of promises of confidentiality, some researchers argue that there is a silver lining


A biopic fails to make sense or cinema of her princess life: Grace Kelly’s own films attest to her greatness as actor and star, says Lucy Bolton

Robert Reynolds on how US cultural critics in the 1970s ignored the upside of championing oneself

Victoria Harris on an interpretation of the French experience of the Allied arrival and its aftermath that focuses only on interactions with US forces

Roger Cardinal on a critique of the later work of an avant-garde German artist during his years in exile

The Great War transformed the balance of world power in unexpected ways, finds Robert Gellately

What goes up must also come down, finds Annmarie Adams

Philip Kemp revels in the good, the bad and the ugly aspects of western film-making
G. R. Evans (“Questions over open books”, Letters, 29 May) may be pleased to hear that there are, by my count and off the top of my head, at least seven large projects already investigating the...

Lawyers achieve goal but Coventry academic still linked to second publication on ‘blacklist’

Higher education committee censured as call to launch tougher actions against employers is passed at UCU congress

Confidential concerns - Does research involving those at the edge of the law need better protection?