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Lord Hague, in ceremonial Chancellor gown, gestures in his speech

The Chancellor’s Intervention: Hague on “Safe Spaces”, Gaza, and Ukraine

A year on from the first round of the election of the new Chancellor, its victor, William Hague, took to the Cheltenham Literature Festival in mid-October to comment on his ideals for the University, the current Starmer Government, and the development of Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan. Noah Allerton explores the Chancellor’s remarks.

opinion

Provided by Ngoc Diep (Alice), used with permission.

The Oxford Paradox

We debate the world’s challenges in tutorials. Why do we still get funnelled into careers that don’t address them? – Building a career is not simply an art of stacking CV items with impressive internships, prestigious awards, and a first-class degree. It’s about determining what your one working life will add up to. Your career…

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Provided by Honcques Laus, used with permission

The Oxford History of Donations and the Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities

The University of Oxford has a long history of receiving funds for its buildings from benefactors whose donations may stimulate debate. This time, the Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities has prompted discussion due to its connection with Stephen A. Schwarzman, the Chairman of Blackstone which the United Nations rapporteurs identified as potentially contravening human rights…

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Provided by Ngoc Diep (Alice), used with permission

LinkedIn Is Better 

Here is my take: We should all prioritise LinkedIn over every other app on our phones.  First, LinkedIn is simply a better social media app. Why?  What is the definition of being a good friend? Celebrating when your friends actually win in life. Not celebrating when she soft-launches some “mystery man” on Instagram whom she…

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Global Affairs

The Dutch Elections: a Lesson for Liberals?

On October 29, Dutch voters returned to the polls a lot sooner than they may have hoped. On June 3, after only 11 months in government, the former cabinet led by Dick Schoof collapsed after the largest constituent party, Geert Wilders’ far-right Party for Freedom (PVV), withdrew over a heated dispute on asylum…

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COLUMNS

A man sits at a table alone, eating a bowl of ramen.

Risk Appetite: On Relationships with Food and Food Influencers

“I thought spending mealtimes studying instead of eating would give me some sort of leverage over my peers, who weren’t spending that time being ‘productive’ in the traditional sense” Valerie Wu discusses the relationship between eating and studying and how LA and food influencers helped improve it. Image by Guian Bolisay, CC BY-SA 2.0 ,…

A picture of people in a library common room. Everyone is looking at their phones.

Luddite Renaissance: Are adults the real screenagers?

“And yet, I find that the focus on children and teenagers’ usage of smartphones from adults has a whiff of the infamous “when one finger points, three point back at you”.” Noah Petts discusses screen dependency in children, teens, and adults and argues that the real screenagers may not be teens. Image by Noah Petts…

An illustration of a map of Western Europe with an arrow connecting Leipzig and Oxford

Return Flight: Jumping Back In

“I concluded my year genuinely sad it was coming to an end, but this sadness showed me that I had done what I had wanted to do – I had turned Leipzig into somewhere I had truly gotten to know.” Esmé Hubbert discusses returning from her year abroad in Leipzig and discovering that Oxford no…

CULTURES

character looks through a bag while on stage

The Players at the Burton Taylor Studio: Reviewed

“Splinters Productions’ debut play explores all the vicissitudes of student theatre, from cringeworthy flirtation to tyrannical direction” Oliver Martin reviews ‘The Players’ Image from Splinters Productions

Photo of Bigger Trees Near Warter canvas in gallery

Bigger Trees Near Warter (2007)

“Standing in the middle of the exhibition, I wanted to tell everyone that these were my trees, my farms, my houses, my roads, my towns.” Katie Percival describes her relationship…

An illustration of a poet on the platform TikTok reading aloud.

Is TikTok democratising poetry?

‘On encountering Poetrytok, people who are not in the habit of reading poetry can quickly absorb spoken words that stir in them a memory, a feeling of comfort, or some…

LIfestyle

Identity

Photo of a woman using a phone and a laptop.

A Camera Roll in Language

“For me, the notes app is a psychological tool. It is a way of mediating thought and reality, condensing messy webs of perception into their own contained and defined widget.”…


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