
How Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan influenced today’s multi-sensory museums
In recent decades, museums and galleries have made a sensory turn when it comes to designing displays and engaging visitors. Museums like the Metropolitan in New York offer multi-sensory activities so visitors so can...

Lawlessness and disorder: The hypocrisy of Donald Trump’s exile threats after the Jan. 6 pardons
In 2020, in response to the riots that followed the murder of 46-year-old Black man George Floyd, Donald Trump declared himself the president of law and order. During the same speech, he threatened to use the military to...

Generative AI, online platforms and compensation for content: the need for a new framework
The emergence of generative artificial intelligence has put the issue of compensation for content producers back on the table. Generative AI offers undeniable benefits but raises familiar fears tied to disruptive...
US-China tensions are an opportunity – the EU could become the world’s third great power
Tomas Ragina/Shutterstock In the early 1990s, as the Cold War faded into memory, the Maastricht Treaty established the existence of the European Union (EU). Since its inception, the bloc has jostled for position in an...
What public-private-partnership scandals can tell us about wrongdoing in the water industry
Jory Mundy/Shutterstock.com Water bills are going up in England and Wales, even after the series of scandals around water companies. Last year water firms paid 158 million in fines following a record-breaking number of...
How the brain can miraculously switch off pain
Jack FotoVerse/Shutterestock In the second world war, the physician Henry Beecher observed that some of his soldier patients, despite being injured on the battlefield, required no strong painkillers to manage their pain....