A World of Homeowners: American Power and the Politics of Housing Aid, by Nancy H. Kwak
Danny Dorling sees how bricks and mortar became part of the arsenal with which the US fought the Cold War
Danny Dorling sees how bricks and mortar became part of the arsenal with which the US fought the Cold War
Number edges close to 1 million, driven by rise from India and China
A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash
SUVs but no Porsches: success is relative when keeping up with the Joneses, Jessi Streib finds
A journey into ‘sound design’ strikes discordant tones: Richard J. Williams is all ears
Why do some literary works enjoy long afterlives, while other disappear from the ‘canon’? Jane Darcy finds out
Thirty-three journals have been given the coveted “world elite” ranking in an influential and hotly debated league table
The Association of Business Schools has released its latest ranking of periodicals, but not everyone welcomes it
John Gilbey is fascinated by the unseen fibre-optic communications cables that gird the globe
A tale of the priest, the boy, his aunt and her arrest in 1762 is first-rate micro-history, says Alec Ryrie
Cordula van Wyhe on the meshing of spirituality and sensuality in a master’s religious works
UK-based researchers have claimed the lion’s share of the European Research Council’s new consolidator grants, announced today
Vernon Bogdanor has a few points of order on an analysis of political fiction’s wider effects
Hasia Diner on the evolution of US immigration policy, its complex aims and intended and unintended consequences for a small group of Jews
Leverhulme TrustInternational Network GrantsSciencesAward winner: Istvan BallaiInstitution: University of SheffieldValue: £108,980Instabilities in partially ionised prominence plasmasAward winner:...