Opinion: Ancient Greeks would not recognise our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
03 June 2016Paul Cartledge (Faculty of Classics) discusses what the ancient Greeks would think of our democracy.
Research
Paul Cartledge (Faculty of Classics) discusses what the ancient Greeks would think of our democracy.
Flash floods, burst riverbanks, overflowing drains, contaminants leaching into waterways: some of the disruptive, damaging and hazardous consequences of having too much rain. But can...
Researchers have devised a new method for stacking microscopic marbles into regular layers, producing intriguing materials which scatter light into intense colours, and which change...
Geoffrey Edwards (Department of Politics and International Studies) discusses what motivates some people to support Brexit.
Michael Gaultois (Department of Chemistry), Joshua Conrad Jackson (University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill), Ian Mahar (Boston University), and Jaan Altosaar (Princeton University) discuss why much reporting on...
Heliconius butterflies have evolved bright yellow colours to deter predators, while peppered moths famously turned black to hide from birds. A new study reveals that...
The male and female brains have more in common than media reports often suggest, argues Julia Gottwald, a third year PhD student at the...
An approach that could reduce the chances of drugs failing during the later stages of clinical trials has been demonstrated by a collaboration between the...
Today, we commence a month-long focus on the future of cities. To begin, Doug Crawford-Brown, Robert Mair and Koen Steemers describe the challenges our future...
As they struggled to maintain their grip on India as the jewel in the colonial crown, the British attempted to mould the character of India’s...