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Academic Perspectives from Cambridge University Press.

February 12th 2025 0

The Art of Walking in London

When, in his 1716 poem Trivia: or, the Art of Walking the Streets of London, John Gay announced he would instruct his readers on “How to walk clean by Day, and safe by Night”, he firmly positioned his account between two different modes of rep…

February 7th 2025

Looking in the Mirror of Early Modern Art

What is a painting?  An application of coloured pigments to a flat surface, be it a wall, a canvas, or a panel.  My book poses this question in historical perspective, to ask: what was a Renaissance painting understood to be?  The answer is…

February 6th 2025

Beyond the Invisible Hand: Exploring the Construction of Markets

Markets are everywhere—in our communities, workplaces, and even our personal lives—shaping society in important and often unnoticed ways. For many, markets are viewed as the solution to society’s most pressing challenges, from improving …

February 6th 2025

Reimagining Prosperity in the EU

We live in the times of profound pessimism about the future. Where have the hope and optimism go? And how is Europe, and its political leaders, trying to create new grounds for optimism? In Europe, the earlier receipt for some time was the European Green …

February 5th 2025

“Dialysis: An Aquarium Filter for Your Blood”

When I first embarked on writing and illustrating books for children, I had one simple goal: to make complex medical concepts accessible, relatable, and less intimidating for young patients and their families. My latest book, Dialysis: An Aquarium Filter …

February 5th 2025

“The Pediatric Liver Transplant Journey: A Five-Part Series”

As a transplant surgeon and an advocate for pediatric healthcare education, I’m thrilled to share my latest five-part series of books designed to guide children and their families through the liver transplant journey. Each book in the series breaks …

February 5th 2025

Why Is There Something and Not Rather Nothing? Hey, Whatever

According to Thomas Aquinas, knowledge of first causes is the most fundamental kind of knowledge.  Since a cause is an explanation – a reason why something is — to say things have no cause is to say that they have no explanation.  Mo…

February 4th 2025

The Extraordinary History of World Cities

This is an urban age. The concept of “world cities” and the cross-border networks that animate them inspired a wave of interdisciplinary research. Megaregions like New York, Lagos, Mexico City, and Mumbai captivate the world by their scale and…

February 4th 2025

Bidding farewell to Kant’s ‘murderer at the door’

Kant’s 1797 essay “On a Supposed Right to Lie from Love of Humanity” has done more than any of his other works to scare students off his moral theory. Interpreters have little time for it. They call it “grotesque”, “sho…

January 31st 2025

Recovering an ancient scientific culture: The case of the Roman artes

One of the most significant legacies of Greek and Roman antiquity is the vast body of scientific and technical writings which, copied and transmitted across the centuries, has exerted a profound influence on the development of the modern world. Certain ce…

Cambridge Core

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Advancing learning, knowledge and research.

February 11th 2025 0

Military Intimacies: Peruvian Veterans and Narratives about Sex and Violence

Many researchers and writers have considered the question why soldiers in conflict situations rape civilian and enemy populations. Few works have been able to research motivations of soldiers directly with them. We carried out in-depth interviews with ex-…

February 11th 2025 0

Using Solid and Liquid Digestate as Fertilizer for a Sustainable Processing Tomato Cultivation

As the global energy crisis intensifies and non-renewable resources, particularly fossil fuels, approach depletion, sustainable alternatives are gaining global prominence. Biogas plants offer numerous advantages, making them a sustainable and eco-friendly…

February 11th 2025 0

Celebrating Women and Girls in Science: Contributions to Conservation Research

These studies, led or co-authored by women, published in Oryx, reinforce the essential role of female scientists in addressing global conservation challenges. As we celebrate this day, we recognise their dedication to shaping a sustainable future for our …

February 11th 2025 0

Celebrating Women and Girls in Science: Contributions to Avian Conservation

These studies, led or co-authored by women, reflect the vital role of female scientists in addressing pressing conservation challenges. As we celebrate this day, we recognise their commitment to safeguarding bird species and their habitats for future gene…

February 11th 2025 0

Breaking the Barrier: How To Push for more Women in Science

As we celebrate the incredible contributions of women in science, it’s time to make space for even more voices, ideas, and innovations. We encourage you to share your work by submitting to Quarterly Reviews in Biophysics or QRB Discovery. Your resea…

February 5th 2025 0

The Publication of the First Translated Article in LSR

Mayra Feddersen and colleagues have published in the Law & Society Review a Spanish-language translation of their article, “‘The state is something that disappoints’: legal consciousness amid institutional dissatisfact…

February 4th 2025 0

Evaluating Fair Use Principle in the context of Free Service Providing Websites

The extensive use of free service providing websites by netizens aligned with ignorance of their copyright violation while accessing such websites is an issue for deliberation.…

February 3rd 2025 0

Introducing the new Co-Editors-in-Chief of Development and Psychopathology

In 1989, Dr. Dante Cicchetti founded Development and Psychopathology, a journal that quickly came to reflect the best scholarship in the then nascent field of developmental psychopathology.…

February 3rd 2025 0

PMLA Articles in the College Classroom

Many years ago, while still in graduate school, I was helping a group of undergraduates understand a scholarly essay about translation, when one student asked me (with all good intentions): “Why do we need to know this?”…

January 31st 2025 0

Constitutionalism, technology, environmental governance and more

The latest issue of the German Law Journal is perfectly timed for the start of the year, as it covers an array of themes poised to dominate the scholarly agenda in 2025.…

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