‘Upcycled’ food is on the rise – here’s what you need to know
Wonky veg are upcycled from the dustbin. Civil/Shutterstock Whether customers are pleased to hear it or not, firms are selling upcycled food to tackle food waste internationally. Food with ingredients that were saved from...

Bombing Iran: has the UN charter failed?
The recent US attack on Irans nuclear sites has prompted renewed questions about whether the UN charters prohibition on the use of force is meaningful. Considered one of the keystones of international law, article 2(4) of...
People with severe diabetes cured in small stem cell trial
A man having his continuous glucose monitor checked by his doctor. Halfpoint/Shutterstock The cure for diabetes is a life free from daily insulin injections. Based on that criterion, ten out of 12 people (83%) in a new...

Alasdair Gray: unseen artworks offer insight into a profoundly creative and original artist
Artist, writer, playwright, illustrator and the man who made the Oscar-winning film Poor Things possible Alasdair Gray was one of Scotlands great creative polymaths and eccentrics, now celebrated every year on Gray Day...
Shutterstock/JessicaGirvan Todays Notting Hill Carnival, first held in its streets in 1966 when it was led by a Trinidadian steel band, is a glorious cultural blend. Its a hotch-potch of traditions, music, dancing and food...
England’s free school meals rollout risks losing sight of which children need help most
New Africa/Shutterstock The UK government has announced an expansion of free school meals in England. Starting from September 2026, all children in households receiving universal credit will qualify, removing the previous...
Who called Shakespeare ‘upstartcrow’? Our study points to his co-author, Thomas Nashe
Left: A polemical woodcut deriding Nashe as jailbird (1597). Right: A copper engraving of Shakespeare from the title page of the First Folio (1623). Folger Shakespeare Library (left) and Yale Beinecke Library (right)....