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Feeling the Rainbow: LGBT Rights and Reforms
Read more: Feeling the Rainbow: LGBT Rights and Reformsby Senthorun Raj Do I feel proud? This was a question I reflected on recently while gathered with several sweaty […]
The Absence of God and Its Contextual Significance for Hume

In our featured article this week, “The Absence of God and Its Contextual Significance for Hume”, David Fergusson of the…
The Architecture and Impact of the School Boards in Glasgow

The rapid programme of school building undertaken across Glasgow by the School Boards (1873–1919) left the city with a rich…
Guest Blog – SPS Standards and TBT regulations in Intra-African Trade

Dr. Onsando Osiemo is currently a legal practioner and researcher in Nairobi, Kenya. His areas of research are in international…
‘Don’t pump up the emotion’: The creation and authorship of a sound world in The Wire

The HBO TV series, The Wire, is well known for capturing a realistic slice of Baltimore life in and around…
War and Christmas

Priecīgus Ziemassvētkus! [Merry Christmas!] is a picturebook written by two Latvian refugees while displaced during the Second World War. The…
Guest Blog – Organised Crime In Scotland

Organised crime in Scotland has been characterised (one could say sensationalised) as a blight and a cancer. Despite the best…
From the Archives – Translation of Children’s Literature in the Soviet Union: How Pinocchio Got a Golden Key

As well as providing entertainment and a tool for developing children’s reading skills, children’s literature is also a powerful instrument…
The Red Menace

The article “British Conservatives, the Red Menace and Antiforeign Agitation in China, 1924–1927” in our journal Cultural History looks at…
From the Archives – Persius’ Prologue and Early Modern English Satire

When compared to Juvenal or Horace (the two most prominent figures of Roman satire in sixteenth and seventeenth century England),…