<![CDATA[Newsroom University of 野狼社区]]> /about/news/ en Sat, 07 Mar 2026 13:34:30 +0100 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 12:44:05 +0100 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of 野狼社区]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 野狼社区 conference to re-examine Falklands/Malvinas conflict nearly 45 years later /about/news/falklands-malvinas-conflict/ /about/news/falklands-malvinas-conflict/737921On Thursday 16th April and Friday 17th April, The University of 野狼社区 is hosting a major conference about the Falklands/Malvinas conflict.

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On Thursday 16th April and Friday 17th April, The University of 野狼社区 is hosting a major conference about the Falklands/Malvinas conflict.

44 years have passed, but the conflict still resonates deeply in both the UK and Argentina. Once a little-known far-flung archipelago for the British, the islands became emblematic of the UK鈥檚 pride and military strength in the face of declining post-imperial influence. For Argentines, the islands remain a unifying symbol of national identity under 鈥榣a causa Malvinas鈥.

Now, as the 45th anniversary approaches, it enables us to pose and address histories, legacies and a number of questions through multiple lenses: What is the importance and legacy of the conflict forty-four years on? How have scholarly and popular works regarding the conflict and the continued territorial dispute been represented since? What is the current shape and future scope of a nascent Falklands/Malvinas scholarship? 

This conference will be particularly interested in, but not limited to, media coverage and military aspects of the conflict and thereafter.

The event hopes to build upon the success of the last conference held at The University of 野狼社区 in 2019, and provides an opportunity for veterans from both sides, experienced and independent scholars, early career academics and postgraduate students, to share their ideas and present their research in a supportive and interdisciplinary environment.

The event seeks to draw upon researchers from across the North-West and beyond, and possibly to initiate a 鈥楩alklands/Malvinas Network鈥 that might consider further projects and publications as the 45th anniversary of the conflict draws near.

Presenting the conflict from both sides, the conference has keynote speakers including Professor Sir Lawrence Freedman, Emeritus Professor of War Studies at King鈥檚 College London, who is a leading authority on strategic theory, international history and nuclear policy, and has served as the official historian of the Falklands Campaign and adviser on major UK defence inquiries. 

Also speaking will be Professor Virginia Gamba - a senior United Nations official and Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict who has more than three decades of global experience in disarmament, peacebuilding, and human security - and Rear Admiral Jeremy Larken DSO, a Cold War submariner and senior Royal Navy commander who played a key operational role in the Falklands Campaign as Captain of HMS Fearless and Chief of Staff to Commodore Michael Clapp, the amphibious Maritime Force Commander, bringing firsthand expertise in crisis management and high-level military leadership. 

Together, they represent an exceptional breadth of insight into warfare, diplomacy and strategic decision-making at the highest levels.

The full conference programme and ticket information can be found at , or you can follow @fm44conference on X (Twitter) and @fm44conference.bsky.social on Bluesky. 

Conference sponsors: British Commission for Military History (BCMH), Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS) and The University of 野狼社区鈥檚 Student Enhancement Fund.

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Wed, 04 Mar 2026 11:44:05 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b7dc6b88-1a0a-43a3-8b77-20e3ca5caf39/500_gettyimages-2258629778.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b7dc6b88-1a0a-43a3-8b77-20e3ca5caf39/gettyimages-2258629778.jpg?10000
Why community voices could make or break world鈥檚 forest restoration plans /about/news/make-or-break-worlds-forest-restoration-plans/ /about/news/make-or-break-worlds-forest-restoration-plans/737353A new study has revealed a critical gap between global promises to restore forests and what is happening on the ground for the communities who depend on, manage and care for them.

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A new study has revealed a critical gap between global promises to restore forests and what is happening on the ground for the communities who depend on, manage and care for them.

The research, led by researchers from The University of 野狼社区 and published in the journal , is based on a detailed assessment of national policies in Mexico. It found that while governments are increasingly committed to restoring ecosystems and tackling climate change, indigenous peoples and local communities are recognised in policy but rarely given any meaningful decision-making power in restoration projects. 

Forest Landscape Restoration is seen as a key solution to biodiversity loss, climate change and environmental degradation worldwide. Yet the study shows that even when policies acknowledge the importance of community participation and rights, they often lack the institutional mechanisms needed to translate these commitments into real authority on the ground. 

The researchers reviewed 24 government policies created between 1988 and 2024 to see how well they support forest restoration and whether local communities are truly involved in decisions. They found that while many policies talk about protecting nature and improving people鈥檚 lives, far fewer actually give communities a real say in what happens. Only a small number - less than 30% - treat them as equal partners, and just one gives them full control over restoration decisions.

This gap matters because communities already manage large areas of forest globally. In Mexico alone, around 60% of forests operate under community-based land tenure, but relatively fewer than 6% of documented restoration projects report meaningful participation beyond consultation. Without community leadership, restoration efforts risk being less equitable and less effective.

The study also identified structural barriers that limit progress, including fragmented coordination between government agencies, limited institutional capacity, short-term funding cycles, and insufficient guidance for implementation at local level. These factors make it difficult to turn ambitious national commitments into practical action within communities and landscapes. 

At the same time, the research highlights opportunities. Many policies increasingly recognise Indigenous rights, traditional ecological knowledge and the potential for restoration to support livelihoods and climate resilience. Strengthening cross-sector collaboration, funding and governance could help bridge the gap between policy ambition and real-world outcomes.

鈥淵ou can recognise indigenous rights in policy, mandate consultation, and still never transfer decision-making power to the people who manage these forests,鈥 said lead researcher Mariana Hernandez-Montilla. 鈥淥ur research shows this is exactly what's happening - consultation is treated as participation, but it's not the same as authority.鈥

Although focused on Mexico, the findings have global relevance as countries accelerate restoration pledges and international initiatives led by organisations such as the United Nations. The researchers hope their work will help policymakers to design fairer, more effective restoration strategies, ensuring that efforts to restore nature also strengthen communities and deliver lasting benefits for people and the planet.

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Thu, 26 Feb 2026 10:19:54 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1dc547dd-c043-48dd-ae43-a612393bb576/500_b49edbad-051f-4f5c-932a-99ecf2f8aaa3.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1dc547dd-c043-48dd-ae43-a612393bb576/b49edbad-051f-4f5c-932a-99ecf2f8aaa3.jpg?10000
University of 野狼社区 to lead accelerated research project tackling violence against women and girls /about/news/university-of-manchester-to-lead-accelerated-research-project-tackling-violence-against-women-and-girls/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-to-lead-accelerated-research-project-tackling-violence-against-women-and-girls/737227An interdisciplinary research team at the University of 野狼社区 have been awarded 拢625,000 to accelerate the UK鈥檚 efforts to prevent and respond to violence against women and girls (VAWG).Content warning: References to sexual violence, domestic abuse, sexual harassment and homicide.

Violence against women and girls (VAWG) remains a widespread and underreported issue across the UK. According to official statistics, more than 200,000 sexual offences were recorded by UK police in England and Wales in 2024/25, and 2.2 million women aged 16+ experienced domestic abuse in the year ending March 2025.

In response to this crisis, 鈥 a new project hosted by , and 鈥 has been awarded 拢625,000 from to accelerate national efforts to prevent and respond to VAWG. Bringing together leading researchers, practitioners and policymakers, RISE will feed in to the delivery of the and recent which aim to halve VAWG within a decade.

The project will consist of four team鈥憀ed research projects covering primary prevention (working with men and boys), women鈥檚 safety in public spaces, management of domestic abuse perpetrators and child-parent homicides. RISE will also provide to enable researchers and practitioners across policing, third sector and policymaking to collaborate and pilot new approaches.

RISE draws on the expertise of and , whose influential research on abuse of women runners was recently cited in Parliament, , a leading authority on domestic abuse and masculinities, and , co鈥慸irector of and specialist in crime data analysis.

The project is further strengthened by NSEC and SALIENT Principal Investigator , who will support the team in securing complex multi鈥慳gency research data, and privacy expert and SPRITE+ director, who will lead stakeholder engagement and lead an in-depth evidence review of primary prevention strategies.

More information on RISE

Advice and support

  • (England): 0808 2000 247
  • (England and Wales): 0808 500 2222
  • (Northern Ireland): 0808 802 1414
  • (Scotland): 0800 027 1234

In an emergency call 999. If it鈥檚 unsafe to speak and you call from a mobile, press 55 and you will be transferred to a police call handler trained to deal with 鈥榮ilent calls鈥.

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Wed, 25 Feb 2026 14:18:01 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/073175a3-e1b1-4634-921c-fd315b97b56c/500_artur-rekstad-0tozkpet-i0-unsplash002.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/073175a3-e1b1-4634-921c-fd315b97b56c/artur-rekstad-0tozkpet-i0-unsplash002.jpg?10000
鈥楾he Plastic Divide鈥 - how carrier bag bans impact the poorest communities /about/news/the-plastic-divide/ /about/news/the-plastic-divide/737107A new study from The University of 野狼社区 has shed light on an unexpected consequence of plastic bag bans in East Africa, and why well-intentioned environmental laws may actually be making life harder for the people they aim to protect.

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A new study from The University of 野狼社区 has shed light on an unexpected consequence of plastic bag bans in East Africa, and why well-intentioned environmental laws may actually be making life harder for the people they aim to protect.

Anthropologist Dr Declan Murray spent nine months in Tanzania鈥檚 capital city Dar es Salaam, following the everyday journeys of plastic bags from small shops and street food stalls to people鈥檚 homes and workplaces. Tanzania banned plastic carrier bags in 2019, joining more than 120 countries around the world attempting to tackle plastic waste 鈥 but six years later, the ban has produced surprising results.

Despite the law, small thin plastic pouches - used to package everyday essentials like flour, oil and cooked snacks - remain a lifeline for millions of residents. For many families who live day-to-day, buying small amounts of food is the only affordable option. Without these cheap pouches, there is no practical way for shopkeepers to portion out food.

The research - which has been published in the - shows that the ban has removed large plastic bags from supermarkets and wealthier neighbourhoods, but the poorest communities have been left with few real alternatives. Paper, cloth and woven bags are too expensive, too big, or not suited to carrying wet or hot foods. As a result, small plastic pouches continue to circulate quietly, helping people to manage the daily 鈥渟earch for life鈥 - a Swahili phrase many Dar es Salaam residents use to describe the struggle to earn enough money each day.

The study introduces the idea of 鈥淭he Plastic Divide鈥 - the gap between those who can easily switch away from plastics, and those whose livelihoods depend on them. Well-off residents can afford reusable bags and buy pre-packaged goods from supermarkets, but low-income families rely heavily on small shops, street food vendors and local markets - all of which depend on these plastic pouches to function.

It also highlights how many people make a living from plastics. Small-scale manufacturers, market sellers and bicycle-riding wholesalers all depend on selling the pouches. Others reuse plastic creatively - as fuel for cooking fires, rain protection, or even as a way to keep insects away from food. For these groups, plastics are not simply waste - they are tools for survival.

鈥淧lastic pollution is a real problem, but these findings show that bans which don鈥檛 consider everyday life can hit the poorest communities hardest,鈥 said Dr Murray. 鈥淧eople aren鈥檛 using plastic because they want to harm the environment - they鈥檙e using it because it鈥檚 the only option that works for them.鈥

The study raises important questions for governments, charities and environmental groups worldwide. It suggests that reducing plastic waste must go hand-in-hand with supporting people鈥檚 daily needs - whether through affordable alternatives, changes to food supply systems or involving low-income communities in designing solutions.

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Tue, 24 Feb 2026 13:11:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/850709f5-1a27-48dd-9d3a-63e20112aa4e/500_gettyimages-996127734.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/850709f5-1a27-48dd-9d3a-63e20112aa4e/gettyimages-996127734.jpg?10000
Northern researchers and Whitehall unite to tackle the SEND crisis through connected data /about/news/tackle-the-send-crisis-through-connected-data/ /about/news/tackle-the-send-crisis-through-connected-data/737104Landmark 野狼社区 workshop brings together policy makers, scientists, and frontline experts to transform support for children with Special Educational Needs and DisabilitiesOn the day the government published its Every child achieving and thriving white paper on reforms to the schools and SEND systems in England, policymakers, researchers, clinicians and frontline practitioners gathered in 野狼社区 to demonstrate how connected data can turn that ambition into reality. 

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On the day the government published its Every child achieving and thriving white paper on reforms to the schools and SEND systems in England, policymakers, researchers, clinicians and frontline practitioners gathered in 野狼社区 to demonstrate how connected data can turn that ambition into reality. 

The Child of the North Data Showcase, held at the Whitworth Art Gallery at The University of 野狼社区, brought together nearly 100 delegates from NHS trusts, local authorities, universities, and the voluntary sector to examine how linking data across education, health, and social care can get children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities the support they need earlier, and more effectively.

The event was convened by Child of the North, the N8 Centre of Excellence for Computationally Intensive Research, and the Northern Health Science Alliance, in partnership with the Centre for Young Lives and in collaboration with the Department for Education, the Department for Health and Social Care, and the Ministry of Justice.

Child of the North has spent several years convening researchers, practitioners, and policymakers to analyse the evidence on children鈥檚 outcomes across the North of England. That evidence has played a significant role in shaping national SEND reform. The Independent Neurodivergence Task and Finish Group (NDTFG) report published alongside the white paper draws heavily on Child of the North analyses, and informs both the Schools white paper and the government鈥檚 SEND reform consultation, Putting Children and Young People First. The Child of the North Data Showcase builds on this momentum by demonstrating how connected data can now deliver the practical change the system needs.

Professor Mark Mon-Williams of the Child of the North Leadership Group said: 鈥淭he Schools White Paper has set a bold ambition as we seek to build a country that works for all children and young people. Today's event brought together a coalition of academics, clinicians and policymakers to explore how we can support these ambitions through effective use of connected administrative data. The day was truly inspirational and will ensure that government can rely on the best possible evidence as it addresses the SEND crisis.鈥

Presentations came from major northern data programmes including Born in Bradford, Connected Bradford, #BeeWell, and the Children Growing Up in Liverpool cohort, alongside research collaborations funded by NIHR and the ESRC, including the Health Determinants Research Collaborations, and the ESRC Vulnerabilities and Policing Futures Research Centre, whose involvement underlines that unmet SEND need has consequences reaching well beyond education into the criminal justice system. Clinical perspectives came from NHS trusts including Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust and 野狼社区 University NHS Foundation Trust.

For too many children with SEND, needs go unidentified until crisis point. Families describe battling complex, fragmented systems. Support arrives too late. The evidence-backed argument made today is that when services can see a fuller picture of a child's life, they can intervene earlier, reduce crisis responses, and improve outcomes that last a lifetime.

Haroon Chowdry, Chief Executive of the Centre for Young Lives, who chaired the event, said: 鈥淲e were delighted to support this data showcase. It pulled together a vast array of ground-breaking initiatives to show that data linkage and connected public services are increasingly prevalent, and are already generating rich insights to inform SEND and other policies."

A short report for national government will be produced following the event, drawing on the insights of all participants. It will set out what linked administrative data can achieve, what infrastructure already exists across the North to support it, and what policy action is needed to scale it nationally.

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Tue, 24 Feb 2026 12:22:39 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/23f9c0f2-e702-4015-a232-840e47274b53/500_23feb2026_childofthenorthdatashowcase_paneldiscussion.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/23f9c0f2-e702-4015-a232-840e47274b53/23feb2026_childofthenorthdatashowcase_paneldiscussion.jpg?10000
The Business Case for Nature: Confronting Biodiversity Risk /about/news/the-business-case-for-nature-confronting-biodiversity-risk/ /about/news/the-business-case-for-nature-confronting-biodiversity-risk/736905Businesses increasingly recognise that nature is not just a backdrop to economic activity but its foundation. This perspective shaped the recent event, Business Impact: Driving Biodiversity Recovery Through Business Action, where researchers, practitioners, and industry leaders gathered to discuss how organisations can actively contribute to restoring the natural world. 

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Magnitude of challenge 

Professor Nalin Thakkar opened the event, introducing keynote speakers Andrea Ledward CBE, Director of International Biodiversity and Climate at DEFRA, and Dr Katie Leach, Biodiversity Specialist at IPBES. Both speakers emphasised that biodiversity loss is accelerating and requires a collective response. Ledward highlighted the magnitude of the challenge, while Leach questioned how we can collaborate effectively to create real change. Their insights underscored the need for alignment among scientific evidence, policy goals, and business efforts to accelerate nature recovery.  

Panel insights 

An expert panel session led by KatieJo Luxton, Director of Global Conservation at the RSPB, brought together a range of perspectives from across sectors. Panellists included Dr Tom Burditt, Chief Executive of the Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, 野狼社区 and North Merseyside; Javed Siddiqi, Senior Lecturer at Alliance 野狼社区 Business School; Anna Gilchrist, Lecturer in Ecology at the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; Jo Harrison, Director of Environment, Planning and Innovation at United Utilities; and Ed Pollard, UK Business & Biodiversity Forum CIC.  

Nature connectedness 

The panel focused on the realities of landscape restoration, emphasising its incremental, place-based nature whilst balancing with the role of technology and data, while highlighting the importance of understanding ecological systems rather than relying on simplistic solutions. Gilchrist also reflected on the human dimension of biodiversity recovery, noting that we need to invest deeply in nature connectedness, encouraging people鈥檚 love of nature to cross boundaries and extend into the workplace.  

Humanities interpretation 

A recurring theme across these contributions was the importance of communication. Not just more communication, but clearer, accessible messaging that bridges disciplines and facilitates a shared language among organisations.  

As the event was concluded by Fiona Divine, discussions explored the role of the humanities in this effort. While science provides the evidence, the humanities help interpret and turn it into action. This interdisciplinary view emphasised that biodiversity recovery is not solely a scientific or technical challenge but fundamentally a human one. 

 

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Fri, 20 Feb 2026 13:05:15 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/005de62e-a650-4b56-9d81-a8c6f4c557d0/500_pic1.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/005de62e-a650-4b56-9d81-a8c6f4c557d0/pic1.jpg?10000
MIE Academic Recognised in International Top 50 Voices in Higher Education 2026 List /about/news/mie-academic-recognised-in-international-top-50-voices-in-higher-education-2026-list/ /about/news/mie-academic-recognised-in-international-top-50-voices-in-higher-education-2026-list/736336Dr Miri Firth has been named in Vevox鈥檚 Top 50 Voices to Follow in Higher Education 2026, an international list recognising sector-leading influence. She was also included in the Top 100 Influencial People list, highlighting her global impact.Dr Miri Firth, Senior Lecturer in Education at the 野狼社区 Institute of Education (MIE) in the University of 野狼社区's School of Environment, Education and Development, has been recognised internationally as one of the Top 50 Voices to Follow in Higher Education for 2026 by . The list celebrates educators, researchers and leaders whose work is shaping the future of higher education globally. Miri鈥檚 inclusion reflects her national and international leadership in employability education and flexible assessment. As Academic Lead for Assessment in the University of 野狼社区's Flexible Learning Programme, she has driven institutional reform through the development of 野狼社区鈥檚 Assessment Toolkit, now supporting thousands of staff and students across the University.

Nationally, she led the QAA-funded  project, collaborating with the University of York, UCL and Imperial College London to explore student choice in assessment design. The outputs from this work have been adopted by multiple universities and have contributed to sector-wide conversations around inclusion, flexibility and future-focused learning.

Dr Firth also chairs the GFI (formerly AGCAS) , supporting careers professionals and academics across the UK in enhancing employability pathways for creative graduates.

In addition to this recognition, she was named in the  for 2026, highlighting the reach and impact of her scholarship and public engagement.

This achievement reinforces MIE鈥檚 national and international standing in educational leadership, assessment innovation and graduate employability.

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Fri, 13 Feb 2026 12:35:37 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/0be1d042-a445-4dd1-a257-11b73d779480/500_mfprofileeditedsquare.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/0be1d042-a445-4dd1-a257-11b73d779480/mfprofileeditedsquare.jpg?10000
What the economic impact of Hurricane Katrina means for businesses today /about/news/economic-impact-of-hurricane-katrina/ /about/news/economic-impact-of-hurricane-katrina/736333When Hurricane Katrina struck the USA in 2005, nearly 2000 people lost their lives and the cost of the catastrophe exceeded $100 billion. Now, 21 years later, new research from The University of 野狼社区 has found that Katrina left another, less visible legacy long after the storm clouds had cleared.

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When Hurricane Katrina struck the USA in 2005, nearly 2000 people lost their lives and the cost of the catastrophe exceeded $100 billion. Now, 21 years later, new research from The University of 野狼社区 has found that Katrina left another, less visible legacy long after the storm clouds had cleared.

The study, published in the , has revealed that in the months and years after Katrina, many businesses in affected areas began paying their suppliers later than usual. These delays had real consequences 鈥 fewer jobs, more business closures and financial stress spreading from one company to the next.

Using detailed data on individual business locations across the Gulf Coast region of the USA, Professor Viet Dang, Professor Ning Gao and Dr Hongge Lin from Alliance 野狼社区 Business School tracked how payment behaviour changed after Katrina. They focused on whether companies paid their bills on time - something that matters deeply to suppliers operating in competitive markets who rely on steady payments to cover wages, rent and materials.

The results were notable - businesses located in counties hit hardest by Katrina were significantly more likely to delay payments to their suppliers. On average, payment reliability fell by more than four percent, which may not sound dramatic, but delays of this magnitude can tip the balance for businesses with tight margins and weekly payrolls.

Companies that delayed payments were more likely to cut jobs or shut down entirely. Their suppliers 鈥 often businesses located far from the hurricane zone 鈥 also suffered, reporting weaker cash flow and poorer financial health. In other words, a storm in Louisiana could hurt a supplier in another state, simply because money arrived late.

The findings highlight payment delays within supply chains as a key cause of Katrina鈥檚 widespread and lasting economic footprint. They also underscore the importance of corporate financial management across the supply chain. 

鈥淚n a fast-moving economy, companies must manage their cash flows effectively,鈥 said Professor Gao. 鈥淧unctual payment not only enables companies to meet their bill-payment obligations but also directly affects their credit scores and borrowing capacity, as suppliers and lenders closely monitor payment behaviour to assess financial health.鈥

The lessons are especially relevant today. Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and more severe, from hurricanes along the US coast to wildfires and floods elsewhere. Modern businesses are deeply interconnected, meaning that disruption in one place can quickly spread to many others, affecting even workers and communities that never experienced the events directly.

鈥淔aster access to emergency funding, more resilient supply chains and better disaster planning could help prevent payment delays from turning into job losses and business failures.鈥 

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Fri, 13 Feb 2026 12:19:10 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/dacd3fec-4ce4-40f4-836d-912ac3c883c0/500_gettyimages-172728401.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/dacd3fec-4ce4-40f4-836d-912ac3c883c0/gettyimages-172728401.jpg?10000
New EU Report on Non-Discrimination by Law experts at the University of 野狼社区 /about/news/new-eu-report-on-non-discrimination-by-law-experts-at-the-university-of-manchester/ /about/news/new-eu-report-on-non-discrimination-by-law-experts-at-the-university-of-manchester/736329Law Prof. Elaine Dewhurst and Ricardo Buendia delivered a policy report, published by the European Commission and supported by the NGO Migration Policy Group, on the unexplored area of the regulation and application of the prohibition of issuing instructions to discriminate by the EU Member States.

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EU equality law prohibits not only direct discrimination but also giving instructions to discriminate against others.  This rule applies broadly, covering all forms of discrimination and many areas of social and professional life.  Yet despite its wide reach, the meaning and practical implications of 鈥渋nstructions to discriminate鈥 remain unclear.  There is no case law from the EU courts clarifying the concept, and decisions at national level are limited and rarely examined in depth.

As a result, important questions remain unanswered.  These include who is protected by the rule, who can be held responsible when discrimination occurs following an instruction, and what kind of relationship must exist between the person giving the instruction and the person who follows it. Different EU Member States have taken different approaches to these issues.

This report, authored by  and , seeks to improve understanding of EU law on instructions to discriminate and to clarify both its limits and its potential.  It offers practical guidance and recommendations for strengthening the concept at EU level, alongside a comparative overview of how all 27 EU Member States regulate and apply this form of discrimination in their national legal systems.

Read more: 

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Fri, 13 Feb 2026 11:30:59 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_arthur-lewis-and-hbs-774x300-280869.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/arthur-lewis-and-hbs-774x300-280869.jpg?10000
AI could rebalance power between people and the services they use /about/news/ai-could-rebalance-power-between-people-and-services/ /about/news/ai-could-rebalance-power-between-people-and-services/736129Artificial intelligence could help people who feel overwhelmed, excluded or disadvantaged when dealing with everyday tasks like paying energy bills or booking healthcare appointments, according to a new study involving researchers from The University of 野狼社区.

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Artificial intelligence could help people who feel overwhelmed, excluded or disadvantaged when dealing with everyday tasks like paying energy bills or booking healthcare appointments, according to a new study involving researchers from The University of 野狼社区.

The research - published in the - explored how 鈥減ersonal AI agents鈥 could work on behalf of individuals, helping them to navigate complex systems, make better decisions and gain more control.

Vulnerability or overwhelm can affect almost anyone, whether through illness, financial pressure, language barriers or difficulty interpreting complex information.

The research team - including experts from The Universities of 野狼社区, Queensland, Oxford, Cambridge and Heriot-Watt - argue that advances in AI create an opportunity to rebalance power between organisations and the people who rely on their services. Instead of technology being used mainly by companies, personal AI tools could act in individuals鈥 interests, making purchases and helping them to compare options and understand information.

In the cases of an older person choosing an energy tariff, a patient managing multiple appointments or a parent navigating the benefits system, a personal AI assistant could interpret information, suggest choices and communicate decisions with service providers on the user鈥檚 behalf.

The study brings together research on customer experience, vulnerability and emerging AI technologies to show how this could work in practice, proposing a framework for designing systems that support people when they feel they lack control.

Researchers say the key is not just smarter tools, but ones that genuinely represent users鈥 interests. Personal AI agents could improve access to services, reduce stress and simplify everyday decisions.

Four possible roles for personal AI are outlined, from a 鈥渟ervice organiser鈥 coordinating everyday tasks to a 鈥減rotective鈥 system safeguarding users鈥 interests and flagging risks. Together, these approaches could help ensure fairer treatment and clearer information when interacting with companies and public services.

鈥淎s digital systems increasingly shape daily life, the real promise of AI may lie not in enabling large organisations to make incremental efficiency gains, but in helping individual people achieve greater confidence and control in their lives,鈥 said Dr Jamie Burton, Professor of Marketing at Alliance 野狼社区 Business School. 

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Wed, 11 Feb 2026 16:39:53 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a5c84a2b-380b-4b40-b111-919e51418b39/500_gettyimages-2256475291.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a5c84a2b-380b-4b40-b111-919e51418b39/gettyimages-2256475291.jpg?10000
CreaTech Network 2026: Exploring Creativity & AI in Entertainment, Heritage, and Open Tools /about/news/createch-network-2026-exploring-creativity--ai-in-entertainment-heritage-and-open-tools/ /about/news/createch-network-2026-exploring-creativity--ai-in-entertainment-heritage-and-open-tools/735987The CreaTech Network series returns in 2026, bringing together creatives, researchers, and industry partners. This year鈥檚 events explore how AI is shaping entertainment, cultural heritage, and open-source creative tools, with in-person sessions designed to spark ideas, collaboration, and innovation across Greater 野狼社区 and the North West.

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The CreaTech Network series returns in 2026, led by  in collaboration with  and the . This three-part event series, running between February and June 2026, is designed to strengthen connections across the CreaTech ecosystem in Greater 野狼社区 and the North West, and to support collaboration between the University and the wider creative and cultural industries community.

The theme of this year鈥檚 series is Creativity and AI, exploring how artificial intelligence is shaping creative and cultural practice. Across a series of in-person events, the programme brings together researchers, creatives, technologists, and industry partners to examine emerging opportunities and challenges. The 2026 series will focus on AI in entertainment, cultural heritage, and free and open-source tools.

If you鈥檙e curious about what鈥檚 coming in 2026, take a look back at previous CreaTech Network events from 2024 and 2025, which explored AI across music, publishing, fashion, and other creative areas. Those past programmes show the exciting mix of ideas, collaborations, and experiments that have shaped the Network and give a hint of the conversations and creativity to expect this year.

Creativity and AI: Entertainment

馃棑锔忦煏 Thursday 26 February l  14:30 - 17:00 
馃搷Contact Theatre, Space 0, Oxford Rd, 野狼社区 M15 6JA

The first event of the 2026 CreaTech Network Series will focus on how AI is currently being used across the entertainment sector, particularly in film, television and games. It will look at practical uses of AI in areas such as animation, screen production and creative workflows, alongside some of the challenges this raises for creative practice.

Hear from academic and industry speakers in short lightning talks, followed by a panel session and an open Q&A inviting audience participation.

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Creativity and AI: Cultural Heritage

馃棑锔忦煏 Thursday 30 April  l  14:30 - 17:00 

The growing use of AI in cultural heritage raises important questions around data, ethics and partnership. This event examines how galleries, libraries, archives and museums are working with AI, and the implications for practice.

Creativity and AI: Free and Open-source AI Tools and Platforms

馃棑锔忦煏 Thursday 25 June  l  14:30 - 17:00 

What role do free and open-source AI tools play in creative and cultural practice today? This event examines how open technologies enable collaboration and shared innovation.

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Tue, 10 Feb 2026 15:48:14 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/05557c24-e4b7-4a9f-83b4-1a99956ef850/500_createchnetworkseries.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/05557c24-e4b7-4a9f-83b4-1a99956ef850/createchnetworkseries.jpg?10000
Nature as therapy: research shows how the outdoors can help us to heal /about/news/nature-as-therapy-research/ /about/news/nature-as-therapy-research/735002Nature-based therapy may help people to find hope, meaning and a deeper sense of connection, according to new research from The University of 野狼社区.

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Nature-based therapy may help people to find hope, meaning and a deeper sense of connection, according to new research from The University of 野狼社区.

The study - published in journal - examined a form of outdoor therapy called 鈥榚cotherapy鈥 which includes activities such as walking in woodland, spending time near water, gardening or sitting quietly in nature with a trained therapist. By reviewing studies from around the world, the researchers explored how people described their most meaningful moments during these experiences.

Many people spoke about moments in nature that helped them process pain, let go of the past and rediscover a sense of purpose. Rather than techniques or theories, participants described simple experiences - watching trees grow and decay, feeling the wind on their face or sitting quietly in a forest and feeling part of something larger.

Some described nature as a mirror for their own lives. Seeing natural cycles of growth and renewal helped them accept difficult experiences and feel more present. Others spoke about a strong sense of connection and belonging which brought comfort and made personal problems feel more manageable.

Importantly, these experiences were not linked to religion - people from different backgrounds described spirituality in their own words, focusing on connection, awe and meaning rather than belief.

The study suggests these moments can have lasting effects, helping people accept themselves, release emotional pain and find new direction. At a time of widespread anxiety about the future, the study highlights how connecting with nature may support mental health and foster hope.

Ecotherapy does not replace traditional talking therapies, but the researchers say it may offer something different - space, perspective and a reminder that people are part of a wider living world.

鈥淎t a time when many people feel overwhelmed or anxious about the future, these experiences often helped people reconnect with hope and a sense of purpose.鈥

鈥淭his research shows that therapy doesn鈥檛 always have to happen in a room,鈥 said co-author Professor Terry Hanley. 鈥淔or some people, being outdoors creates the space they need to reflect, heal and move forward. As mental health services face growing demand, nature-based approaches could be a valuable part of a wider, more humane response to wellbeing.鈥

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Mon, 02 Feb 2026 16:33:36 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/084b4501-2c77-4ac8-a490-526462842622/500_gettyimages-1459964491.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/084b4501-2c77-4ac8-a490-526462842622/gettyimages-1459964491.jpg?10000
Gorton and Denton byelection: Reform could benefit from split vote on the left /about/news/gorton-and-denton-byelection/ /about/news/gorton-and-denton-byelection/734861A byelection has been set for February 26 in the 野狼社区 constituency of Gorton and Denton. This will be a big test for Keir Starmer鈥檚 Labour party and a temperature check on the state of multi-party politics in the North. Although Labour won the seat comfortably in 2024, some early polls are could win.

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A byelection has been set for February 26 in the 野狼社区 constituency of Gorton and Denton. This will be a big test for Keir Starmer鈥檚 Labour party and a temperature check on the state of multi-party politics in the North. Although Labour won the seat comfortably in 2024, some early polls are could win.

Byelections are awkward beasts and don鈥檛 necessarily follow the usual rules. What makes things harder in this case is that Gorton and Denton is a new constituency. It was in 2024 from parts of three different constituencies (Gorton, Denton & Reddish and 野狼社区 Withington).

When we try to understand what might happen in a byelection, we rely on the constituency鈥檚 past election results as a marker, which is obviously limited to just one election in this case. Gorton and Denton is also 鈥渁 bit of a Frankenstein鈥檚 monster鈥, .

It has an elongated shape and combines areas with huge socio-demographic differences. Its Tameside wards are predominantly white, with a sizeable working class while its 野狼社区 wards have a much higher student and Muslim population.

Labour has everything to lose

Ordinarily, this would be a constituency which Labour should easily win. 野狼社区 is a Labour heartland through and through. Its other five constituencies are all held by Labour MPs, it boasts all but a handful of seats on the City Council and Andy Burnham trounced his opponents in the city鈥檚 last mayoral elections .

But byelections are difficult for governments and Keir Starmer鈥檚 track record so far is not good. Labour lost a byelection in the Cheshire constituency of in May 2025 to Reform鈥檚 Sarah Pochin. Pochin won on a narrow margin of just six votes but had managed to . That makes Labour鈥檚 majority of 13,000 in Gorton and Denton look less than secure.

The real danger here is that Labour finds itself in the squeezed middle. It risks losing voters to Reform on the right and the Greens on the left. This is what happened in the in November, which saw Labour pushed back into third place behind Reform and winners Plaid Cymru.

Reform has everything to prove

Nigel Farage鈥檚 party has the momentum at the moment. Polls suggest they are outperforming Labour nationally right now and the recent high-profile defections of and have increased the size of their parliamentary group to 8 MPs.

The Reform candidate in Gorton and Denton, former university academic and GB News presenter Matthew Goodwin, may be the most recognisable candidate to voters, but his political views may not go down well throughout the constituency.

His views on the white working class being may resonate in some of 野狼社区鈥檚 Tameside wards, but his and what it means to be British will not play well in others, something the Greens in particular are trying to capitalise on.

Pitching the byelection as a 鈥渞eferendum鈥 on Starmer鈥檚 leadership is a sensible strategy by Goodwin, especially as a recent YouGov poll showed that think the prime minister is doing a bad job. Reform may struggle to bring together enough voters ready to sign up to all the party stands for, but may be able to borrow the votes from those who nevertheless want Labour out and would benefit from a split on the left.

Victory in Gorton and Denton would not only mean that Reform will equal the SNP in party group size in the Commons, it will be a further pull for disgruntled or panicking Conservative (or Labour) MPs, ahead of the Farage has imposed on MPs thinking about defecting to his party. But there is a sizeable chunk of voters across the UK , and who could vote tactically for Labour just to keep Reform out.

Green performance could be key

The Greens did not perform brilliantly in Gorton and Denton at the 2024 elections, but nationally the party received 7% of the vote and they hold over 800 seats on local councils. Since the election, they have , Zack Polanski, who has been instrumental in raising the Green voice in the media.

Their candidate is Hannah Spencer, a councillor in the region who stood for mayor in 2024 and finished in fifth place, behind Reform.

Polanski is confident that only the Greens can beat Reform in Gorton and Denton. And while that鈥檚 a bold claim, his supporters will be buoyed by the in a Derbyshire local byelection last year.

And even if they don鈥檛 win, a solid Green performance could be very bad news for Starmer.

, Senior Lecturer in Politics
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Fri, 30 Jan 2026 16:55:05 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d89a0e9a-ffaa-4032-bd11-bbb172adf39a/500_image-from-rawpixel-id-5803560-jpeg-scaled.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d89a0e9a-ffaa-4032-bd11-bbb172adf39a/image-from-rawpixel-id-5803560-jpeg-scaled.jpg?10000
UK expert in energy and climate governance joins The University of 野狼社区 /about/news/uk-expert-in-energy-and-climate-governance/ /about/news/uk-expert-in-energy-and-climate-governance/734272The University of 野狼社区 has appointed Professor Rebecca Willis as Chair of Energy and Climate Governance 鈥 a role which bridges the Faculty of Humanities and the Faculty of Science and Engineering through the  and the  for Climate Change. 

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The University of 野狼社区 has appointed Professor Rebecca Willis as Chair of Energy and Climate Governance 鈥 a role which bridges the Faculty of Humanities and the Faculty of Science and Engineering through the  and the  for Climate Change.  

A leading academic and thought leader in environment, climate, energy policy and politics, Rebecca will also bring a team of highly regarded researchers and academics to join her at the University. Rebecca leads the Climate Citizens research group, which investigates public engagement and citizenship. She is a co-investigator for the Centre for Joined-Up Sustainability Transitions (JUST), the Energy Demand Research Centre, and a new initiative, PACT (Production and Consumption Transformations) which provides decision support to government departments.  

Rebecca Willis has previously been a professor at Lancaster University and is an expert advisor to the Climate Change Committee and Innovate UK鈥檚 Net Zero Living Initiative.  

Speaking on her appointment, Rebecca said: 鈥淭he wealth of expertise based here at 野狼社区 is highly valued around the world. I am excited to be part of a community working on global challenges with practical outcomes for people, planet and society. 

Professor Claire Alexander, Head of the School of Social Sciences added: 鈥淲e鈥檙e delighted to be able to welcome Rebecca and her team to the University of 野狼社区. Rebecca brings significant insight and expertise in terms of applying policy to innovation in the challenging fields of energy and climate governance. She will be working closely with colleagues in the Sustainable Consumption Institute, a collaboration between the School of Social Sciences and Alliance 野狼社区 Business School, who are leading the way in terms of the economic and social and policy dimensions of climate justice and environmental sustainability.鈥 

Professor Sarah Cartmell, Head of the School of Engineering said: 鈥淭hrough the Tyndall Centre, Rebecca will strengthen our capacity to link cutting-edge engineering, climate science, social science and governance insights with policy that works in practice. Her expertise will help accelerate the impact of our work, deepen our partnerships and enhance 野狼社区鈥檚 role as a leading contributor to the UK and global climate policy landscape.鈥 

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Mon, 26 Jan 2026 11:04:51 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/21b6d02e-d9bc-403f-8335-1d63fc08c107/500_lancsheadsmay-1851.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/21b6d02e-d9bc-403f-8335-1d63fc08c107/lancsheadsmay-1851.jpg?10000
Radical measures needed to close arts class gap in Greater 野狼社区, inquiry finds /about/news/radical-measures-needed-to-close-arts-class-gap/ /about/news/radical-measures-needed-to-close-arts-class-gap/734194Working class creatives are struggling to break into and are leaving the arts, a new inquiry has warned. 

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Working class creatives are struggling to break into and are leaving the arts, a new inquiry has warned. 

, led by Chancellor of The University of 野狼社区 Nazir Afzal OBE and Avis Gilmore, former Deputy General Secretary of one of Europe鈥檚 biggest trade unions, found that barriers preventing working class talent from succeeding included class-based discrimination, low pay, a lack of connections and exploitative practices.   

Less than half of creatives surveyed (44%) said they earned enough to make a living, with many requiring second jobs; 51% of respondents said they had experienced bullying, harassment or bias based on their social class; just 18% of respondents said they saw their lived experiences widely represented in the art form they practice and only 22% said they personally knew anyone working in the arts when they were growing up.  

Featuring over 150 hours of interviews with artists ranging from teenage musicians and mid-career arts workers to globally recognised playwrights and BAFTA and Emmy winning screenwriters, the Inquiry found anger, despair and seeds of hope in the voices they heard.   

Co-Chair Nazir Afzal OBE, who is also the Chair of the Lowry theatre, said this was an opportunity for Greater 野狼社区 to lead the way on a national challenge and build a better sector 鈥渨here talent is discovered everywhere, nurtured properly, paid fairly and allowed to rise.鈥  

Among the Inquiry鈥檚 21 recommendations are measures to include class as a protected characteristic, the appointment of a Class Champion, a drive to increase apprenticeships, measures to decasualise labour and a co-ordinating body led by the GMCA to marshal resources, spot gaps and join up best practice.  

Although the Equality Act does not recognise class as a protected characteristic, Afzal said that 野狼社区 should look to unilaterally recognise people from working class backgrounds as having protected characteristics. 鈥淎s a former prosecutor, I have seen our region do this before,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen Sophie Lancaster was killed, Greater 野狼社区 Police broke new ground by offering people from alternative sub-cultures hate crime protection 鈥 and other police forces eventually followed suit. This was the right thing to do and we need to be equally bold. Because we are not going to break down barriers that are crushing creativity until we build an arts sector that treats class as a core inclusion issue.鈥 

But as well as highlighting structural failings, the Inquiry also shines a light on many changemakers who are working hard to widen participation and make a difference. Co-chair Avis Gilmore said she was particularly inspired by institutions like the Co-op stepping up on the back of the report to campaign for more apprenticeships. 鈥淚鈥檓 thrilled that the Co-op has agreed to lead a campaign to significantly boost creative apprenticeships in our region,鈥 she said. 

Claire Costello, Chief People and Inclusion Officer at Co-op explained: 鈥淥ur Co-op believes everyone, whatever their background, should be able to access opportunities in the arts and creative sector throughout Greater 野狼社区. Apprenticeships can provide a 鈥榮tepping stone鈥 for future careers, that鈥檚 why Co-op is encouraging Greater 野狼社区 employers to share unspent apprenticeship levy funds to raise 拢3 million over 3 years to support 200 new apprenticeships in the arts and creative sector throughout Greater 野狼社区.鈥 

The inquiry鈥檚 findings are being launched on January 26th at an event at the Whitworth Art Gallery at The University of 野狼社区 in collaboration with research platform Creative 野狼社区, where the Mayor of Greater 野狼社区, Andy Burnham, is due to speak.  

The report can be downloaded .

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Mon, 26 Jan 2026 10:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a3a770fa-c38a-4af9-b4c7-84d6d7755f49/500_chatgptimagejan23202603_25_20pm.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a3a770fa-c38a-4af9-b4c7-84d6d7755f49/chatgptimagejan23202603_25_20pm.png?10000
New Funding to Catalyse Devolved Cultural Policy Making: The Mayoral Authorities Creative Health Network /about/news/new-funding-to-catalyse-devolved-cultural-policy-making-the-mayoral-authorities-creative-health-network/ /about/news/new-funding-to-catalyse-devolved-cultural-policy-making-the-mayoral-authorities-creative-health-network/733457Dr Hannah Waterson, Research Associate 鈥 Knowledge Mobilisation, based at The University of 野狼社区 will lead work on a new shared framework for creative health across devolved mayoral authority regions in England.

Working with the Mayoral Authorities Creative Health Network (MACHN), convened by Greater 野狼社区 Combined Authority and Greater London Authority, the network will map policy alignment and challenges across mayoral areas and establish a first of its kind framework for embedding creative health for growth into devolved strategy.  The project is titled 鈥鈥.

2026 Co-Lab Policy Network Awards

The  programme based at  has today announced the results of the 2026 : an ambitious intervention to reorientate place-based cultural policy making in a new context of  and the .

The awards mark a pivotal opportunity to deliver devolution and community-led innovation not just as buzzwords, but as practical tools for better place-based policymaking. Together, the four awards mark a timely shift in how we understand innovation, community, and collaboration across the UK. 

The programme will fund 4 new  to support innovative cross-sector cultural policy networks in devolved nations and regions of the UK.

Co-Lab Policy Network Awards 2026

The Co-Lab Policy Network Awards will create new spaces for deliberation on complex cultural challenges and opportunities鈥攆rom culture-led regeneration to creative health鈥攂uilding devolved policy infrastructure that will enable better outcomes. The networks will work across sectors to ensure that people in devolved settings become not just participants in policy but the co-creators of it. 

The AHRC Creative Communities programme will bring the four networks together to host a devolution and cultural policy summit in December 2026. The programme will publish a Policy Priority Paper from each network award in March 2027. The papers will make new policy recommendations direct to devolved administrations to strengthen delivery and create new capacity for devolved policy exchange within and between the nations and regions of the UK.

About Creative Communities  

 is a major multi-million pound research programme based at Northumbria University in Newcastle. The investment builds a new evidence base on how cultural devolution can enhance belonging, address regional inequality, deliver devolution, and break down barriers to opportunity for communities in devolved settings across all four nations of the UK.

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Tue, 20 Jan 2026 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/9aef278c-bead-4337-b446-ba4836f66179/500_manchester_co-labpolicynetworkawardannouncement_zigzag.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/9aef278c-bead-4337-b446-ba4836f66179/manchester_co-labpolicynetworkawardannouncement_zigzag.png?10000
Cross-faculty team combine art and education to promote diversity and inclusion /about/news/cross-faculty-team-combine-art-and-education-to-promote-diversity-and-inclusion/ /about/news/cross-faculty-team-combine-art-and-education-to-promote-diversity-and-inclusion/733563Academics from the University of 野狼社区's School of Environment, Education and Development and the School of Medical Sciences are working together to celebrate diversity and inclusion and challenge the orthodoxy of medical art through the Reframing Stopford Project.  

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Academics from the University of 野狼社区's School of Environment, Education and Development and the School of Medical Sciences are working together to celebrate diversity and inclusion and challenge the orthodoxy of medical art through the . 

This eye-catching art exhibition, which launched in October, features fourteen illustrations by seven international artists. It is being displayed in high traffic areas of the Stopford Building, the home of the University鈥檚 Medical School.

Medical art refers to the illustrations which are used to illustrate anatomy, medical procedures, surgical techniques and medical devices. It is often dominated by illustrations of White, slim, young adult, non-disabled men. Reframing Stopford aims to challenge this by showing the actual diversity of human bodies, with each piece showing people with intersectional, underrepresented characteristics. The project aims to improve the sense of belonging for students and staff while normalising difference in how we visualise health(care).   

A grant from the University鈥檚 Institute of Teaching and Learning  is now enabling the next phase of development of the Reframing Stopford Project. The cross-Faculty team will be holding creative workshops for students and staff during Spring 2026, experimenting with interdisciplinary, arts-based methods for reflecting on and improving belonging.

The  exhibition is free to visit and is open for university staff and students and members of the public to view during usual University hours within the Stopford Building 鈥  for locations of the art works.  

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Fri, 16 Jan 2026 13:36:17 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/812e3672-6e72-434b-b1ad-b803fee119d3/500_reframingstopfordexhibition.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/812e3672-6e72-434b-b1ad-b803fee119d3/reframingstopfordexhibition.png?10000
Study finds strong link between teacher wellbeing and pupil achievement /about/news/teacher-wellbeing-and-pupil-achievement/ /about/news/teacher-wellbeing-and-pupil-achievement/733565A new study from The University of 野狼社区 has found that happier teachers help create happier pupils - and better learning - as ten schools across the UK embrace a groundbreaking approach to wellbeing.

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A new study from The University of 野狼社区 has found that happier teachers help create happier pupils - and better learning - as ten schools across the UK embrace a groundbreaking approach to wellbeing.

The research, led by Dr Alexandra Hennessey and Dr Sarah MacQuarrie from the 野狼社区 Institute of Education, explored how the schools adopted the Well Schools framework - a national movement run by the Youth Sport Trust that puts wellbeing at the heart of education.  

The Well Schools project, which began in 2020, has grown into a thriving community of more than 2,000 schools across the UK. This focused on ten schools that took part in a detailed evaluation of how the framework supports wellbeing among both staff and pupils.

Their findings, published in , show that when schools focus on the health, happiness and connectedness of both pupils and staff, classrooms become more positive, productive places to learn and teach.

The report highlights inspiring examples from schools that have introduced everything from daily 鈥渁ctive learning鈥 sessions and outdoor lessons to staff recognition schemes, mental health first aid training and after-school wellbeing clubs. These initiatives, tailored to each school鈥檚 needs, are helping teachers feel valued and pupils more engaged.

One headteacher told the research team: 鈥淚f staff are happy and relaxed, the lessons they teach are better. You can feel the buzz in the building - it just feels different.鈥

Schools involved ranged from small primaries to large secondaries and special schools across England, Scotland and Wales. Despite their differences, all shared a commitment to supporting wellbeing as part of their school culture - and saw real benefits in attendance, focus and morale.

The study found that wellbeing programmes worked best when led by senior school leaders but shaped collaboratively by staff and pupils. Initiatives such as 鈥榢eep, tweak or ditch鈥 reviews helped teachers cut unnecessary workload, while pupil wellbeing ambassadors and parent workshops extended the benefits beyond the classroom.

鈥淭his research highlights the power of schools working as communities - not just institutions that deliver lessons, but places that nurture people,鈥 added Dr MacQuarrie. 鈥淭he schools we studied created a sense of belonging, where staff and pupils alike feel heard and supported.鈥

Dr Hennessey concluded: 鈥淲ellbeing and learning go hand in hand. Schools that invest in the health and happiness of their staff and students aren鈥檛 just improving education - they鈥檙e shaping stronger, kinder communities.鈥

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Fri, 16 Jan 2026 12:34:55 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5737e6b5-c410-4445-a62a-c53280fcb419/500_gettyimages-648942918.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5737e6b5-c410-4445-a62a-c53280fcb419/gettyimages-648942918.jpg?10000
Music Department hosts 'Re:locating the Arts' event with researchers and leading industry partners /about/news/music-department-hosts-relocating-the-arts-event-with-researchers-and-leading-industry-partners/ /about/news/music-department-hosts-relocating-the-arts-event-with-researchers-and-leading-industry-partners/733454The symposium explored research and current practice in the arts with leading industry partner 野狼社区 Camerata. The third in a series of Think Tank events discussed themes emerging from 鈥榣ocation鈥 as interrogated by a diverse range of voices and disciplines.

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On 4th November, the University鈥檚 Music Department hosted Re:locating the Arts, a symposium which explored research and current practice on themes of location in the output of arts organisations, co-organised with partner organisation 野狼社区 Camerata. With contributions from academia, postgraduate researchers, and professionals working in industry, the event provided an opportunity for a disciplinary diverse range of voices to interrogate current thinking around the role of geographical location in designing and delivering effective arts programmes. 

With representatives from theatre, music, orchestral production, and music education, the event began with a roundtable discussion that examined routes to finding a home within a community. Presentations covered a breadth of topics spotlighting current initiatives and relocations in arts organisations; experimental AI in collective practice; festival partnerships; the positioning of the arts within (and by) universities; civic capital in classical music outreach projects; ethics, rights, and regulations in the University of Sheffield鈥檚 Access Folk鈥檚 participant-led research; and preliminary findings from the University鈥檚 research partnership with English National Opera. 

This symposium was the third in an ongoing series of Think Tank events, in which themes emerging from a collaborative PhD project are discussed and interrogated by a diverse range of voices and disciplines. The Think Tank series will continue in 2026 with an event focusing on the theme which was considered the most urgent for further interrogation: community. 

This event was funded by the North West Consortium Doctoral Training Partnership, part of the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Thanks also to Creative 野狼社区 for their generous support. 

For more information on the Think Tank series, please email Rebecca.parnell@manchester.ac.uk

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Lack of coordination is leaving modern slavery victims and survivors vulnerable, say experts /about/news/modern-slavery-victims-and-survivors-vulnerable/ /about/news/modern-slavery-victims-and-survivors-vulnerable/733313Researchers at The University of 野狼社区 are calling for stronger, coordinated partnerships to tackle modern slavery and human trafficking, warning that gaps between organisations risk leaving victims and survivors without consistent protection and support.

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Researchers at The University of 野狼社区 are calling for stronger, coordinated partnerships to tackle modern slavery and human trafficking, warning that gaps between organisations risk leaving victims and survivors without consistent protection and support.

Their appeal comes in a new review commissioned by , which examines how organisations across the city region work together to identify, safeguard and support people affected by modern slavery and human trafficking. The review focuses on partnerships involving local authorities, statutory services, law enforcement, housing providers and voluntary and community sector organisations.

The authors argue that tackling modern slavery depends on robust, long-term collaboration rather than ad hoc arrangements. While organisations across Greater 野狼社区 have developed innovative partnership approaches, the review finds that these are not always embedded consistently across the system. Among the review鈥檚 key recommendations, the authors are calling for:

- Clearer strategic governance to strengthen modern slavery and human trafficking partnerships at a Greater 野狼社区-wide level.
- More consistent roles and responsibilities across organisations, so victims/survivors do not fall through gaps between services.
- Improved information-sharing and referral pathways, ensuring concerns are acted on quickly and safely.
- Sustainable funding and resources to support partnership working, rather than reliance on short-term arrangements.
- Stronger links between safeguarding, housing, immigration advice and criminal justice responses, reflecting the needs of victims.

The review suggests that where partnerships are well established, outcomes for victims are more likely to be improved. Such embedded collaboration enables earlier identification of exploitation, better safeguarding responses and coordinated support to help individuals recover and rebuild their lives. Strong partnerships also support disruption of criminal activity by improving intelligence-sharing and joint working.

However, the authors highlight challenges which can weaken partnership arrangements including variations in local practice, capacity pressures and funding uncertainty. Frontline professionals reported that without clear structures and shared accountability, collaboration often relies on personal relationships, making it fragile and difficult to sustain.

The researchers also note that victims and survivors of modern slavery often face overlapping vulnerabilities including insecure housing, mental ill-health and immigration insecurity. Without joined-up working across sectors, these complexities can delay support and increase the risk of re-exploitation.

The authors stress that the findings have national relevance due to a relatively cohesive modern slavery partnership approach in Greater 野狼社区. As awareness of modern slavery grows, public bodies across the UK face pressure to demonstrate good quality partnership responses. The review positions Greater 野狼社区 as a potential leader, but cautions that this requires investment in governance, coordination and shared learning.

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Thu, 15 Jan 2026 08:30:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d632f855-734c-4352-970d-d2ab7dd41460/500_gettyimages-871475200.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d632f855-734c-4352-970d-d2ab7dd41460/gettyimages-871475200.jpg?10000
India shows how urban forests can help cool cities 鈥 as long as planners understand what nature and people need /about/news/india-shows-how-urban-forests-can-help-cool-cities/ /about/news/india-shows-how-urban-forests-can-help-cool-cities/733303For many years, I lived in the Indian city of Chennai where the summer temperatures can reach up to 44掳C. With a population of 4.5 million, this coastal city is humid and hot.

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For many years, I lived in the Indian city of Chennai where the summer temperatures can reach up to 44掳C. With a population of 4.5 million, this coastal city is humid and hot.

Its suburbs are home to 600 Hindu temples and there鈥檚 a wildlife reserve called Guindy national park in the heart of the city. of the streets but green parks are few and far between 鈥 as is the shade.

As and the rest of , urban forests become more vital. These clusters of trees in parks, gardens, public spaces and along roads and rivers have multiple benefits 鈥 from cooling the surrounding air to providing homes for wildlife and creating space for people to enjoy nature. Yet they are often overlooked by city developers.

shows that, in Chennai, there are 26 square miles of tree and other vegetation cover, mainly accounted for by formal green spaces such as Guindy wildlife reserve. On the outskirts of this city, an area of nine square miles of unused land is ideally suited to creating more urban forest. Similarly, there is more potential space for urban forests in other fast urbanising Indian cities like Coimbatore and Tiruchirapalli.

recommend having at least 30% tree cover in urban areas. suggests that cities should allow for nine square metres of urban tree cover per person. Most Indian cities .

Improving urban forests in India has been a challenge for many years due to high land prices, lack of urban planning and little public participation .

Policies introduced by the Indian government to 鈥済reen鈥 urban areas often equate tree planting with cooling cities and building climate resilience. But it鈥檚 not that simple. The success of urban forests depends on factors such as rainfall, understanding interactions with local wildlife and people鈥檚 needs.

A warns that in hot, dry cities with limited water availability like Chennai, trees slow the cooling process by water evaporation from leaves and instead contribute to urban heat. Urban heat comes from the reflection and absorption of sunlight by buildings and land surfaces. This is particularly high in smaller Indian cities with populations of 1 to 5 million.

Planting trees with the sole aim of cooling cities could negatively affect wildlife too. Not all birds, bugs and mammals depend on trees for food or shelter. A from researchers in Bengaluru, India, shows that non-native tree species contribute little to bird richness. Meanwhile, urban grasslands and marshlands that are often misclassified as 鈥渨aste land鈥 support wildlife and help regulate flooding.

In India, cities and villages have open 鈥渃ommon鈥 land where people graze their cattle or harvest fuelwood from trees that grow naturally there 鈥 tree-planting initiatives in these open land areas can displace poorer communities of people who rely on open lands for grazing and fuel wood collection.

Design with nature

Urban forests can be planned to meet the needs of people, birds and other wildlife.

In 1969, Ian McHarg, the late Scottish landscape architect and urban planner came up with the concept of 鈥渄esign with nature鈥, where development has a minimal negative effect on the environment. His idea was to preserve existing natural forests by proposing site suitability assessments. By analysing factors such as rivers and streams, soil type, slope and drainage, to identify which areas suit development and which are best preserved for nature.

This approach has advanced with new technology. Now, geographic information systems and satellite imagery help planners integrate environmental data and identify suitable areas for planting new trees or conserving urban forests.

Using the principles of landscape ecology, urban planners can design forest patches in a way that enhances the connectivity of green spaces in a city, rather than uniformly planting trees across all open spaces. By designing these 鈥渆cological corridors鈥, trees along roads or canals, for example, can help link fragmented green spaces.

Planting native tree species suited to dry and drought-prone environments is also crucial, as is assessing the local community鈥檚 needs for native fruit-bearing trees that provide food.

Growing urban forests

By 2030, one-third of India鈥檚 electricity demand is expected to come from cooling equipment such as . Increasing urban forests could help reduce this .

National-level policies could support urban forest expansion across India. In 2014, the government of India released its urban greenery and flagship urban renewal programmes such as the have tried to increase tree cover. But guidelines often overlook critical considerations like ecological connectivity, native species and local community needs.

In 2020, the government of India launched (a scheme to improve tree cover in cities) with a budget of around US$94 million (拢70 million). It aims to create urban forests through active participation of citizens, government agencies and private companies. But there is little evidence that urban forest cover has improved.

Urbanisation reduced tree cover in most Indian cities, and much of it was rather . But by protecting and planting more trees, citizens can live in greener, cooler cities. By shifting urban forest policy from counting trees to designing landscapes, plans that enhance climate resilience, nature conservation and social equity can be put into practice.

, Postgraduate Researcher, Climate Adaptation,
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Wed, 14 Jan 2026 13:48:24 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8e8c3222-559b-4299-91bb-2b30f67dfff7/500_gettyimages-1026354560.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8e8c3222-559b-4299-91bb-2b30f67dfff7/gettyimages-1026354560.jpg?10000
Time spent on gaming and social media not to blame for teen mental health issues /about/news/time-spent-on-gaming-and-social-media/ /about/news/time-spent-on-gaming-and-social-media/733219A major new study from The University of 野狼社区 has found little evidence that social media use or video gaming are causing mental health problems in young teenagers, challenging one of the most widespread concerns among parents and teachers today.

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A major new study from The University of 野狼社区 has found little evidence that social media use or video gaming are causing mental health problems in young teenagers, challenging one of the most widespread concerns among parents and teachers today.

The research - published in the - is based on the experiences of more than 25,000 pupils across Greater 野狼社区, and is one of the largest and most detailed studies of its kind. The team followed young people aged 11-14 over three school years as part of the #BeeWell programme, which focuses on understanding and improving young people鈥檚 wellbeing.

For several years, headlines have warned that time spent on TikTok, Instagram or gaming platforms could be driving a rise in anxiety and depression among teenagers - but the 野狼社区 researchers say their findings paint a much more nuanced picture.

鈥淲e know families are worried, but our results do not support the idea that simply spending time on social media or gaming leads to mental health problems - the story is far more complex than that,鈥 said lead author .

The study tracked pupils鈥 self-reported social media habits, gaming frequency and emotional difficulties over three school years to find out whether technology use genuinely predicted later mental health difficulties. The researchers found no evidence that heavier social media use or more frequent gaming caused increases in symptoms of anxiety or depression over the following year - for boys or girls.

However, the study did uncover other interesting patterns. Girls who gamed more often went on to spend slightly less time on social media the following year, and boys who reported more emotional difficulties were more likely to cut back on gaming in the future - a pattern the researchers suggest could be linked to losing interest in hobbies when feeling low, or parents limiting screen time when they notice their child is struggling.

The research team also explored whether actively chatting on social media or just passively scrolling made a difference, but the overall picture remained the same - technology habits alone did not appear to drive mental health difficulties.

The authors emphasise that this does not mean online experiences are harmless. Hurtful messages, online pressures and extreme content can all have real impacts on wellbeing, but they argue that focusing simply on screen time misses the bigger picture.

DOI:

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Wed, 14 Jan 2026 08:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6fb3a477-f620-47e5-b562-b3d659303c26/500_gettyimages-2234299196.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6fb3a477-f620-47e5-b562-b3d659303c26/gettyimages-2234299196.jpg?10000
野狼社区 research reveals how global laws can give workers real power /about/news/global-laws-can-give-workers-real-power/ /about/news/global-laws-can-give-workers-real-power/733118A new study in the has revealed that European 鈥榙ue diligence鈥 laws designed to make multinational companies accountable for labour and environmental abuses are beginning to give a voice to some of the world鈥檚 most vulnerable workers.

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A new study in the has revealed that European 鈥榙ue diligence鈥 laws designed to make multinational companies accountable for labour and environmental abuses are beginning to give a voice to some of the world鈥檚 most vulnerable workers.

Focusing on South Africa鈥檚 wine industry, the research - led by Professor Matthew Alford from The University of 野狼社区鈥檚 Alliance 野狼社区 Business School, in collaboration with colleagues from the University of Cape Town, University of Wurzburg and TIE Germany - found that farm workers and local unions are using Germany鈥檚 Supply Chain Due Diligence Act to push for better working conditions and corporate accountability.

The 2023 law requires German companies to ensure human rights are respected throughout their global supply chains - from vineyards in the Western Cape, to supermarket shelves in Berlin.

The research team discovered that South African trade unions and community organisations have started invoking this legislation to open direct talks with farm owners and European retailers. In one case, the Commercial, Stevedoring, Agricultural and Allied Workers Union (CSAAWU) used the new law to press a local wine farm to address dangerous working conditions.

鈥淲orkers were suffering back injuries, lacked clean drinking water and were exposed to pesticides,鈥 said Dr Alford. 鈥淏y referencing the new German law, local organisers were able to secure regular meetings with management - something that hadn鈥檛 happened before - and win concrete improvements.鈥

These changes included safer equipment, better sanitation and running water for workers鈥 homes. According to one union organiser interviewed for the study, 鈥淔or many of the workers, it is the first time ever that they sat at the table and had a discussion with a white person鈥n the beginning, the workers were a bit shy but once they saw that the management would actually listen to them and even respond to their demands, they got very confident.鈥

The research also highlights how South African campaigners are using the same laws to challenge European chemical companies which export pesticides to the country that are banned in the EU. The Women on Farms Project has joined forces with German partners, including Oxfam Germany, to explore using the legislation to seek compensation and push for stricter oversight.

The study demonstrates that the laws are opening up new possibilities for workers thousands of miles away from Europe to hold powerful companies to account, but it also shows how their effectiveness depends on awareness, solidarity and cross-border cooperation. It also warns that while Europe鈥檚 new regulations hold promise, they are still at an early stage and risk being weakened by political pushback. 

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Tue, 13 Jan 2026 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/93c4d199-261b-470a-b0e1-e13d5f1f4058/500_gettyimages-486125792.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/93c4d199-261b-470a-b0e1-e13d5f1f4058/gettyimages-486125792.jpg?10000
Announcing the launch of the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Innovation /about/news/centre-for-teaching-learning-and-innovation/ /about/news/centre-for-teaching-learning-and-innovation/732700Alliance 野狼社区 Business School (AMBS) is delighted to announce the launch of the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Innovation (CTLI), a new hub dedicated to advancing educational excellence and innovation across our community. 

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Alliance 野狼社区 Business School (AMBS) is delighted to announce the launch of the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Innovation (CTLI), a new hub dedicated to advancing educational excellence and innovation across our community. 

Under the leadership of Professor Ali Owrak, the CTLI will serve as a catalyst for transformative education at AMBS, supporting both educators and learners through a wide range of services and opportunities. The Centre鈥檚 mission is to foster pedagogical excellence, drive innovation, and champion inclusive partnerships that empower our academic community. 

Empowering Educators and Students 

The CTLI offers practical support for academic staff seeking to enhance their teaching and student engagement. Services include tailored workshops, one-to-one consultations, and access to resources for course design, assessment strategies, and the effective use of digital tools in the classroom.  

Educators can also benefit from interactive workshops, peer observation training, and the pedagogical innovation series. The voluntary peer observation scheme will provide a supportive environment for sharing feedback and learning from colleagues.  

Values 

At the heart of the CTLI are the values of Excellence, Partnership, Inclusivity, Curiosity, and Trustworthiness. The Centre is committed to developing equitable learning environments, accessible teaching practices, and forward-thinking approaches that support staff and students. 

Professor Ali Owrak: 

鈥淭his marks an exciting new chapter for AMBS. Our vision is to create a collaborative hub where colleagues can explore innovative approaches to teaching, share ideas, and engage in reflective practice. I look forward to welcoming colleagues and working together to shape the future of education at AMBS.鈥 

Professor Ken McPhail: 

鈥淎t a time of rapid change, it is vital that we continue to innovate in how we teach, learn, and collaborate. The Centre will embody our commitment to educational excellence, inclusivity, and partnership鈥攅nsuring that our staff and students are equipped to thrive.鈥 

For more information, visit the CTLI page on the AMBS intranet or contact the team (based on the sixth floor at AMBS, room 6.030) or by emailing CTLI@manchester.ac.uk

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Mon, 12 Jan 2026 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cf6ca1ae-b752-4e22-9f5a-db7032fb10d5/500_dsc_5160-jamesmaddox.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cf6ca1ae-b752-4e22-9f5a-db7032fb10d5/dsc_5160-jamesmaddox.jpg?10000
Iran protests have put the country鈥檚 political system on trial /about/news/iran-protests-have-put-the-countrys-political-system-on-trial/ /about/news/iran-protests-have-put-the-countrys-political-system-on-trial/732752Protests that began in late December over rising prices and a collapsing currency have now spread to most of Iran鈥檚 31 provinces, with demonstrators taking aim at the country鈥檚 rulers.

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Protests that began in late December over rising prices and a collapsing currency have now spread to most of Iran鈥檚 31 provinces, with demonstrators taking aim at the country鈥檚 rulers. The demonstrations signal a deep challenge to a political order that many Iranians see as incapable of delivering stability, dignity or a viable future.

The unrest poses the most serious challenge to  since 2022. That year, nationwide protests erupted over the death of 22-year-old  in police custody after she was arrested for violating hijab rules. Those  were ultimately suppressed through force.

Iran鈥檚 political establishment has for decades defined itself through permanent confrontation on multiple fronts: with , the  and what it sees as global imperialism. This posture has reshaped domestic life by subordinating the economy, governance and social stability to ideological resistance.

What the latest protests reveal is not simply frustration with the hardship that has accompanied this political stance. They seem to reflect a growing consensus among Iranians that this order  into something functional and must therefore be replaced.

This has been apparent in the language used by the protesters. Many demonstrators have linked their daily hardships to the regime鈥檚 foreign policy priorities, expressed perhaps most clearly  that has echoed through the streets of various Iranian cities in recent days: 鈥淣ot Gaza, not Lebanon, I sacrifice my life for Iran.鈥

The slogan is a rejection of the regime鈥檚 official stance that sacrifice at home is necessary to fulfil ideological goals of 鈥渞esistance鈥 abroad. Iran has long pursued a policy of supporting militant groups like Hamas and Hezbollah to counter the influence of the US and Israel in the Middle East.

Chants of  鈥 a reference to Iran鈥檚 ageing supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei 鈥 are yet more evidence of the broad rejection of the political order among the Iranian population. They signal that many Iranians now view their economic survival as inseparable from fundamental political change.

The protests have spread across wide sections of Iranian society. What began as strikes by bazaar merchants and shopkeepers in Iran鈥檚 capital, Tehran, quickly drew in students, professionals and business owners elsewhere in the country. Protests have  in Qom and Mashhad, cities whose populations have traditionally been loyal to the state.

The state鈥檚 initial response to the protests was muted. The government recognised the protests and  to the 鈥渓egitimate demands鈥 of the demonstrators. However, despite a warning from US president Donald Trump of US intervention should security forces 鈥渒ill peaceful protesters鈥, at least 36 people have . Over 2,000 more people have been detained.

A social media post by Donald Trump warning of American intervention should Iran's authorities kill protesters.

Donald Trump posts on his Truth Social media platform in response to the protests in Iran. 

Post-war paralysis

The protests come six months after Iran鈥檚 brief but destabilising war with Israel. This conflict severely strained the state鈥檚 capacity to govern, with Khamenei largely withdrawing from public view since then due to heightened fears over his safety. Major decisions in Iran require Khamenei鈥檚 approval, so his absence has slowed decision-making across the system.

The effects of this have been felt nationwide. Universities and schools have been hampered by repeated closures, shortened schedules and the sudden suspension of in-person classes. Transport networks have faced repeated disruption and economic planning has become nearly impossible.

Prices are . The official annual inflation rate stands at around 42%, with food inflation exceeding 70%. The prices of some basic goods have reportedly risen by more than 110% compared with a year ago, and are  further in the coming weeks.

Iran鈥檚 authorities have also intermittently suspended routine daily and weekly activities since the end of the war, such as school days, public office hours, transport services and commercial operations. They , pollution or security concerns as the reasons for doing so.

Underlying these disruptions is a governing system braced for the possibility of renewed war, either with Israel or possibly the US. The regime is operating in a prolonged state of emergency, which has pushed Iranian society itself deeper into crisis.

Iran鈥檚 governing paralysis has been strained further by intensifying competition within the ruling elite. The war with Israel led to the deaths of several senior Iranian military and security figures, which has created gaps in networks of power.

With authority fragmented, rival political, military and security factions have sought to position themselves for influence in a post-Khamenei order. Networks associated with figures such as former president Hassan Rouhani, former foreign minister Javad Zarif and current president Masoud Pezeshkian are pursuing negotiations with western powers to address Iran鈥檚 foreign policy challenges.

But others appear to be engaging in talks aimed at securing backing from ideological allies such as Russia and China. These include people in security and intelligence circles, along with figures ideologically aligned with Khamenei like his second-eldest son Mojtaba, current speaker of parliament Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf and conservative clerics such as .

These rival strategies have not produced coherent governance. Instead, they have reinforced perceptions among the Iranian public that the system is preoccupied with survival rather than addressing everyday breakdowns in basic administration, public services and economic coordination.

Iran stands at a crossroads. One path leads toward deeper militarisation, elite infighting and prolonged paralysis. The other points towards a reckoning with a political order that large segments of Iranian society no longer believe can deliver stability or welfare.

The protests suggest that the central question for many Iranians is no longer whether the system can be repaired, but whether continuing to live under it is viable at all. What is clear is that Iran is at a critical political moment, with significant changes likely to unfold in the weeks and months ahead.

, Research Fellow at the Global Development Institute
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Wed, 07 Jan 2026 18:51:01 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/61ba56a1-b4ec-4fc1-aaf0-3e6f8a3ad907/500_gettyimages-1454952507.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/61ba56a1-b4ec-4fc1-aaf0-3e6f8a3ad907/gettyimages-1454952507.jpg?10000
New book highlights human toll of the Kenyan property boom /about/news/human-toll-of-the-kenyan-property-boom/ /about/news/human-toll-of-the-kenyan-property-boom/732697As Nairobi鈥檚 skyline climbs ever higher, life for those living on the city鈥檚 edges is being transformed - and not always for the better. 

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As Nairobi鈥檚 skyline climbs ever higher, life for those living on the city鈥檚 edges is being transformed - and not always for the better. 

In a powerful new book, , Dr Peter Lockwood of The University of 野狼社区 tells the human stories behind Kenya鈥檚 rapid urban expansion and the families being left behind.

Based on years of living and working alongside residents in Kiambu County - an area just north of Nairobi where farmland is giving way to housing estates and shopping malls - Lockwood鈥檚 book captures a quiet but profound social upheaval. It reveals how fathers, once proud smallholders, are selling off ancestral plots of land, leaving their sons landless and adrift in a volatile economy.

鈥淟and in Kiambu has become unimaginably valuable,鈥 says Lockwood. 鈥淔or some families, it鈥檚 a ticket out of hardship. For others, selling land means losing not only their home but their history.鈥

Through vivid portraits of everyday lives - farmers, young jobseekers, mothers struggling to make ends meet - Peasants to Paupers explores what happens when the dream of a stable, middle-class future collides with the harsh realities of unemployment, soaring land prices and changing family values.

The book opens with Mwaura, a young man watching his father sell their family鈥檚 land to a private developer. What follows is both a personal tragedy and a reflection of a wider trend: as land becomes a commodity, generations of Kenyans are being cut off from the security that once defined rural life.

The book tells a deeply human story of hope and heartbreak. It shows how moral ideas about family, work and responsibility are being tested as young people face shrinking opportunities and elders grapple with impossible choices between survival and legacy.

Lockwood, a Hallsworth Research Fellow in Political Economy at 野狼社区, brings a journalist鈥檚 eye for storytelling to his anthropological research. His work has previously been published in leading journals, and he co-curated Nairobi Becoming (2024), an ethnographic portrait of the Kenyan capital.

Peasants to Paupers is published by Cambridge University Press as part of the prestigious International African Library series and is freely available online under open access, ensuring that readers in Kenya and around the world can engage with its findings.

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Wed, 07 Jan 2026 12:28:37 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/24b26ba6-9ae1-43eb-91ce-e92b8e830355/500_gettyimages-638877910.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/24b26ba6-9ae1-43eb-91ce-e92b8e830355/gettyimages-638877910.jpg?10000
Konger FC: How Football Is Helping 野狼社区鈥檚 Hong Kong Community Find Home and Voice /about/news/konger-fc-how-football-is-helping-manchesters-hong-kong-community-find-home-and-voice/ /about/news/konger-fc-how-football-is-helping-manchesters-hong-kong-community-find-home-and-voice/732216Konger FC is a 野狼社区 football team formed by Hong Kong migrants. Playing together helps them make friends, keep their culture alive, and feel at home in the UK, while also raising awareness of Hong Kong鈥檚 situation.A Saturday morning football club in 野狼社区 is doing more than just scoring goals - it鈥檚 helping a community rebuild its identity.

Founded in 2021, Konger FC is a football team made up of Hong Kongers who have relocated to 野狼社区, many on British National (Overseas) passports. Their move was prompted by increasing restrictions on activism and cultural expression in Hong Kong. Now, through football, they鈥檙e finding new ways to connect, integrate, and express themselves.

The club is at the heart of a new research project which received Community Partnership funding from the , led by University of 野狼社区 academics,  from the  and  from . The project, which includes short films and a multimedia  documents the 2024/25 season of Konger FC and lays the foundation for a full documentary film.

But this is more than just a sports story.  The researchers have embedded themselves in the club鈥檚 activities - attending matches, training sessions, and interviewing players, sponsors, and fans. Their goal is to amplify the voices of Hong Kongers in 野狼社区, showcasing how they preserve their culture, build community networks, and contribute to civic life.

The project also taps into resources at the University of 野狼社区鈥檚 , offering the Konger FC community tools and expertise to share their story with wider audiences.

Through everyday activities like football, the Hong Kong diaspora in 野狼社区 is practising a quiet form of activism - championing democratic values and human rights while resisting the pressures of political repression back home.  The upcoming documentary and website aim to shine a light on their journey, highlighting both the challenges and triumphs of starting anew in Britain.

Konger FC is proving that football can be more than a game鈥攊t can be a lifeline, a platform, and a powerful way to say, 鈥淲e鈥檙e still here.鈥

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Tue, 23 Dec 2025 12:17:25 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a2a14f6d-8945-4615-8a07-84541158181d/500_kongerfc2lrsmall.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a2a14f6d-8945-4615-8a07-84541158181d/kongerfc2lrsmall.jpg?10000
AI-powered insights for global supply chain resilience /about/news/ai-powered-insights-for-global-supply-chain-resilience/ /about/news/ai-powered-insights-for-global-supply-chain-resilience/731651野狼社区 researchers are using AI to map shifting supply chains in the global battery industry, revealing how technology, policy and geopolitics shape resilience and strategic decision-making.Global supply chains are being reshaped by rapid technological change, shifting trade policies, and growing geopolitical tensions. In the battery sector 鈥 critical to the energy transition 鈥 understanding these shifts is vital for innovation, investment and resilience.

Researchers at The University of 野狼社区 are developing AI-based methods to map how firms adapt to supply chain risks. By analysing data from international firms, including site visit transcripts, the team uses large language models to detect where and why networks are changing 鈥 from concentration around specific suppliers to diversification across regions.

This research offers a new lens on strategic management, showing how companies respond to uncertainty and external shocks. Insights from the project could inform policy and industry efforts to build more transparent, secure, and sustainable supply chains.

Linyi Guo, the PhD researcher leading this project explains: 鈥淚 believe innovation should be inclusive and driven by real-world needs, especially in supply chain transparency and corporate strategy. By combining AI with strategic analysis, we can uncover how global networks evolve 鈥 helping businesses and policymakers make better, fairer decisions in complex systems.鈥

Linyi Guo

Meet the researcher

Linyi Guo is a PhD researcher in Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy, based at the Alliance 野狼社区 Business School. Under the supervision of Professor Andrew James and Professor Kieron Flanagan, her primary research interests are innovation management and innovation policy, with a focus on high-tech industries. Her expertise includes Python, SPSS and MySql.

Read her papers

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AI-powered bunker fuel forecasting to help shipping industry /about/news/ai-powered-bunker-fuel-forecasting-to-help-shipping-industry/ /about/news/ai-powered-bunker-fuel-forecasting-to-help-shipping-industry/731649Fuel prices can make or break maritime operations. 野狼社区 researchers are using AI to forecast bunker fuel costs, helping the shipping industry to optimise for smarter refuelling and more resilient global trade.Fuel is one of the biggest costs for shipping companies, often making up more than half of a vessel鈥檚 operating expenses. With prices fluctuating daily and varying across ports, even small miscalculations can make or break profitability.

The research work led by Dr Arijit De at the Alliance 野狼社区 Business School, are using advanced artificial intelligence to bring clarity to this turbulent market. Their MarineFuelAI system combines historical fuel data, economic indicators and port-specific variables to forecast bunker fuel prices for different fuel grades at several global ports, for up to 60 days in advance.

The technology doesn鈥檛 just crunch numbers. Enhanced with explainable AI techniques, it can reveal the hidden drivers behind fuel price movements, from regional demand shifts to geopolitical events like the Russia鈥揢kraine conflict.

These tailored, route-based forecasts can give shipping companies much more confidence in their refuelling decisions. As Dr Arijit De explains: 鈥淭his approach brings clarity around future fuel prices, cuts bunkering costs and helps global shipping sail confidently through uncertainty, toward a more efficient, resilient and future-ready industry."

By reducing both risk and expense, improving operational efficiency, MarineFuelAI could help the maritime sector navigate fuel volatility while supporting a more sustainable global shipping industry into the future.

Dr Arijit De

Meet the researcher

Dr Arijit De is an Associate Professor at the Alliance 野狼社区 Business School, a Chartered Fellow of CILT and an Industrial Engineer (MTech, PhD). He applies AI, machine learning, intelligent algorithms and optimisation to real-world challenges on freight and maritime logistics, supply chain management and sustainable operations. His research is funded by Horizon Europe, ESRC, Department for Transport, EPSRC, Innovate UK and published in leading operations and transportation journals.

Read his papers

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Helping accountants use generative AI responsibly and effectively /about/news/helping-accountants-use-generative-ai-responsibly-and-effectively/ /about/news/helping-accountants-use-generative-ai-responsibly-and-effectively/731637In an era where AI plays a major role in accountancy, 野狼社区 researchers are exploring how generative AI is changing professional decision-making and developing a framework to help accountants balance efficiency with human expertise.Generative AI tools like ChatGPT are transforming professions worldwide, and accounting is no exception. From summarising policy documents to processing client data, AI promises faster workflows and reduced admin. But alongside these benefits comes a bigger question: how far should AI be allowed to influence professional judgement?

A team of 野狼社区 researchers have been exploring this issue through in-depth research with accountancy firm Beever Struthers, looking at the use of generative AI through in-person observation, chat logs and interviews. Their early findings reveal that whilst AI is highly effective at streamlining repetitive tasks, if firms aren鈥檛 careful it could also start to encroach on areas where human expertise is essential. For example, AI-generated summaries may speed things up but risk losing crucial context, whilst the technology鈥檚 ability to make assumptions could blur lines of professional responsibility.

The team鈥檚 study highlights that accounting relies on more than technical analysis; client interactions, on-site fieldwork and mentoring are vital to developing the professional judgement that underpins trust in the field. These are skills AI cannot currently replicate.

Led by Dr Sung Hwan Chai, Professor Brian Nicholson and Dr Leonid Sokolovskyy the project aims to redefine what professional judgement means in an AI-enabled world, offering a framework that could help accountants to use generative AI responsibly, and harnessing its efficiencies while protecting the human insight that makes their work reliable.

Dr Chai explains: 鈥淥ur project has both academic and practical impact. First, we鈥檙e redefining what 鈥減rofessional judgement鈥 means in accounting 鈥 in a way that applies to all areas of the profession, not just auditing, and takes new technologies like AI into account. Second, we鈥檙e working with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland (ICAS) to create a report that will help accountants use generative AI responsibly and ethically in their work.鈥

Dr Sung Hwan Chai

Meet the researcher

Dr Sung Hwan Chai is a Lecturer in Accounting in the Accounting and Finance division of the Alliance 野狼社区 Business School. He specialises in interdisciplinary research between management accounting and information systems, using a qualitative case study approach. His research interests are in the impact of current and future technologies on management accounting practices, such as performance measurement and management, surveillance and information communication practices.

Read his papers

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MIOIR in Review 2025 /about/news/mioir-in-review-2025/ /about/news/mioir-in-review-2025/732146As 2025 draws to a close, the 野狼社区 Institute of Innovation Research (MIOIR) reflects on a year of research excellence, global engagement and impact in 2025.Celebrating doctoral success

The Institute celebrated a strong year of doctoral completions, with successful PhD defences by Wanyu Zhang, Taeje Park, Seung-hyun Lee, Sebastian Arriagada Mujica, Yiwen Sun, An Yu Chen, Adam McCarthy, Matt Ziembla, Noora Al-Muhannadi, Milad Aghazadeh, Gianncarlo Duran and Jhenelle McIntyre. These milestones represent an important contribution to the global research community in science, technology and innovation studies.

Major funding wins and support for emerging research

In 2025, MIOIR secured substantial new research funding, including participation in the 鈧2 million Horizon Europe  on climate-neutral cities, a UKRI grant on research security, and Liangping Ding鈥檚 prestigious AI Metascience Fellowship.

The Institute also awarded six MIOIR Small Grants, supporting projects spanning science diplomacy, international collaboration and digital transformation in SMEs. These initiatives are already strengthening MIOIR鈥檚 research base and supporting the development of future external funding bids. 

A vibrant programme of events and professional development

MIOIR delivered a rich and varied programme of academic and policy-focused events throughout the year. Highlights included the Fred Jevons Lecture delivered by John KrigeVital Topics lectures by Dan Breznitz and Kevin Morgan, the IPEC Research Symposium on innovation procurement, the Amaz么nia+10 workshop on sustainable value chains, and a science diplomacy event co-organised with the Embassy of Spain.

Additional activities included the RSA 60th Anniversary Workshop on inclusive innovation, workshops on security and defence, and MIOIR鈥檚 flagship professional development course on Evaluation of Science and Innovation Policies, which welcomed 20 participants from 11 countries.

The Institute鈥檚 research seminar series featured leading international scholars, with contributions from Hanna Hottenrott, Riccardo Crescenzi, Martin Henning, Simone Vannuccini, Valentina Tartari, Meric Gertler, Markus Simeth and Frank Neffke.

Growing the MIOIR community

During the year, MIOIR welcomed new colleagues S枚nke Mestwerdt, Alice Naisbitt, Alina Spanuth, An Yu Chen, Matt Ziembla, Adam McCarthy and Nathan Critch, as well as new associate members Chelsea Sawyer and Julia Schoonover. The Institute also hosted a large number of international research visitors from across Europe and beyond.

Strengthening international partnerships

MIOIR continued to expand its global collaborations. Its partnership with Georgia Tech thrived through AI & Policy Group seminars and doctoral exchanges, while MIOIR鈥檚 doctoral researchers organised the Trilateral MIOIR鈥揋eorgia Tech鈥揓ohannesburg Doctoral Workshop, bringing together 34 participants across three continents.

Several PhD students and early career researchers benefited from Eu-SPRI circulation awards, research visits to Georgia Tech and internships at the OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation. In addition, MIOIR signed a new memorandum of understanding with the University of Johannesburg, and the University of 野狼社区 formalised a strategic partnership with the University of Chile, opening up new opportunities for collaboration.

Publications, policy influence and research impact

The year saw a strong portfolio of publications in top journals, as well as edited volumes such as  (co-edited by Jakob Edler) and , with chapters by Kieron Flanagan and Raquel Ortega-Argil茅s.

MIOIR researchers also delivered high-level reports for the Innovation and Research Caucus, the UK Government鈥檚 FCDO/DSIT Science & Technology Network, and the Finnish Government, among others. Evidence produced by MIOIR scholars was reflected in policy documents, including the UK Government鈥檚 Industrial Strategy review and the OECD Science, Technology and Innovation Outlook 2025.

Recognition of research excellence

MIOIR鈥檚 research excellence continued to receive international recognition. Frank Geels was named a Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher for the seventh consecutive year and ranked 92nd in the Stanford/Elsevier Top 2% Scientists list. Several other MIOIR colleagues 鈥 Philip McCann, Bruce Tether, Elvira Uyarra, Gerard Hodgkinson, Ian Miles, Jakob Edler and Karl Taeuscher 鈥 were also featured in the Stanford/Elsevier rankings.

The Institute was further represented at the AMBS Staff Awards 2025, with Aarti Krishnan named Innovator of the Year, Marianna Rolbina highly commended, and Chloe Best commended for Professional Services Colleague of the Year.

Looking ahead to 2026

Looking ahead to 2026, we have much to anticipate, including the 10th anniversary of our STIP PhD programme, a memorial workshop honouring Stan Metcalfe's contributions to our field, and 野狼社区 hosting the  in June.

MIOIR remains committed to delivering leading research that makes a difference, in line with the University of 野狼社区鈥檚 M2035 strategy.

Thank You

Thank you to our researchers, colleagues, partners and collaborators who made 2025 a remarkable year for MIOIR.

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Inspiring global careers in international politics /about/news/inspiring-global-careers-in-international-politics/ /about/news/inspiring-global-careers-in-international-politics/732144Students gathered for a recent event on careers in international politics organised by the Politics Department in the School of Social Sciences.The Politics Department is excited to share the success of their inaugural event on careers in international politics, which attracted an impressive student turnout, highlighting the growing interest in global career opportunities among our students.

The event featured inspiring speakers from the United Nations, Amnesty International, the FCDO, Chatham House, Global Weekly, EY, and the Department for Education. Most of these speakers are proud 野狼社区 alumni, a testament to the quality of education they received here, which helped them thrive in competitive international roles.

This initiative reflects the University鈥檚 commitment to having a global impact as part of its 2035 strategy. Dr Jasmin Ramovic, organiser of the event, said:

Given the overwhelming response, the Politics Department will be making this an annual event and looks forward to expanding it even further in the future.

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International Recognition for Innovative Assessment Research /about/news/international-recognition-for-innovative-assessment-research/ /about/news/international-recognition-for-innovative-assessment-research/732060Dr 鈥檚 work on rethinking assessment through choice and purpose has gained national and international recognition, including coverage in Higher Education Digest and invitations to deliver keynotes and panels for Advance HE, the World Conference on Research in Teaching & Education, and Universities UK this autumn.

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Dr Miri Firth鈥檚 pioneering work on rethinking assessment through choice and purpose continues to shape national and international conversations on assessment design. On 22 October, Higher Education Digest featured her research on optionality in assessment, exploring how flexibility and purpose-driven assessment can improve student engagement, wellbeing, and achievement.

In November, Dr Firth will share this work across a series of prestigious events: as a keynote speaker at the Advance HE Assessment and Feedback Symposium (4 November); a keynote at the World Conference on Research in Teaching & Education (16 November); and as an invited panel member for Universities UK鈥檚 national event on Access, Participation and Student Success (20 November).

Together, these invitations highlight both the relevance and the impact of her research, which has already influenced assessment practice in more than a dozen universities. Her continued leadership demonstrates the Faculty of Humanities鈥 contribution to transforming assessment and enhancing the student learning experience across the higher education sector.

Evidence of sector use of this work to date : 

  • University of Liverpool&苍产蝉辫;鈥&苍产蝉辫;Formal Flexible Assessment Guidance and Code of Practice define flexible assessment and parity/equivalency expectations. 
  • Sheffield Hallam University 鈥 Public guidance on Assessment Choice (students choose questions/methods; emphasis on inclusivity and parity). 
  • University of Glasgow&苍产蝉辫;鈥&苍产蝉辫;Flexible Submission Guidance adopted institutionally; reported reductions in extensionsand improved manageability. 
  • Teesside University 鈥 LTE guidance on Flexible / Hybrid Assessment (choice and authentic formats aligned to hybrid delivery). 
  • Loughborough University 鈥 Case study on student choice of assessment format (poster, vlog, infographic, etc.) to remove barriers. 
  • University of Sussex 鈥 Case study on introducing optionality for accessibility and inclusion (student reflections). 
  • University of Northampton&苍产蝉辫;鈥&苍产蝉辫;Assessment snapshot: optionality embedded and signposted across a programme to build assessment literacy. 
  • University of York 鈥 Institutional workstream on assessment optionality; staff resources and funded projects exploring subject-specific cases. 
  • UCL 鈥 Digital Assessment Team blog series on optionality, reflecting work with 野狼社区, York and Imperial in the QAA project. 
  • Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) 鈥 Policy/guidance updates and staff hub referencing flexible assessment practice (plus public comms on assessment reform). 
  • Newcastle University 鈥 Curriculum framework and learning-and-teaching resources highlight programme-level assessment design aligned with inclusive/flexible practice. 

Sector-level foundation / cross-institutional reference

  • QAA Collaborative Enhancement Project 鈥 Optionality in Assessment (Firth et al., 2023): report and resources underpinning many of the above adoptions. 
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2025's news highlights from the Faculty of Humanities /about/news/highlights-from-the-faculty-of-humanities/ /about/news/highlights-from-the-faculty-of-humanities/7319042025 has been another great year for The University of 野狼社区's Faculty of Humanities, and has again seen some significant achievements and initiatives. Here are some of the key highlights:

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2025 has been another great year for The University of 野狼社区's Faculty of Humanities, and has again seen some significant achievements and initiatives. Here are some of the key highlights:

January

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The year started with research from Professor Jamie Woodward which revealed that England鈥檚 major water and sewage companies are misleading the public and Government by using strategies which mirror those of the tobacco and fossil fuel industries. His study uncovered widespread use of greenwashing and disinformation tactics by England鈥檚 nine major water and sewage companies, and was covered extensively in the national media.

January also saw the launch of a major new study to assess the impact of smartphones and social media on young people, and research which found that vast areas of the UK鈥檚 peatlands are under threat due to climate change. It also brought the news that The University of 野狼社区 ranks in the top 50 globally for Social Sciences, Business Economics, Engineering, Arts & Humanities and Medical & Health.

February

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In February, one of the world鈥檚 largest school-based trials found that an intervention to help students normalise their everyday emotions is the 鈥榤ost promising鈥 of several approaches for supporting mental health in children and young people. The Education for Wellbeing trial involved 32,655 students in 513 English primary and secondary schools, testing five interventions.

Research launched in February also found that polling in Ukraine contradicted Donald Trump, who claimed that Volodymyr Zelensky鈥檚 approval rating stood at 4% - the study put his approval rating at 63%, making him the most popular politician in the country. This story received widespread media coverage.

March

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Internationally acclaimed novelist and short story writer Sarah Hall joined The University of 野狼社区 in March as a Professor of Creative Writing. Sarah joined a prestigious teaching team at the University鈥檚 Centre for New Writing made up of novelists, poets, screenwriters, playwrights and non-fiction writers, including Jeanette Winterson, Ian McGuire, Jason Allen-Paisant, Beth Underdown, Horatio Clare, Tim Price and John McAuliffe.

Also during this month, experts called on the government to make urgent changes to the UK鈥檚 bus network in an appearance at a Transport Select Committee inquiry. The group 鈥 including Professor Karen Lucas, Head of the Transport and Mobilities Group at The University of 野狼社区 鈥 spoke about the detrimental impact of poor bus connectivity and the need for immediate government action. A new research centre was also launched to promote socially just, people-centred sustainability transformations by collaborating with communities, governments and businesses to develop low-carbon living initiatives.

April

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In April, The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) - the UK鈥檚 largest funder of economic, social, behavioural and human data science - appointed 野狼社区鈥檚 Professor Cecilia Wong as a member of its Council. Professor Wong brought a wealth of expertise and an exceptional track record to her role - her extensive research encompasses strategic spatial planning, policy monitoring & analysis, urban & regional development and housing & infrastructure planning. 鈥

The month also saw the launch of a new report from , which has surveyed 130,000 young people since 2021, which highlighted the experiences of pupils in mainstream schools with Special Educational Needs (SEN). The study found that across a range of headline metrics 鈥 mental wellbeing, life satisfaction, self-esteem and emotional difficulties 鈥 young people with SEN experience worse outcomes.  

May

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May saw the launch of a major new partnership with the Bank of England which will see existing teachers offered free training to deliver A Level economics alongside their core subject. The three-year programme, which will be piloted in the North West before eventually being rolled out across the UK, aims to make the subject more accessible to students from a wider range of backgrounds.

Also in May, the Government announced changes to the Winter Fuel Payment after being presented with research from The University of 野狼社区 which found that their plans were going to leave many more older people in poverty, putting their health and wellbeing at risk. The month also saw 野狼社区 being officially recognised as one of the UK鈥檚 new Policing Academic Centres of Excellence (PACE), as part of a national initiative to embed world-class research into frontline policing and community safety.

June

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June brought two major archaeology stories - firstly, experts from 野狼社区 played a leading role in the rediscovery of the ancient city of Imet in Egypt鈥檚 eastern Nile Delta, uncovering multi-storey dwellings, granaries and a ceremonial road tied to the worship of the cobra goddess Wadjet. This story received widespread coverage. The month brought news of a new project to explore the discovery of Wales鈥 first complete ancient chariot.

The same month also saw the launch of two reports into children's mental health - one found that while teens from disadvantaged neighbourhoods do face lower life satisfaction, they don't actually face more emotional problems. The other found that physical activity is critical for children's happiness.

July

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July brought the extremely sad news that Lord David Alliance CBE had passed away. Lord Alliance鈥檚 belief in the power of philanthropy, education and research to drive positive change inspired generations of students, staff, alumni and partners. The renaming of 野狼社区 Business School to Alliance 野狼社区 Business School in 2015 stands as a testament to Lord Alliance鈥檚 transformative impact and support for The University of 野狼社区 and its students over many years.

The month also saw Alliance 野狼社区 Business School's Professor Timothy Michael Devinney being elected as a Fellow of the British Academy, the UK鈥檚 leading national body for the humanities and social sciences.

Also during this month, several Humanities academics were leading policy conversations about major issues - including Professor Jamie Woodward who spoke at Westminster about the impact of microplastic pollution on our environment, and Professor Pamela Qualter who co-authored a World Health Organization (WHO) report calling for urgent action to tackle loneliness and social disconnection around the world.

August

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During August, an historian from The University of 野狼社区 was named as one of six authors shortlisted for the 2025 Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize, which celebrates the best popular science writing from across the globe. Vanished: An Unnatural History of Extinction by Professor Sadiah Qureshi was named as one of the finalists at the Edinburgh International Book Festival.

Two leading criminologists from The University of 野狼社区 also joined a groundbreaking national research project designed to tackle fraud in the NHS, which costs the UK taxpayer an estimated 拢1.3 billion each year. 

There was also media interest in a study which found that a single sheet of 1,100-year-old parchment may have been used to heal a dangerous royal rift in Ancient England.

September

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The start of the new academic year was marked by the appointment of three academics from The University of 野狼社区 as Fellows of the Academy of Social Sciences. Professor Liz Richardson, Professor David Richards and Professor Anupam Nanda were named in recognition of their excellence and impact, and their advancement of social sciences for the public good. 

The month also saw The University of 野狼社区 being appointed as the UN's Academic Impact Vice-Chair for SDG10 research, meaning the University will play an essential role in advancing the implementation of the UN's 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Some major research was also launched in August which found that Levelling Up鈥 left many southern areas behind, a mentoring programme was giving a big mental health boost to LGBTQIA+ teens, and cities needing to do more to support older people who want to stay in their own homes as they age.

October

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October saw three major pieces of research into schools - studies were published into school isolation rooms damaging pupil wellbeing, a third of new teachers quitting within five years of qualifying and the discovery of a significant and lasting link between the subjects young people study in school and their political preferences. 

Also during October, a study was launched by Dr Louise Thompson which found that outdated rules in the House of Commons shut smaller parties out of key decisions, leaving millions of voters effectively unheard. This led to several of those parties - including the SNP, Plaid Cymru and Reform - raising the issue, as well as media coverage across the UK. 

November

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The University鈥檚 Professor Hilary Pilkington was one of the authors of the final report of the Independent Commission on Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice,  which in November called for a comprehensive overhaul of the UK's counter-terrorism policies. This received widespread media coverage across the country.

The University also launched new research as part of the N8 Child of the North campaign in November, which found that the post-Covid school attendance crisis is hitting disadvantaged children hardest - the story led to regional and national media coverage.

The month also saw studies into Buddhism in mental health care, stronger communities being linked to better health, and the rise of 鈥authoritarian peacemaking鈥 and its implications for Ukraine. 

December

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The final month of the year saw the launch of a major new collaboration with the University of Oxford which will bring together an expert team of textual scholars, book historians, computer scientists, library data experts and research software engineers to explore whether computers 鈥榮ee鈥 books and prints the same way as people do, and asks whether the AI algorithm can be made to see in the same way as humans. 

A major global study led by Dr Francesco Rampazzo also found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before. The research - which analysed data from over 900,000 users of the queer women鈥檚 and nonbinary dating app Zoe - offered one of the first truly global pictures of how people identify their sexuality in 122 countries, from the UK and the US to Brazil, South Africa and Taiwan.

These stories reflect the Faculty's commitment to addressing global challenges through its research, education and social responsibility.

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Justice Hub wins 鈥楨ducational Institution of the Year鈥 award /about/news/justice-hub-wins-educational-institution-of-the-year-award/ /about/news/justice-hub-wins-educational-institution-of-the-year-award/732017The Justice Hub at the University of 野狼社区 Law School has won 鈥楨ducational Institution of the Year 2025鈥 for providing legal support to those unable to access legal aid, helping to close the justice gap and transform lives across Greater 野狼社区.The  at the  has won 鈥楨ducational Institution of the Year 2025鈥 at the recent Greater 野狼社区 Pro Bono Awards.  Through partnerships with students from across the , academics, lawyers and local charities, the Hub delivers free legal support to those most in need.

Around 650,000 people in the region fall into the 鈥榡ustice gap鈥 because they cannot access legal aid or afford private representation.

The Justice Hub鈥檚 important work exposes lawyers of the future to the injustices faced by many and the importance of access to justice and helps to transform lives across Greater 野狼社区. 

The Awards, now in their second year, celebrate the regions鈥 lawyers, law students and legal professionals who are transforming lives through free legal advice and representation. 

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Hidden bias gives 鈥榮wing state鈥 voters more influence over US trade policy /about/news/more-influence-over-us-trade-policy/ /about/news/more-influence-over-us-trade-policy/731928Americans living in political 鈥渟wing states鈥 have a significantly louder voice in national trade policy - effectively making their votes worth more than others - according to a new study published in the .

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Americans living in political 鈥渟wing states鈥 have a significantly louder voice in national trade policy - effectively making their votes worth more than others - according to a new study published in the .

Professor Karim Chalak from The University of 野狼社区, Professor John McLaren from the University of Virginia and Professor Xiangjun Ma from Liaoning University found that US governments of both parties tend to shape their trade policies to favour industries based in states that could decide presidential elections.

Using decades of economic and political data - from the Clinton years through to the Trump trade wars - the team found that US tariffs are consistently biased toward industries located in swing states such as Florida, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. 

According to their estimates, the welfare of a voter in a non-swing state is treated as being worth just 82 percent of that of a voter in a swing state when national trade decisions are made.

鈥淥ur research reveals the extent to which US policymakers cater to the welfare of swing-state workers relative to others with similar jobs elsewhere,鈥 explains Professor Chalak. 鈥淭his bias is a byproduct of the US鈥檚 electoral system - economic policies are shaped partly by political geography.鈥

The researchers describe how this pattern was illustrated clearly in the 1990s, when the Clinton administration negotiated special tomato trade protections for Florida ahead of a tight election. Similar patterns reappeared during later trade disputes involving steel and manufacturing tariffs.

鈥淧eople often claim that the Electoral College protects small states, but the evidence is that it just penalizes people for not living in a swing state,鈥 said Professor McLaren, 鈥渁nd even for swing states, the best evidence is that small states do not benefit from the bias.鈥 

By combining theoretical modelling with real-world data on tariffs, industries, and voting patterns, the team developed what they call the 鈥淪wing-State Theorem.鈥 The theorem predicts that in majoritarian systems like the US, policy naturally tilts toward the interests of swing regions - even without explicit lobbying.

The findings shed light on how political incentives can distort economic policy in ways that are both inefficient and hard to justify as fair, and they may help to explain why trade wars and protectionist measures often appear inconsistent with broader national welfare. The authors suggest the same logic could apply to other areas of policy, from infrastructure spending to defence contracts.

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Thu, 18 Dec 2025 13:08:02 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f535d660-4d33-4d7f-aa38-c2a98a0773a9/500_gettyimages-2212921530.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f535d660-4d33-4d7f-aa38-c2a98a0773a9/gettyimages-2212921530.jpg?10000
Exhibition celebrates works of 野狼社区 City Architect鈥檚 Department /about/news/manchester-city-architects-department/ /about/news/manchester-city-architects-department/731898A new landmark exhibition has opened in the first floor gallery of 野狼社区 Central Library which celebrates the contribution that the City Architects made to 野狼社区 and its citizens over the 101 years of the Department. 

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A new landmark exhibition has opened in the first floor gallery of 野狼社区 Central Library which celebrates the contribution that the City Architects made to 野狼社区 and its citizens over the 101 years of the Department. 

The first City Architect, Henry Price, was appointed in 1902 鈥 between then and 2003, only six others held the prestigious post. Price oversaw the design and construction of many of the city鈥檚 wash houses and baths, including the Grade II* listed Victoria Baths of 1906 on Hathersage Road. 

It is worth remembering how much of the city鈥檚 operations were governed from the town hall. 野狼社区 Corporation once controlled gas and electricity undertakings, tramways and trolleybuses, schools, police, fire and ambulance services, waste collection, parks and recreation, housing, libraries and more. The City Architect鈥檚 Department designed for all of these. 

Over 350 images of plans, adverts, brochures, press clippings official and amateur photography, are on display and show the incredible breadth of the Departments influence, as well as their geographic reach. The exhibition focuses on the city and its suburbs, not just the centre. 

Much of the show features buildings constructed between 1945 and 1974 鈥 the end of the Second World War and the creation of Greater 野狼社区 Council 鈥 and illustrates the incredible transformation of the city in that period. 

Celebrated schemes, like the restoration of the Free Trade Hall in the 1950s, sit alongside more macabre utilitarian buildings, such as the City Mortuary, reminding us of the things a city needs to function. 

The latter days of the Department were characterised by the upkeep of existing estate, libraries, schools and housing, and renewed attention on the public realm 鈥 the creation of Castlefield Urban Heritage Park, the pedestrianisation of Market Street, pocket parks along the River Irwell and in China Town. 

Finally, as commissions increasingly fell to the private sector, the City Architect became an instrumental figure in the stewarding of large investments that saw Olympic bids and the delivery of the Commonwealth Games. 

"This exhibition celebrates the work of City Architects who made their mark on the city skyscape and its suburbs from 1903," said Councillor John Hacking, Executive Member for Skills, Employment and Leisure. 鈥淚t is a fascinating look back at how instrumental they were in shaping the city and showcases their vision in making 野狼社区 the city that we live in today.鈥

鈥淚t is easy to forget the wonderful, weird and sometimes straightforward contributions that local authority architects made to the city and the lives they shaped,鈥 said Professor Richard Brook from Lancaster University. "To get this research out in public and in partnership with Archives+ hopefully casts new light on the city and the collections.鈥 

The exhibition runs until 28 February 2026. The curators, Dr Martin Dodge and Professor Richard Brook, have created a dynamic composition to which they will continually add material during its run.

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Thu, 18 Dec 2025 10:17:36 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cd965915-1168-4dfd-97c1-58e52665a309/500_feca456745ae43f69796b5e28d47f671_jpg.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cd965915-1168-4dfd-97c1-58e52665a309/feca456745ae43f69796b5e28d47f671_jpg.jpg?10000
Researchers awarded funding from Schmidt Sciences for 'Envisioning Print with AI Computer Vision' project /about/news/envisioning-print-with-ai/ /about/news/envisioning-print-with-ai/731538The Envisioning Print project brings together an expert team of textual scholars, book historians, computer scientists, library data experts, and research software engineers from the University of 野狼社区 and Oxford to address new research questions in AI computer vision via novel interdisciplinary research approaches. 

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The project aims to teach computers to identify differences between examples of early printed documents and artworks, that is, to be able to discover minute instances of difference in otherwise-identical prints from the same printing surface. It explores whether computers 鈥榮ee鈥 books and prints the same way as people do, and asks whether the algorithm sees (or indeed, can see, or can be made to see) the same way as humans. 

The researchers aim to develop AI tools that can understand the differences between multiple versions of prints throughout history, allowing scholars to understand how early imagery was made and circulated, along with the practices of printers and their workshops. 

The team consists of (Professor of Italian and Director of the John Rylands Research Institute at the University of 野狼社区);  (Professor of Computer Science and Head of Engineering Research at the University of 野狼社区); (Head of the Digital Development Team at the University of 野狼社区 Library);  (Senior Software Developer in the University of 野狼社区 Library鈥檚 Digital Development Team); (Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities at the University of Oxford); (Royal Society Research Professor and Professor of Computer Vision Engineering at the University of Oxford); and (Software Engineer at the University of Oxford).

Professor Richard Curry, Vice-Dean for Research and Innovation in the University's Faculty of Science and Engineering, said: "It's fantastic news that the 野狼社区-led project Envisioning Print with AI Computer Vision, has been selected for this Schmidt Sciences award. This project is an exemplary, highly interdisciplinary collaboration between humanities researchers and computational experts, and its cutting-edge mixed methodologies will shape future innovation  with real-world impacts in line with the University's 野狼社区 2035 ambitions."

Wendy Schmidt, co-founder of Schmidt Sciences, added: 鈥淥ur newest technologies may shed light on our oldest truths, on all that makes us human 鈥 from the origins of civilization to the peaks of philosophical thought to contemporary art and film, Schmidt Sciences鈥 Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI) is poised to change not only the course of scholarship, but also the way we see ourselves and our role in the world.鈥

Schmidt Sciences has awarded $11 million to 23 research teams around the world who are exploring new ways to bring artificial intelligence into dialogue with the humanities, from archaeology and art history to literature, linguistics, film studies, and beyond. As part of the Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI), these interdisciplinary teams will both apply AI to illuminate the human record and draw on humanistic questions, methods, and values to advance how AI itself is designed and used.

Schmidt Sciences is a nonprofit organisation founded in 2024 by Eric and Wendy Schmidt that works to accelerate scientific knowledge and breakthroughs with the most promising, advanced tools to support a thriving planet. The organisation prioritises research in areas poised for impact, including AI and advanced computing, astrophysics, biosciences, climate, and space 鈥 as well as supporting researchers in a variety of disciplines through its science systems program.

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Tue, 16 Dec 2025 11:06:03 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a57da138-5502-4735-ad2f-6966c2135b00/500_computer-hands-close-up-concept-450w-2275082489.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a57da138-5502-4735-ad2f-6966c2135b00/computer-hands-close-up-concept-450w-2275082489.jpg?10000
Professor Duncan Ivison visits HSE Buxton /about/news/professor-duncan-ivison-visits-hse-buxton/ /about/news/professor-duncan-ivison-visits-hse-buxton/731381Professor Duncan Ivison visits the Health and Safety Executive's (HSE) Science and Research Centre in Buxton for an important visit that highlighted the strength and depth of partnerships in science and research.

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On the 17th November 2025, the Health and Safety Executive's (HSE) Science and Research Centre in Buxton welcomed Professor Duncan Ivison, President and Vice-Chancellor of The University of 野狼社区, for an important visit that highlighted the strength and depth of our partnerships in science and research.

Duncan met with Professor Andrew Curran CBE, HSE鈥檚 Director of Science, and Professor Neil Bourne, both of whom direct the work of the .

The discussions focused on the long-standing collaboration between HSE and The University of 野狼社区, a relationship that dates back to the early 20th century when Marie Stopes worked with both institutions.

Duncan received an overview of the Centre, where more than 400 staff deliver applied science, engineering, and analytical expertise to support HSE鈥檚 strategy: Protecting People and Places. He also toured parts of the wider site, which spans more than 550 acres, highlighting our capability to deliver science at scale, even though the weather limited outdoor exploration. 

Key topics discussed included: 

  • The history of joint working between HSE and The University of 野狼社区
  • Updates on major collaborative projects:
    • Discovering Safety 鈥 improving global health and safety performance
    • The PROTECT study 鈥 delivered in support of the pandemic response.
  • Current active grants and bids driving future innovation.

This visit reinforced the importance of our partnerships and the role of science in shaping safer workplaces and communities.

Professor Duncan Ivison explained:

鈥淭his visit to HSE鈥檚 Science and Research Centre has been valuable and insightful. It highlights the strength of our partnership, and the vital role collaborative research plays in addressing global challenges. The work we discussed, which spanned safety, health and innovation, directly supports a key goal of our new strategy; to turn outstanding research into public good."

Professor Duncan Ivison鈥檚 visit to HSE Buxton underscores the critical role of collaborative research in advancing workplace safety and public health. By reaffirming the historic and ongoing partnership between HSE and The University of 野狼社区, the visit highlights how joint initiatives, such as and the PROTECT study, translate cutting-edge science into practical solutions that protect people and places. This engagement strengthens strategic alignment, fosters innovation and demonstrates the power of partnerships in addressing global challenges through applied research.

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First global study finds young people redefining sexuality around the world /about/news/young-people-redefining-sexuality-around-the-world/ /about/news/young-people-redefining-sexuality-around-the-world/731347A major new global study led by a researcher at The University of 野狼社区 has found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before.

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A major new global study led by a researcher at The University of 野狼社区 has found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before.

The research - which analysed data from over 900,000 users of the queer women鈥檚 and nonbinary dating app Zoe - offers one of the first truly global pictures of how people identify their sexuality in 122 countries, from the UK and the US to Brazil, South Africa and Taiwan.

The study, published in , found that lesbian and bisexual are the most common identities - but it also shows that younger users are far more likely to describe themselves using newer or broader terms such as queer, pansexual or asexual, suggesting that traditional labels are evolving rapidly.

鈥淵ounger generations are showing us that sexuality is not a fixed category - it鈥檚 a spectrum,鈥 said Dr Francesco Rampazzo, lead author and Lecturer in Social Statistics at The University of 野狼社区. 鈥淎cross the world, more young people are comfortable describing their identities in diverse and fluid ways.鈥

The research highlights how openness about sexuality often depends on cultural and social context. Countries in Europe, North America and Oceania show the greatest diversity of identities, while users in some parts of Africa and Asia were less likely to share information about their sexuality - likely reflecting differences in social acceptance or legal protection.

鈥淲here people feel safe, they are more likely to express who they really are,鈥 said Dr Canton Winer, co-author from the Northern Illinois University. 鈥淚n places where LGBTQ+ identities remain stigmatised or even criminalised, that freedom is much narrower.鈥

The team emphasises that the study is not just about numbers - it鈥檚 about visibility. Behind each data point is a real person choosing to be seen.

The findings also show a small but visible proportion of users identifying as asexual, an often-overlooked orientation that鈥檚 now appearing beyond Western contexts. This hints at a growing global recognition of lesser-known identities.

By working directly with Zoe, which shared anonymised, aggregated data for research, the study marks a new frontier in demographic research. Rather than relying only on national surveys - which often miss sexual minorities - digital data from dating apps can help paint a more inclusive global picture.

鈥淎t Zoe, we have always believed that responsible collaboration between industry and academia can produce insights that genuinely benefit LGBTQ+ communities,鈥 said Milan Kovacic, the former CEO of Zoe. 鈥淪tudies like this show how data, when handled with care and respect, can deepen our understanding of people鈥檚 experiences and help create safer, more inclusive digital spaces. We are proud to support research that contributes to that goal.鈥

The study was conducted by researchers from The University of 野狼社区, Northern Illinois University and the Zoe App, and is part of ongoing efforts to build a more global understanding of LGBTQ+ identities.

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Fri, 12 Dec 2025 13:24:58 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c07e5c3c-0706-4385-924e-e0ddbbf6ac60/500_gettyimages-1408388361.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c07e5c3c-0706-4385-924e-e0ddbbf6ac60/gettyimages-1408388361.jpg?10000
Humanities Academics Celebrate Business Engagement Success at inaugural event /about/news/humanities-academics-celebrate-business-engagement-success-at-inaugural-event/ /about/news/humanities-academics-celebrate-business-engagement-success-at-inaugural-event/731189Academics and business engagement colleagues gathered on Tuesday 9 December to celebrate business engagement and knowledge exchange success across the Faculty of Humanities. The Faculty was the first to embed business engagement & Knowledge Exchange into its overall strategy , launching its first Business Engagement strategy in 2015.  

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Opening the event was Dr Louise Bates, Director of Business Engagement and Knowledge Exchange for the University of 野狼社区 who highlighted the depth and breadth of the collaborative partnership work undertaken by academics from across the University and how her team supports academic colleagues in establishing such partnerships. Vice Dean for Research, Professor Maggie Gale welcomed guests and highlighted the breadth of expertise and collaborative innovation taking place across the faculty within key areas including AI, climate resilience and sustainability, legal and social justice including investigating racial bias on the bench, age-friendly communities, and supply chain innovation. 

Associate Dean for Business Engagement, Civic & Cultural Partnerships , Professor Richard Allmendinger introduced the nominees from each school.

The winners, announced by Maggie Gale, were: 

Alliance 野狼社区 Business School 

  • Prof Jian-Bo Yang & Prof Dong鈥慙ing Xu, for their KTP with Kennedys to develop and embed an intelligent data driven fraud prevention and detection service for insurance claim handling, utilising modern machine learning, text analytics and semantic technologies. 

School of Arts, Languages and Cultures 

  • Prof Eithne Quinn, for work on racial bias in the judicial system enabled through a Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship project undertaken by Keir Monteith KC, which  has received significant media coverage and follow-on projects in related areas. 

School of Social Sciences 

  • Prof Emma Barrett for a Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship with Limina Immersive 鈥淏uilding a safer Metaverse: Exploring the challenges faced by industry in developing safe, secure and ethical immersive experiences鈥.  The project supported a successful 拢80K SPRITE+ funding bid for a deep dive expected to result in a step change in our industry engagement around XR and fostered new cross-disciplinary and external collaborations. 

School of Environment, Education & Development 

  • Dr Emma Shuttleworth For collaborating with key stakeholders, including the Environment Agency, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Groundwork Greater 野狼社区, to lead KTPs that have developed a data-driven framework for innovative sustainable water management in the Irwell catchment and optimised the long-term financial health of the Groundwork Trust. 

At the end of the Awards ceremony Richard Allmendinger announced the launch of a seed-funding call for academics across the faculty to submit bids for up to 拢7k to support early-stage development of collaborative projects with partners. Full information on the call available .

The full list of nominated projects: 

Alliance 野狼社区 Business School 

  • Dr Arijit De, Associate Professor in Management Science  For his work in establishing Maritime Engineering and Management as a new cluster theme at UoM, including work with Port of Dover, DFDS, Ship & Bunker, Sealand and Smart Green Shipping building a substantial portfolio of research in maritime, port, and freight logistics with these partners, a REF Impact Case Study in freight and maritime logistics is in development.
  • Prof Yu-wang Chen, Professor of Decision Sciences and Business Analytics  KTP 鈥 - the largest KTP awarded by Innovate UK.
  • Dr Pedro Sampaio, Senior Lecturer in Information Systems  KTP 鈥 - to design, develop and embed an Industry 4.0 inspired data driven business model and management information framework which will support the company's strategic vision of expansion.
  • Prof David Hughes, Professor of Personality and Organisational Psychology & Nadia Papamichail, Professor of Decision Systems & Management Sciences  KTP - to create sustainable growth and productivity improvement by combining behavioural psychology profiling and emotional regulation with advanced data science techniques to tackle complex work processes and transform the way JLG engages, supports its clients and staff through the legal frameworks. DH was shortlisted for Academic of the Year at the 2025 KTP Awards.
  • Prof Brian Nicholson, Professor of Business Information Systems & Dr Sung Hwan Chai, Lecturer in Accounting KTP: - To develop, embed and exploit advanced smart data driven technologies to deliver digital transformation within the audit function significantly increasing quality, productivity and capacity to deliver additional insight and value to clients.
  • Prof Judy Zolkiewski, Professor of Marketing  KTP projects - . To create a smarter business that is both client-driven whilst also enhancing improved employee interactions, within a unified customer-centric framework that can support product and service innovation.
  • Prof Jian-Bo Yang, Professor of Decision and System Sciences & Prof Ling (Dong鈥慙ing) Xu, Chair Professor of Decision Science and Systems  KTP - AMBS & Kennedys to develop and embed an i and detection service to support insurance claim handling utilising modern machine learning, text analytics techniques and semantic technologies, that can shape and add value to business. 

 

School of Arts, Languages and Cultures  

  • Prof Eithne Quinn, Professor of Cultural and Socio鈥憀egal Studies  For work on racial bias in the judicial system enabled through a undertaken by Keir Monteith KC which has received significant media coverage and led to a follow-on project on mis-use of lyrics in rap music in criminal court cases.
  • Prof Steve Scott-Bottoms, Professor of Contemporary Theatre and Performance - Finding the Story ARC: Engaging businesses with climate resilience in Yorkshire鈥檚 Aire valley  IAA 496 Advance - The Rivalry Project: Extending Stakeholder Engagement with Climate Resilience in the Catchment of the Aire
  • Dr Kostas Arvanitis, Senior Lecturer in Museology  - Therapeutic Impact of Physical, Digital and Virtual Collections of Trauma.
  • Dr Kostas Arvanitis, Senior Lecturer in Museology & Dr Andy Hardman, Senior Lecturer in Creative and Cultural Practices  KTP - SALC & Port Sunlight Village Trust - creating and embedding a framework and tool-kit underpinned by museological and critical heritage research to transform the ways in which PSVT manages and interprets its history, site and collections.
  • Prof Sasha Handley, Professor of Early Modern History  Salford Community Leisure - - Sleeping Well Salford: Using Historic Sleep Practices to Support Health and Social Care Pathways. 

 

School of Environment, Education & Development 

  • Dr Emma Shuttleworth, Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography  Working collaboratively with a number of key stakeholders on environmental sustainability projects including Environment Agency, and leading on KTPs with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Groundwork Trust to create and embed a data driven catchment management framework that will drive innovative evidence-based sustainable water management within the Irwell catchment and optimise long-term financial health for Groundwork Greater 野狼社区.
  • Dr Sophie van Huellen, Senior Lecturer in Development Economics   - Why Ghanaian farmers have been unable to capitalise on record cocoa prices with Fuad Mohammed Abubakar, Managing Head of the Ghana Cocoa Marketing Company (UK) Ltd.
  • Dr Joanne Tippett, Lecturer in Spatial Planning  野狼社区 UNESCO Creative City of Literature IAA 425 Secondment - Imagining sustainable futures: self-facilitated learning from heritage through art and play in UNESCO-designated sites. Shortlisted for 鈥楾ransformative Social Venture of the Year鈥 award at the KEUK Awards 2024. 

鈥淭he RoundView is a powerful way to activate and build capacity in UNESCO鈥檚 core competencies for sustainability leadership鈥. James 脰mer Bridge, Secretary-General of UNESCO UK. 

鈥淭he Secondment demonstrated that the RoundView learning toolkit offers great promise to address a key challenge we experience as UNESCO sites, of linking our work to sustainable development鈥 and enabling us to translate SDG 13 Climate Action into an accessible activity. A key finding from the Secondment was that the 鈥榩oetry as pedagogy鈥 incorporated into the toolkit helps encourage sustainability learning through literature, a key need for both us as Cities of Literature and our library partners.鈥 Ivan Wadeson, Executive Director of 野狼社区 UNESCO City of Literature.

  • Dr Nuno Pinto, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning and Urban Design  For demonstrating exceptional leadership and innovation through the establishment and continued development of the MSc Data Science student industry-project programme. His dedication has transformed the initiative into a thriving platform for student engagement and real-world impact, with its success growing year on year. Nuno鈥檚 commitment to expanding the programme is evident in his active collaboration with fellow academics, fostering the creation of similar opportunities across other schools. His work exemplifies the spirit of business engagement and makes him a worthy nominee for the Faculty of Humanities Business Engagement award.
  • Prof Sarah Marie Hall, Professor in Human Geography  with 野狼社区 Central Foodbank  IAA 468 Relationship Development - Developing community-led, anti-poverty research capacity.  IAA 503 Proof of Concept - Developing 野狼社区鈥檚 Anti-Poverty Research Community: Co-Producing Grassroots Collaborations for Positive Social Change. Winner of UoM in the Outstanding public engagement initiative: Local/civic engagement category
  • Prof Nicola Banks, Professor of Global Development   - Activating citizen philanthropy for community-centred social justice: piloting a One World Together Global Citizenship curriculum for secondary schools.
  • Prof Alison Browne, Professor of Geography   - the project brings together data analytics and social science insights to develop a Water Practices Analytical Toolkit for use in the water industry, offering a unique approach for managing the sustainability of water and influencing the UK鈥檚 long-term usage, average and peak water demands. 

School of Social Sciences 

  • Prof Tine Buffel, Professor of Sociology and Social Gerontology  Age Friendly 野狼社区 (野狼社区 City Council)  IAA 401 Secondment - Developing age-friendly communities to support healthy ageing: Exploring the potential of a policy innovation partnership between public agencies and faith-based organisations in Greater 野狼社区.
  • Prof Emma Barrett, Professor of Psychology, Security and Trust  Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship with Limina Immersive 鈥淏uilding a safer Metaverse: Exploring the challenges faced by industry in developing safe, secure and ethical immersive experiences鈥.  The SIF project supported a successful 拢80K SPRITE+ funding bid for a deep dive expected to result in a step change in our industry engagement around XR and fostered new cross-disciplinary and external collaborations. The work also informed EB鈥檚 presentation at the Home Office Digital Forensics Conference in June 2025, alongside Innovate UK. 
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Thu, 11 Dec 2025 12:09:18 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6f87ffed-4203-43fa-ab32-60f5db59405c/500_02.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6f87ffed-4203-43fa-ab32-60f5db59405c/02.jpg?10000
The Digital Environment Conference 2026: Open Call /about/news/the-digital-environment-conference-2026-open-call/ /about/news/the-digital-environment-conference-2026-open-call/730681Open call for presentations and poster submissions. is excited to announce that the presentation and poster submission is now live for !

Interested in presenting your work at The Digital Environment Conference 2026, hosted at SISTER on 1st April 2026? We are looking for individuals to present their research in 15 minute speakers slots, or present their work on a poster board at the event.

Please email Jade at digitalfutures@manchester.ac.uk with your presentation and/ or poster title, and topic or area of research. 

Please note that the open call for presentation or poster submissions deadline is Friday 27th February 2026.

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Fri, 05 Dec 2025 15:38:26 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/87f22416-4425-4af0-a0eb-d0e1cde614cc/500_dec2026.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/87f22416-4425-4af0-a0eb-d0e1cde614cc/dec2026.png?10000
Creative 野狼社区 Showcases Student Research and Celebrates University Collaboration at BEYOND Conference 2025 /about/news/creative-manchester-showcases-student-research-and-celebrates-university-collaboration-at-beyond-conference-2025/ /about/news/creative-manchester-showcases-student-research-and-celebrates-university-collaboration-at-beyond-conference-2025/730675For the second-year running, Creative 野狼社区 was one of the partners for the BEYOND Conference, engaging with industry leaders, researchers and artists from across the creative sector.For the second-year running,  was one of the partners for the , engaging with industry leaders, researchers and artists from across the creative sector. The conference provided an opportunity to explore applications of and research into CreaTech and build collaborative links across the UK. 

One of the highlights was Professor John McAuliffe, Creative 野狼社区鈥檚 Platform Director, taking part in the panel discussion 鈥淐ivic, Creative and Cultural: University Collaboration鈥. The session brought together members of the , including Professor Kirsty Fairclough (School of Digital Arts, 野狼社区 Metropolitan University), Dr Sam Ingleson (University of Salford) and Professor Wiebke Thorm盲hlen (Royal Northern College of Music). Together, they demonstrated how universities are helping to create a more connected, creative and equitable city-region through strategic partnerships and cultural engagement.

Creative 野狼社区 also invited three PhD students and their supervisors along to BEYOND for their CreaTech Student Research Showcase. The showcase, located among many other exciting product and research demos in the Immersive Futures Lab, featured the students鈥 PhD research and celebrated the University of 野狼社区鈥檚 vibrant postgraduate research community. These projects show how creative technology can tackle real-world challenges across diverse industries:

  •  - PhD in Electroacoustic Music Composition
    Stream of Strings explores embodied music cognition, blending cultural heritage with creative technology to create motion-responsive performances and visual works. The project reimagines the ancient Chinese Guqin as an interactive instrument for live performance and public engagement. She is supervised by .

  •  - PhD in Electroacoustic Music Composition
    Data Sonification for Algorithm Behaviour uses sonification, the mapping of non-auditory data into sound, to better understand how optimisation algorithms work. This approach advances mathematical research while inspiring educational tools and musical compositions. He is also supervised by Professor Ricardo Climent.

  •  - PhD in Computer Science
    ReflectanceFusion is a neural text-to-texture model that generates editable, relightable materials from text prompts. It enables precise control of physical attributes, producing highly accurate textures for rendering and material design. He is supervised by 

The showcase sparked lively conversations among attendees, with many playing the Guqin virtually via a Leap Motion Controller and others listening to the beats generated by algorithms being solved in real time. Not only did the students get to practise their pitching skills, but they also found partners for onward collaboration and learning. It was great to see how the next generation of researchers and business partners can come together and seize opportunities for R&D.

More content from BEYOND 2025 will be shared soon, but  to get an idea of the atmosphere at this special conference. 

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New study exposes how conspiracy theories go mainstream across Europe /about/news/how-conspiracy-theories-go-mainstream-across-europe/ /about/news/how-conspiracy-theories-go-mainstream-across-europe/730103New pan-European research has shown that the spread of conspiracy theories across the continent is driven by a continuous feedback loop between media reporting, political rhetoric, protest movements and social media algorithms - not any single cause.

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New pan-European research has shown that the spread of conspiracy theories across the continent is driven by a continuous feedback loop between media reporting, political rhetoric, protest movements and social media algorithms - not any single cause.

The involves 14 researchers from across Europe, and it has examined how conspiracy theories take shape differently in the UK, German-speaking countries, the Balkans, the Baltics, Slovakia and Poland. Their findings highlight that conspiracy narratives reflect the political cultures, histories and social tensions of each region, meaning that approaches to tackling them must be tailored rather than imported wholesale from elsewhere.

A key theme across the reports is the feedback loop that enables conspiracy narratives to circulate. Even when politicians or media outlets refer to a conspiracy theory to debunk it, the resulting attention helps it spread further via social media amplification and mainstream exposure. This blurring of online and offline spaces allows fringe ideas to influence political rhetoric, as seen in Europe-wide variations of the 鈥淕reat Replacement鈥 narrative.

The research also explores how conspiracies evolve in response to local concerns. In the UK, anxieties around Covid-19 restrictions fed into narratives about 鈥15-minute cities鈥. In German-speaking countries, stigma around conspiracism has pushed much of it to the online sphere. In the Baltics and the Balkans, the legacy of foreign occupation, conflict and surveillance shapes suspicion of elites and fuels a sense of victimhood. Conspiracy theories in Poland and Slovakia frequently target gender and LGBTQ+ rights, often influenced by US culture-war narratives.

The reports identify a lack of evaluation of initiatives designed to counter disinformation. Some fact-checking and NGO efforts themselves become targets of conspiracist suspicion, undermining trust and the stability of their funding. Nevertheless, media literacy campaigns, debunking and fact-checking each have a role to play when adapted to national contexts.

In the UK, the REDACT team argues that the current Online Safety Act does not go far enough. Unlike the EU鈥檚 Digital Services Act, it does not explicitly address health misinformation, election-related disinformation or AI-generated content, leaving gaps in the regulation of systemic risks.

Ultimately, the project concludes that tackling conspiracy theories requires more than closing individual online channels. Efforts must address the structural political and social conditions that allow conspiracist narratives to flourish, as well as the business models that incentivise sensational content. The researchers urge a move away from simply asking why the public lacks trust, towards making institutions genuinely worthy of trust.

 

The University of 野狼社区 is globally renowned for its pioneering research, outstanding teaching and learning, and commitment to social responsibility. We are a truly international university 鈥 ranking in the top 50 in a range of global rankings 鈥 with a diverse community of more than 44,300 students, 12,800 colleagues and 585,000 alumni.  Sign up for our e-news to hear first-hand about our international partnerships and activities across the globe. 

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Tue, 02 Dec 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b37266dc-0d7f-4992-9282-628d6d85e037/500_gettyimages-1411957789.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b37266dc-0d7f-4992-9282-628d6d85e037/gettyimages-1411957789.jpg?10000
Study highlights rise of 鈥榓uthoritarian peacemaking鈥 and its implications for Ukraine /about/news/authoritarian-peacemaking-and-its-implications-for-ukraine/ /about/news/authoritarian-peacemaking-and-its-implications-for-ukraine/729864As Donald Trump鈥檚 White House places huge pressure on Ukraine to sign a peace deal, a team of experts has published a new study examining what they describe as a worldwide shift towards 鈥渁uthoritarian peacemaking鈥 - a model of conflict resolution shaped not by international institutions or liberal democracies, but by authoritarian and semi-authoritarian states whose interests lie in control, influence and geopolitical advantage rather than long-term solutions.

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As Donald Trump鈥檚 White House places huge pressure on Ukraine to sign a peace deal, a team of experts has published a new study examining what they describe as a worldwide shift towards 鈥渁uthoritarian peacemaking鈥 - a model of conflict resolution shaped not by international institutions or liberal democracies, but by authoritarian and semi-authoritarian states whose interests lie in control, influence and geopolitical advantage rather than long-term solutions.

The study, set to be published in journal Washington Quarterly, traces how traditional peacemaking - rooted in international law, rights and negotiated compromise - has been eroded over the last two decades. According to the authors, the Iraq War, the post-9/11 security paradigm and growing global competition have weakened the norms that once governed international conflict resolution. This has opened space for powerful states to broker deals that prioritise strategic gain over accountability or the wishes of the affected population, as seen in the Ukraine peace plan drawn up by the USA and Russia.

The research draws on the concept of 鈥淩evisionist Conflict Management,鈥 a framework relying on transactional bargaining, economic incentives and top-down deals that freeze conflicts rather than resolving their causes. The authors argue that these patterns are increasingly visible in conflicts across the Middle East and Africa - and now in Europe too.

The findings have particular resonance for the current efforts to end the war in Ukraine. The proposals floated by the USA give greater weight to Russian territorial 鈥渞ealities on the ground鈥, and involve conversations where Ukraine鈥檚 role is more limited than expected for a state whose sovereignty is at stake. This reflects concerns highlighted in the research - that peace deals in the current climate risk being shaped by external actors, not those living with the consequences.

The study compares this dynamic to earlier conflicts where authoritarian or centralised governments acted as mediators while pursuing their own agendas. In the authors鈥 view, this risks creating 鈥渧ictor鈥檚 peace鈥 arrangements that halt fighting but entrench dominant states鈥 interests, leaving questions of justice, accountability and democratic legitimacy unresolved.

The researchers note that public opinion in Ukraine remains strongly opposed to ceding territory, and that Ukrainian society continues to insist on a settlement that restores borders and addresses wartime abuses. The tension between these expectations and geopolitical pressure, they argue, is emblematic of the broader global transition their study describes.

鈥淏y examining the Ukraine case through this lens, our research offers a wider warning about the international system - as global power becomes more fragmented and traditional norms weaken, the nature of mediation itself is changing,鈥 said Oliver Richmond, Professor in International Relations, Peace & Conflict Studies at The University of 野狼社区. 

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Fri, 28 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d65e2567-995f-4c45-81c1-3ad95320f446/500_gettyimages-2232389194.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d65e2567-995f-4c45-81c1-3ad95320f446/gettyimages-2232389194.jpg?10000
HCRI Anthropologist Recognised with Top Feminist Scholarship Award for Groundbreaking Work on Kashmir /about/news/hcri-anthropologist-recognised-with-top-feminist-scholarship-award/ /about/news/hcri-anthropologist-recognised-with-top-feminist-scholarship-award/729871, Lecturer in Disasters and Climate Crisis at the , has won the Gloria Anzald煤a Book Prize for his monograph,

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, Lecturer in Disasters and Climate Crisis at the , has won the Gloria Anzald煤a Book Prize for his monograph,

Widely regarded as one of the highest honours in the field of feminist studies, the prize is named in tribute to renowned Chicana poet, feminist theorist, and writer Gloria Anzald煤a. It is awarded annually to groundbreaking monographs that significantly advance multicultural feminist research, particularly within Women鈥檚, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.

The National Women鈥檚 Studies Association announced the award at its annual conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in November.

The jury described the book鈥檚 contributions as follows:

Atmospheric Violence: Disaster and Repair in Kashmir offers incredible insights and invitations as we take up [the author鈥檚] question: 鈥榟ow we can operate in ways that warp the distance between the academy and community, expert and subject, story and theory, life and poetry鈥? [The] generous, incisive, beautifully written and visual work informs a lyrical and generative text that is disobedient to the colonial disciplines of extraction normalized in the infrastructure of knowledge production. Atmospheric Violence enriches the depth of Women鈥檚, Gender, and Sexuality studies in [its] offering of rich and complex ethnographic scholarship that continually asks readers pause and reframe the role of the researchers, modalities of living and erasure, and the ever-present question of the politics of our location before we can even fathom a response to 鈥榃ho Can Stand with Kashmir?鈥 [We] thank [the author] for inviting us to pause and delve into these rich scenes of an otherwise.鈥

This is the fifth international award the monograph has won since its release last year.

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Thu, 27 Nov 2025 15:49:38 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb8d7078-81a7-4b56-9b38-ac99014a8762/500_omeraijazi.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb8d7078-81a7-4b56-9b38-ac99014a8762/omeraijazi.jpg?10000
Research calls for 鈥渟portswashing鈥 rethink amid FIFA Peace Prize rumours /about/news/research-calls-for-sportswashing-rethink-amid-fifa-peace-prize-rumours/ /about/news/research-calls-for-sportswashing-rethink-amid-fifa-peace-prize-rumours/729762As global attention turns to rumours that FIFA may award a new 鈥淧eace Prize鈥 to US President Donald Trump later next month, new research has argued that public debates about politics and sport need far more nuance than the familiar narratives of 鈥渟portswashing鈥 allow.

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As global attention turns to rumours that FIFA may award a new 鈥淧eace Prize鈥 to US President Donald Trump later next month, new research has argued that public debates about politics and sport need far more nuance than the familiar narratives of 鈥渟portswashing鈥 allow.

Two new open-access journal articles by Dr Vitaly Kazakov have challenged popular assumptions about how political actors use sport to shape global opinion - and, crucially, how media and audiences participate in that process. Taken together, the studies offer a timely rethink at a moment when sport鈥檚 symbolic power is again colliding with international politics.

The first article, published in , revisits the now-ubiquitous term used to describe attempts by authoritarian governments or international organisations to launder their reputations through sport. Dr Kazakov argues that the concept is often taken for granted, treated as a straightforward description of elite and always effective narrative manipulation rather than a complex, contested and historically recurring phenomenon.

The research identifies what Dr Kazakov calls a 鈥渘ormative trap鈥 - a tendency for public commentary, policy analysis and even some academic work to embed moral judgements into the concept of 鈥渟portswashing鈥 omitting important aspects of analysis. This, he suggests, can obscure the very dynamics the term is meant to illuminate.

鈥淎s debates continue about how meaningful FIFA鈥檚 new Peace Prize will be, and who it might be awarded to, it鈥檚 more important than ever to understand how narratives about sport take shape and impact political and social life around the globe,鈥 Dr Kazakov said. 鈥淚f we treat 鈥榮portswashing鈥 as a fixed label rather than a process involving media coverage and audience interpretation, we risk misunderstanding why these stories resonate - and who they actually influence.鈥

His second article, published in the , goes further by examining how information is circulated, authenticated and emotionally charged through sport. Using Qatar鈥檚 2022 FIFA World Cup as a case study, the article applies a five-part 鈥渄isinformation lifecycle鈥 model developed by The University of 野狼社区鈥檚 Professors Vera Tolz and Stephen Hutchings alongside Dr Kazakov and Dr Sofia Tipaldou from Panteion University, Greece.

The model highlights how political messaging around sport evolves over time, crosses borders and adapts to different languages and cultural contexts. It also emphasises the active role played by journalists and global audiences, whose emotional investments in sport can amplify both criticism and celebration.

鈥淭hese studies show that sport doesn鈥檛 just transmit political messages - it transforms them,鈥 Dr Kazakov added. 鈥淢edia organisations, fans, NGOs and policymakers all contribute to how ideas about politics, morality and identity circulate around major sporting events.鈥

The research offers a pointed reminder that, in an era where symbolic gestures from global sporting bodies can carry enormous political weight, understanding the mechanics of narrative formation is essential. Debates around sport, reputation and political power are set to continue - and this work provides a crucial framework for interpreting them.

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Thu, 27 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3666a653-1e7b-44ff-ac68-783da96f8fc7/500_donald_trump_state_visit_to_qatar.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3666a653-1e7b-44ff-ac68-783da96f8fc7/donald_trump_state_visit_to_qatar.jpg?10000
Post-Covid school attendance crisis is hitting disadvantaged children hardest /about/news/post-covid-school-attendance-crisis/ /about/news/post-covid-school-attendance-crisis/729574Experts from The University of 野狼社区 are warning that school attendance across England still hasn鈥檛 recovered for many children since the pandemic - and the gap between rich and poor pupils is growing. 

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Experts from The University of 野狼社区 are warning that school attendance across England still hasn鈥檛 recovered for many children since the pandemic - and the gap between rich and poor pupils is growing. 

Their findings are the latest in the , which calls for urgent action to help every child stay in school and thrive.

The data shows that:

- Children with Education Health and Care Plans are seven times more likely to miss more than half their school sessions.
- Pupils on Free School Meals are four times more likely to have severe absence.
- Suspensions are nearly four times higher for pupils with special needs or living in poverty.

鈥淭oo many children are being failed by a system that doesn鈥檛 meet their needs,鈥 said Professor  Caroline Bond, who co-led the research alongside Dr Luke Munford. 

The researchers say progress on attendance since the pandemic has been slow - and for some children, things are getting worse. They鈥檙e calling for a joined-up approach that brings together schools, families and community services. This could include:

- Family Hubs which offer early help, advice and activities to support school readiness
- More flexible routes through education, like apprenticeships and internships
- Enrichment activities, mental health and careers support to support pupil鈥檚 broader engagement with learning
- Stronger relationships between teachers, pupils and parents
- Involving young people in decisions to increase their sense of belonging and safety

鈥淓very missed day of school means a missed opportunity,鈥 said Baroness Anne Longfield, founder of the Centre for Young Lives. 鈥淭his research shines a light on the urgent need to fix attendance and make sure every child gets the education they deserve.鈥

The Child of the North campaign is a partnership between the N8 Research Partnership and Health Equity North which brings together universities across the North of England - including 野狼社区, Leeds, Durham, York, Lancaster, Liverpool, Sheffield and Newcastle - to push for fairer futures for children across the North of England.

鈥淚f we want to give every child a fair start in life, we need to fix attendance - and that means fixing the barriers that stop children from feeling they belong in school,鈥 said Professor Mark Mon-Williams, who leads the campaign.

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Tue, 25 Nov 2025 12:00:01 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/08067467-b6e1-4f5b-8161-6d38b3757761/500_gettyimages-1047047834.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/08067467-b6e1-4f5b-8161-6d38b3757761/gettyimages-1047047834.jpg?10000
University of 野狼社区 hosts unveiling of 2026 BRIT Awards Trophy /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/729192The University of 野狼社区 proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University鈥檚 , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in 野狼社区 for the first time in their history.

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The University of 野狼社区 proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University鈥檚 , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in 野狼社区 for the first time in their history. 

The trophy, designed by internationally acclaimed 野狼社区-born designer was unveiled during a special event celebrating both the city鈥檚 creative heritage and the University鈥檚 role as a hub for arts, design, music and performance. The University of 野狼社区鈥檚 , home to the renowned - the UK鈥檚 first large-scale, dedicated collection for the preservation and study of popular, counter- and youth culture - helped frame the significance of the occasion. 

At the event, attended by fashion, music and drama students from across the University, guests witnessed the first public reveal of the iconic trophy and took part in an in-depth Q&A with Williamson. The conversation, led by , Head of Collections, Teaching and Research at the John Rylands Library, offered students and attendees unique insight into the designer鈥檚 creative process, his career journey, and what it means to see the BRITs come to his home city. 

Williamson鈥檚 design draws deeply from 野狼社区鈥檚 identity. Crafted in amber-toned resin reminiscent of the golden honey of the worker bee, the city鈥檚 enduring symbol of resilience, the trophy sits atop a globe representing the global reach and influence of British music. 

Heather Cole from the John Rylands Research Institute and Library added: 鈥淚t was a privilege to host Matthew Williamson and introduce our students to the creative thinking behind this year鈥檚 BRITs trophy.  

At the John Rylands Library, and through the British Pop Archive, we are committed to preserving and celebrating the cultural movements that shape British identity. Seeing a 野狼社区-born designer lead this new chapter of the BRIT Awards resonates strongly with our mission, and it was inspiring to give students direct access to such an influential figure.鈥 

, taking place on Saturday 28th February at 野狼社区鈥檚 , marks the first time the ceremony will be hosted outside London. This year鈥檚 trophy places 野狼社区 and the University, firmly at the centre of the BRITs鈥 new era. 

Matthew Williamson joins a distinguished list of creatives who have shaped the BRITs trophy, including , , , , , , , . Each year, the BRITs commission a leading artist to reinterpret the iconic statue, ensuring it remains a dynamic symbol of British creativity. 

As the BRIT Awards begin their first-ever chapter in 野狼社区, the University鈥檚 involvement underscores its commitment to celebrating and fostering the city鈥檚 rich cultural landscape while offering transformative experiences for its students. 

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 13:28:59 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/500_britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000
Scientists learn to see the hidden world beneath our feet - from the sky /about/news/hidden-world-beneath-our-feet-from-the-sky/ /about/news/hidden-world-beneath-our-feet-from-the-sky/728831A new study by Dr Angela Harris from The University of 野狼社区 and Professor Richard Bardgett from Lancaster University has revealed that scientists can now detect the hidden world of microbes living in the soil - from the air.

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A new study by Dr Angela Harris from The University of 野狼社区 and Professor Richard Bardgett from Lancaster University has revealed that scientists can now detect the hidden world of microbes living in the soil - from the air.

Published in , the research shows that detailed airborne images capturing many parts of the electromagnetic spectrum can be used to predict the abundance and diversity of microbes that live in the soil beneath plant canopies. This offers a new way to monitor soil health and biodiversity.

Soil is the most biodiverse and complex habitat on Earth, and the microbes that live in it - tiny bacteria and fungi that recycle nutrients, store carbon, and keep ecosystems healthy - are fundamental to a healthy planet. Yet, because they live underground, they are notoriously difficult and expensive to measure across large areas. 

Recent research shows that the types of plants growing in an area and their traits - such as how fast they grow or what their leaves are made of - can strongly influence soil microbes. What was not known until now was whether these relationships hold up to predict the abundance and diversity of microbes across different ecosystems.

In this study, researchers used airborne sensors that record light far beyond what the human eye can see. Because these sensors capture hundreds of narrow wavelength bands, they reveal fine details about plant leaves and canopies, such as their chemistry, structure, and overall health. 

By combining this rich spectral information with field measurements of soil microbes and plant traits collected across the continental United States through the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), the team found strong links between plant canopy reflectance and the types and diversity of microbes living in soil.

鈥淭he chemistry and structure of plant leaves, which determine how they reflect light, are tightly linked to the conditions of the soil they grow in,鈥 said Dr Harris. 鈥淏ecause plants and microbes often respond to the same environmental factors - like soil nutrients or climate - we can use what鈥檚 happening above ground to predict what is happening below.鈥

Importantly, the study showed that full-spectrum hyperspectral data - which captures far more detail than traditional satellite imagery - performed far better than simpler vegetation indices such as NDVI. This suggests that upcoming hyperspectral satellites, including the European Space Agency鈥檚 CHIME and NASA鈥檚 Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) missions, could transform how we monitor soil health on a global scale.

Beyond advancing ecological science, the research could provide vital tools for tracking soil carbon storage, monitoring land degradation, and supporting sustainable land management in the face of climate change. 

鈥淭his research opens up a powerful new window into Earth鈥檚 hidden biodiversity, providing a way to map and monitor soil biodiversity at large scales in a cost-effective way,鈥 said Professor Bardgett.

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/76e91dc6-a4c7-4a99-a246-1582e118242d/500_gettyimages-505339680.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/76e91dc6-a4c7-4a99-a246-1582e118242d/gettyimages-505339680.jpg?10000